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diff --git a/old/7833.txt b/old/7833.txt new file mode 100644 index 0000000..e3e8379 --- /dev/null +++ b/old/7833.txt @@ -0,0 +1,3349 @@ +Project Gutenberg's Samantha on the Woman Question, by Marietta Holley + +This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and most +other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you'll have +to check the laws of the country where you are located before using this ebook. + +Title: Samantha on the Woman Question + +Author: Marietta Holley + +Posting Date: February 12, 2015 [EBook #7833] +Release Date: April, 2005 +First Posted: May 20, 2003 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SAMANTHA ON THE WOMAN QUESTION *** + + + + +Produced by Eric Eldred, William Flis and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team. + + + + + + + + + + +[Illustration: "And I wonder if there is a woman in the land that can +blame Serepta for wantin' her rights."] + + + SAMANTHA ON THE + + WOMAN QUESTION + + BY + + MARIETTA HOLLEY + + "Josiah Allen's Wife" + + Author of + + "Samantha at Saratoga," "My Opinions" and + "Betsey Bobbet's," etc. + + + + +CONTENTS + + I. "SHE WANTED HER RIGHTS" + + II. "THEY CAN'T BLAME HER" + + III. "POLLY'S EYES GROWED TENDER" + + IV. "STRIVIN' WITH THE EMISSARY" + + V. "HE WUZ DRETFUL POLITE" + + VI. "CONCERNING MOTH-MILLERS AND MINNY FISH" + + VII. "NO HAMPERIN' HITCHIN' STRAPS" + +VIII. "OLD MOM NATER LISTENIN'" + + IX. THE WOMEN'S PARADE + + X. "THE CREATION SEARCHIN' SOCIETY" + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + +"AND I WONDER IF THERE'S A WOMAN IN THE LAND THAT CAN BLAME SEREPTA FOR +WANTIN' HER RIGHTS" (p. 29). Frontispiece + +"I WANTED TO VISIT THE CAPITOL OF OUR COUNTRY.... SO WE LAID OUT TO GO" + +"HE'D ENTERED POLITICAL LIFE WHERE THE BIBLE WUZN'T POPULAR; HE'D NEVER +READ FURTHER THAN GULLIVER'S EPISTLE TO THE LILIPUTIANS" + +"SEZ JOSIAH, 'DOES THAT THING KNOW ENOUGH TO VOTE?'" + + + + +I + +"SHE WANTED HER RIGHTS" + + +Lorinda Cagwin invited Josiah and me to a reunion of the Allen family at +her home nigh Washington, D.C., the birthplace of the first Allen we knowed +anything about, and Josiah said: + +"Bein' one of the best lookin' and influential Allens on earth now, it +would be expected on him to attend to it." + +And I fell in with the idee, partly to be done as I would be done by if +it wuz the relation on my side, and partly because by goin' I could hit +two birds with one stun, as the poet sez. Indeed, I could hit four on 'em. + +My own cousin, Diantha Trimble, lived in a city nigh Lorinda's and I had +promised to visit her if I wuz ever nigh her, and help bear her burdens for +a spell, of which burden more anon and bom-by. + +Diantha wuz one bird, the Reunion another, and the third bird I had in my +mind's eye wuz the big outdoor meeting of the suffragists that wuz to be +held in the city where Diantha lived, only a little ways from Lorinda's. + +And the fourth bird and the biggest one I wuz aimin' to hit from this tower +of ourn wuz Washington, D.C. I wanted to visit the Capitol of our country, +the center of our great civilization that stands like the sun in the solar +system, sendin' out beams of power and wisdom and law and order, and +justice and injustice, and money and oratory, and talk and talk, and wind +and everything, to the uttermost points of our vast possessions, and from +them clear to the ends of the earth. I wanted to see it, I wanted to like a +dog. So we laid out to go. + +[Illustration: "I wanted to visit the Capitol of our country.... So we +laid out to go."] + +Lorinda lived on the old Allen place, and I always sot store by her, and +her girl, Polly, wuz, as Thomas J. said, a peach. She had spent one of her +college vacations with us, and a sweeter, prettier, brighter girl I don't +want to see. Her name is Pauline, but everybody calls her Polly. + +The Cagwins are rich, and Polly had every advantage money could give, +and old Mom Nater gin her a lot of advantages money couldn't buy, beauty +and intellect, a big generous heart and charm. And you know the Cagwins +couldn't bought that at no price. Charm in a girl is like the perfume in a +rose, and can't be bought or sold. And you can't handle or describe either +on 'em exactly. But what a influence they have; how they lay holt of your +heart and fancy. + +Royal Gray, the young man who wuz payin' attention to her, stopped once +for a day or two in Jonesville with Polly and her Ma on their way to the +Cagwins' camp in the Adirondacks. And we all liked him so well that we +agreed in givin' him this extraordinary praise, we said he wuz worthy of +Polly, we knowed of course that wuz the highest enconium possible for us to +give. + +Good lookin', smart as a whip, and deep, you could see that by lookin' into +his eyes, half laughin' and half serious eyes and kinder sad lookin' too +under the fun, as eyes must be in this world of ourn if they look back fur, +or ahead much of any. A queer world this is, and kinder sad and mysterious, +behind all the good and glory on't. + +He wuz jest out of Harvard school and as full of life and sperits as a +colt let loose in a clover field. He went out in the hay field, he and +Polly, and rode home on top of a load of hay jest as nateral and easy and +bare-headed as if he wuz workin' for wages, and he the only son of a +millionaire--we all took to him. + +Well, when the news got out that I wuz goin' to visit Washington, D.C., all +the neighbors wanted to send errents by me. Betsy Bobbet Slimpsey wanted a +dozen Patent Office books for scrap books for her poetry. + +Uncle Nate Gowdey wanted me to go to the Agricultural Buro and git him a +paper of lettuce seed. And Solomon Sypher wanted me to git him a new kind +of string beans and some cowcumber seeds. + +Uncle Jarvis Bentley, who wuz goin' to paint his house, wanted me to ask +the President what kind of paint he used on the White House. He thought it +ort to be a extra kind to stand the sharp glare that wuz beatin' down on it +constant, and to ask him if he didn't think the paint would last longer and +the glare be mollified some if they used pure white and clear ile in it, +and left off whitewash and karseen. + +Ardelia Rumsey, who is goin' to be married, wanted me, if I see any new +kinds of bedquilt patterns at the White House or the Senator's housen, to +git patterns for 'em. She said she wuz sick of sun flowers and blazin' +stars. She thought mebby they'd have sunthin' new, spread eagle style. She +said her feller wuz goin' to be connected with the Govermunt and she +thought it would be appropriate. + +And I asked her how. And she said he wuz goin' to git a patent on a new +kind of jack knife. + +I told her that if she wanted a govermunt quilt and wanted it appropriate +she ort to have a crazy quilt. + +And she said she had jest finished a crazy quilt with seven thousand +pieces of silk in it, and each piece trimmed with seven hundred stitches +of feather stitchin'--she'd counted 'em. And then I remembered seein' it. +There wuz a petition fer wimmen's rights and I remember Ardelia couldn't +sign it for lack of time. She wanted to, but she hadn't got the quilt more +than half done. It took the biggest heft of two years to do it. And so less +important things had to be put aside. + +And Ardelia's mother wanted to sign it, but she couldn't owin' to a +bed-spread she wuz makin'. She wuz quiltin' in Noah's Ark and all the +animals on a Turkey red quilt. I remember she wuz quiltin' the camel that +day and couldn't be disturbed, so we didn't git the names. It took the old +lady three years, and when it wuz done it wuz a sight to behold, though I +wouldn't want to sleep under so many animals. But folks went from fur and +near to see it, and I enjoyed lookin' at it that day. + +Zebulin Coon wanted me to carry a new hen coop of hisen to git patented. +And I thought to myself I wonder if they will ask me to carry a cow. + +And sure enough Elnathan Purdy wanted me to dicker for a calf from Mount +Vernon, swop one of his yearlin's for it. + +But the errents Serepta Pester sent wuz fur more hefty and momentous than +all the rest put together, calves, hen coop, cow and all. + +And when she told 'em over to me, and I meditated on her reasons for +sendin' 'em and her need of havin' 'em done, I felt that I would do the +errents for her if a breath wuz left in my body. She come for a all day's +visit; and though she is a vegetable widow and humbly, I wuz middlin' glad +to see her. But thinkses I as I carried her things into my bedroom, "She'll +want to send some errent by me"; and I wondered what it would be. + +And so it didn't surprise me when she asked me if I would lobby a little +for her in Washington. I spozed it wuz some new kind of tattin' or fancy +work. I told her I shouldn't have much time but would try to git her some +if I could. + +And she said she wanted me to lobby myself. And then I thought mebby it wuz +a new kind of dance and told her, "I wuz too old to lobby, I hadn't lobbied +a step since I wuz married." + +And then she explained she wanted me to canvas some of the Senators. + +And I hung back and asked her in a cautious tone, "How many she wanted +canvassed, and how much canvas it would take?" + +I had a good many things to buy for my tower, and though I wanted to +obleege Serepta, I didn't feel like runnin' into any great expense for +canvas. + +And then she broke off from that subject, and said she wanted her rights +and wanted the Whiskey Ring broke up. + +And she talked a sight about her children, and how bad she felt to be +parted from 'em, and how she used to worship her husband and how her +hull life wuz ruined and the Whiskey Ring had done it, that and wimmen's +helpless condition under the law and she cried and wep' and I did. And +right while I wuz cryin' onto that gingham apron, she made me promise to +carry them two errents of hern to the President and git 'em done for her if +I possibly could. + +She wanted the Whiskey Ring destroyed and her rights, and she wanted 'em +both inside of two weeks. + +I told her I didn't believe she could git 'em done inside that length of +time, but I would tell the President about it, and I thought more'n likely +as not he would want to do right by her. "And," sez I, "if he sets out to, +he can haul them babies of yourn out of that Ring pretty sudden." + +And then to git her mind offen her sufferin's, I asked how her sister Azuba +wuz gittin' along? I hadn't heard from her for years. She married Phileman +Clapsaddle, and Serepty spoke out as bitter as a bitter walnut, and sez +she: + +"She's in the poor-house." + +"Why, Serepta Pester!" sez I, "what do you mean?" + +"I mean what I say, my sister, Azuba Clapsaddle, is in the poor-house." + +"Why, where is their property gone?" sez I. "They wuz well off. Azuba had +five thousand dollars of her own when she married him." + +"I know it," sez she, "and I can tell you, Josiah Alien's wife, where their +property has gone, it has gone down Phileman Clapsaddle's throat. Look down +that man's throat and you will see 150 acres of land, a good house and +barn, twenty sheep and forty head of cattle." + +"Why-ee!" sez I. + +"Yes, and you'll see four mules, a span of horses, two buggies, a double +sleigh, and three buffalo robes. He's drinked 'em all up, and two horse +rakes, a cultivator, and a thrashin' machine." + +"Why-ee!" sez I agin. "And where are the children?" + +"The boys have inherited their father's habits and drink as bad as he duz +and the oldest girl has gone to the bad." + +"Oh dear! oh dear me!" sez I, and we both sot silent for a spell. And then +thinkin' I must say sunthin' and wantin' to strike a safe subject and a +good lookin' one, I sez: + +"Where is your Aunt Cassandra's girl? That pretty girl I see to your house +once?" + +"That girl is in the lunatick asylum." + +"Serepta Pester," sez I, "be you tellin' the truth?" + +"Yes, I be, the livin' truth. She went to New York to buy millinery goods +for her mother's store. It wuz quite cool when she left home and she hadn't +took off her winter clothes, and it come on brilin' hot in the city, and in +goin' about from store to store the heat and hard work overcome her and she +fell down in a sort of faintin' fit and wuz called drunk and dragged off to +a police court by a man who wuz a animal in human shape. And he misused her +in such a way that she never got over the horror of what befell her when +she come to to find herself at the mercy of a brute in a man's shape. She +went into a melancholy madness and wuz sent to the asylum." + +I sithed a long and mournful sithe and sot silent agin for quite a spell. +But thinkin' I must be sociable I sez: + +"Your aunt Cassandra is well, I spoze?" + +"She is moulderin' in jail," sez she. + +"In jail? Cassandra in jail!" + +"Yes, in jail." And Serepta's tone wuz now like worm-wood and gall. + +"You know she owns a big property in tenement houses and other buildings +where she lives. Of course her taxes wuz awful high, and she didn't expect +to have any voice in tellin' how that money, a part of her own property +that she earned herself in a store, should be used. But she had been +taxed high for new sidewalks in front of some of her buildin's. And then +another man come into power in that ward, and he naterally wanted to make +some money out of her, so he ordered her to build new sidewalks. And she +wouldn't tear up a good sidewalk to please him or anybody else, so she wuz +put to jail for refusin' to comply with the law." + +Thinkses I, I don't believe the law would have been so hard on her if she +hadn't been so humbly. The Pesters are a humbly lot. But I didn't think it +out loud, and didn't ophold the law for feelin' so. I sez in pityin' tones, +for I wuz truly sorry for Cassandra Keeler: + +"How did it end?" + +"It hain't ended," sez she, "it only took place a month ago and she has got +her grit up and won't pay; and no knowin' how it will end; she lays there +amoulderin'." + +I don't believe Cassanda wuz mouldy, but that is Serepta's way of talkin', +very flowery. + +"Well," sez I, "do you think the weather is goin' to moderate?" + +I truly felt that I dassent speak to her about any human bein' under the +sun, not knowin' what turn she would give to the talk, bein' so embittered. +But I felt that the weather wuz safe, and cotton stockin's, and hens, and +factory cloth, and I kep' her down on them for more'n two hours. + +But good land! I can't blame her for bein' embittered agin men and the laws +they've made, for it seems as if I never see a human creeter so afflicted +as Serepta Pester has been all her life. + +Why, her sufferin's date back before she wuz born, and that's goin' pretty +fur back. Her father and mother had some difficulty and he wuz took down +with billerous colick, voylent four weeks before Serepta wuz born. And some +think it wuz the hardness between 'em and some think it wuz the gripin' of +the colick when he made his will, anyway he willed Serepta away, boy or +girl whichever it wuz, to his brother up on the Canada line. + +So when Serepta wuz born (and born a girl ontirely onbeknown to her) she +wuz took right away from her mother and gin to this brother. Her mother +couldn't help herself, he had the law on his side. But it killed her. +She drooped away and died before the baby wuz a year old. She wuz a +affectionate, tenderhearted woman and her husband wuz overbearin' and +stern always. + +But it wuz this last move of hisen that killed her, for it is pretty tough +on a mother to have her baby, a part of her own life, took right out of +her own arms and gin to a stranger. For this uncle of hern wuz a entire +stranger to Serepta, and almost like a stranger to her father, for he +hadn't seen him since he wuz a boy, but knew he hadn't any children and +spozed that he wuz rich and respectable. But the truth wuz he had been +runnin' down every way, had lost his property and his character, wuz +dissipated and mean. But the will wuz made and the law stood. Men are +ashamed now to think that the law wuz ever in voge, but it wuz, and is now +in some of the states, and the poor young mother couldn't help herself. It +has always been the boast of our American law that it takes care of wimmen. +It took care of her. It held her in its strong protectin' grasp so tight +that the only way she could slip out of it wuz to drop into the grave, +which she did in a few months. Then it leggo. + +But it kep' holt of Serepta, it bound her tight to her uncle while he run +through with what property she had, while he sunk lower and lower until at +last he needed the very necessaries of life and then he bound her out to +work to a woman who kep' a drinkin' den and the lowest hant of vice. + +Twice Serepta run away, bein' virtuous but humbly, but them strong +protectin' arms of the law that had held her mother so tight reached out +and dragged her back agin. Upheld by them her uncle could compel her to +give her service wherever he wanted her to work, and he wuz owin' this +woman and she wanted Serepta's work, so she had to submit. + +But the third time she made a effort so voyalent that she got away. A +good woman, who bein' nothin' but a woman couldn't do anything towards +onclinchin' them powerful arms that wuz protectin' her, helped her to slip +through 'em. And Serepta come to Jonesville to live with a sister of that +good woman; changed her name so's it wouldn't be so easy to find her; grew +up to be a nice industrious girl. And when the woman she wuz took by died +she left Serepta quite a handsome property. + +And finally she married Lank Burpee, and did considerable well it wuz +spozed. Her property, put with what little he had, made 'em a comfortable +home and they had two pretty children, a boy and a girl. But when the +little girl wuz a baby he took to drinkin', neglected his bizness, got +mixed up with a whiskey ring, whipped Serepta--not so very hard. He went +accordin' to law, and the law of the United States don't approve of a man's +whippin' his wife enough to endanger her life, it sez it don't. He made +every move of hisen lawful and felt that Serepta hadn't ort to complain +and feel hurt. But a good whippin' will make anybody feel hurt, law or no +law. And then he parted with her and got her property and her two little +children. Why, it seemed as if everything under the sun and moon, that +could happen to a woman, had happened to Serepta, painful things and +gauldin'. + +Jest before Lank parted with her, she fell on a broken sidewalk: some +think he tripped her up, but it never wuz proved. But anyway Serepta fell +and broke her hip hone; and her husband sued the corporation and got ten +thousand dollars for it. Of course the law give the money to him and she +never got a cent of it. But she wouldn't have made any fuss over that, +knowin' that the law of the United States wuz such. But what made it so +awful mortifyin' to her wuz, that while she wuz layin' there achin' in +splints, he took that very money and used it to court up another woman +with. Gin her presents, jewelry, bunnets, head-dresses, artificial flowers +out of Serepta's own hip money. + +And I don't know as anything could be much more gauldin' to a woman than +that--while she lay there groanin' in splints, to have her husband take the +money for her own broken bones and dress up another woman like a doll with +it. + +But the law gin it to him, and he wuz only availin' himself of the glorious +liberty of our free Republic, and doin' as he wuz a mind to. And it wuz +spozed that that very hip money wuz what made the match. For before she wuz +fairly out of splints he got a divorce from her and married agin. And by +the help of Serepta's hip money and the Whiskey Ring he got her two little +children away from her. + + + + +II + +"THEY CAN'T BLAME HER" + + +And I wonder if there is a woman in the land that can blame Serepta for +gittin' mad and wantin' her rights and wantin' the Whiskey Ring broke up, +when they think how she's been fooled round with by men; willed away, and +whipped, and parted with, and stole from. Why, they can't blame her for +feelin' fairly savage about 'em, as she duz. + +For as she sez to me once, when we wuz talkin' it over, how everything had +happened to her. "Yes," sez she, with a axent like bone-set and vinegar, +"and what few things hain't happened to me has happened to my folks." + +And sure enough I couldn't dispute her. Trouble and wrongs and sufferin's +seemed to be epidemic in the race of Pester wimmen. Why, one of her aunts +on her father's side, Huldah Pester, married for her first husband, +Eliphelet Perkins. He wuz a minister, rode on a circuit, and he took Huldah +on it too, and she rode round with him on it a good deal of the time. But +she never loved to, she wuz a woman that loved to be still, and kinder +settled down at home. + +But she loved Eliphelet so well that she would do anything to please him, +so she rode round with him on that circuit till she wuz perfectly fagged +out. + +He wuz a dretful good man to her, but he wuz kinder poor and they had hard +times to git along. But what property they had wuzn't taxed, so that helped +some, and Huldah would make one dollar go a good ways. + +No, their property wuzn't taxed till Eliphelet died. Then the supervisor +taxed it the very minute the breath left his body; run his horse, so it wuz +said, so's to be sure to git it onto the tax list, and comply with the law. + +You see Eliphelet's salary stopped when his breath did. And I spoze the +law thought, seein' she wuz havin' trouble, she might jest as well have a +little more; so it taxed all the property it never had taxed a cent for +before. + +But she had this to console her that the law didn't forgit her in her +widowhood. No; the law is quite thoughtful of wimmen by spells. It sez it +protects wimmen. And I spoze that in some mysterious way, too deep for +wimmen to understand, it wuz protectin' her now. + +Well, she suffered along and finally married agin. I wondered why she did. +But she wuz such a quiet, home-lovin' woman that it wuz spozed she wanted +to settle down and be kinder still and sot. But of all the bad luck she +had. She married on short acquaintance, and he proved to be a perfect +wanderer. He couldn't keep still, it wuz spozed to be a mark. + +He moved Huldah thirteen times in two years, and at last he took her into +a cart, a sort of covered wagon, and traveled right through the western +states with her. He wanted to see the country and loved to live in the +wagon, it wuz his make. And, of course, the law give him control of her +body, and she had to go where he moved it, or else part with him. And +I spoze the law thought it wuz guardin' and nourishin' her when it wuz +joltin' her over them prairies and mountains and abysses. But it jest kep' +her shook up the hull of the time. + +It wuz the regular Pester luck. + +And then another of her aunts, Drusilly Pester, married a industrious, +hard-workin' man, one that never drinked, wuz sound on the doctrines, and +give good measure to his customers, he wuz a groceryman. And a master hand +for wantin' to foller the laws of his country as tight as laws could be +follered. And so knowin' that the law approved of moderate correction for +wimmen, and that "a man might whip his wife, but not enough to endanger her +life"; he bein' such a master hand for wantin' to do everything faithful +and do his very best for his customers, it wuz spozed he wanted to do the +best for the law, and so when he got to whippin' Drusilly, he would whip +her too severe, he would be too faithful to it. + +You see what made him whip her at all wuz she wuz cross to him. They had +nine little children, she thought two or three children would be about all +one woman could bring up well by hand, when that hand wuz so stiff and sore +with hard work. + +But he had read some scareful talk from high quarters about Race Suicide. +Some men do git real wrought up about it and want everybody to have all the +children they can, jest as fast as they can, though wimmen don't all feel +so. + +Aunt Hetty Sidman said, "If men had to born 'em and nuss 'em themselves, +she didn't spoze they would be so enthusiastick about it after they had +had a few, 'specially if they done their own housework themselves," and +Aunt Hetty said that some of the men who wuz exhortin' wimmen to have big +families, had better spend some of their strength and wind in tryin' to +make this world a safer place for children to be born into. + +She said they'd be better off in Nonentity than here in this world with +saloons on every corner, and war-dogs howlin' at 'em. + +I don't know exactly what she meant by Nonentity, but guess she meant the +world we all stay in, before we are born into this one. + +Aunt Hetty has lost five boys, two by battle and three by licensed saloons, +that makes her talk real bitter, but to resoom. I told Josiah that men +needn't worry about Race Suicide, for you might as well try to stop a hen +from makin' a nest, as to stop wimmen from wantin' a baby to love and hold +on her heart. But sez I, "Folks ort to be moderate and mejum in babies as +well as in everything else." + +But Drusilly's husband wanted twelve boys he said, to be law-abidin' +citizens as their Pa wuz, and a protection to the Govermunt, and to be +ready to man the new warships, if a war broke out. But her babies wuz +real pretty and cunning, and she wuz so weak-minded she couldn't enjoy +the thought that if our male statesmen got to scrappin' with some other +nation's male law-makers and made another war, of havin' her grown-up +babies face the cannons. I spoze it wuz when she wuz so awful tired she +felt so. + +You see she had to do every mite of her housework, and milk cows, and make +butter and cheese, and cook and wash and scour, and take all the care of +the children day and night in sickness and health, and make their clothes +and keep 'em clean. And when there wuz so many of 'em and she enjoyin' real +poor health, I spoze she sometimes thought more of her own achin' back than +she did of the good of the Govermunt--and she would git kinder discouraged +sometimes and be cross to him. And knowin' his own motives wuz so high and +loyal, he felt that he ort to whip her, so he did. + +And what shows that Drusilly wuzn't so bad after all and did have her good +streaks and a deep reverence for the law is, that she stood his whippin's +first-rate, and never whipped him. Now she wuz fur bigger than he wuz, +weighed eighty pounds the most, and might have whipped him if the law had +been such. But they wuz both law-abidin' and wanted to keep every preamble, +so she stood it to be whipped, and never once whipped him in all the +seventeen years they lived together. She died when her twelfth child wuz +born. There wuz jest ten months difference between that and the one next +older. And they said she often spoke out in her last sickness, and said, +"Thank fortune, I've always kep' the law!" And they said the same thought +wuz a great comfort to him in his last moments. He died about a year after +she did, leavin' his second wife with twins and a good property. + +Then there wuz Abagail Pester. She married a sort of a high-headed man, +though one that paid his debts, wuz truthful, good lookin', and played well +on the fiddle. Why, it seemed as if he had almost every qualification for +makin' a woman happy, only he had this one little eccentricity, he would +lock up Abagail's clothes every time he got mad at her. + +Of course the law give her clothes to him, and knowin' that it wuz the +law in the state where they lived, she wouldn't have complained only when +they had company. But it wuz mortifyin', nobody could dispute it, to have +company come and have nothin' to put on. Several times she had to withdraw +into the woodhouse, and stay most all day there shiverin', and under the +suller stairs and round in clothes presses. But he boasted in prayer +meetin's and on boxes before grocery stores that he wuz a law-abidin' +citizen, and he wuz. Eben Flanders wouldn't lie for anybody. + +But I'll bet Abagail Flanders beat our old revolutionary four-mothers in +thinkin' out new laws, when she lay round under stairs and behind barrels +in her night-gown. When a man hides his wife's stockin's and petticoats +it is governin' without the consent of the governed. If you don't believe +it you'd ort to peeked round them barrels and seen Abagail's eyes, they +had hull reams of by-laws in 'em and preambles, and Declarations of +Independence, so I've been told. But it beat everything I ever hearn on, +the lawful sufferin's of them wimmen. For there wuzn't nothin' illegal +about one single trouble of theirn. They suffered accordin' to law, every +one on 'em. But it wuz tuff for 'em, very tuff. And their bein' so dretful +humbly wuz another drawback to 'em, though that too wuz perfectly lawful, +as everybody knows. + +And Serepta looked as bad agin as she would otherwise on account of her +teeth. It wuz after Lank had begun to git after this other woman, and wuz +indifferent to his wife's looks that Serepta had a new set of teeth on her +upper jaw. And they sot out and made her look so bad it fairly made her +ache to look at herself in the glass. And they hurt her gooms too, and she +carried 'em back to the dentist and wanted him to make her another set, but +he acted mean and wouldn't take 'em back, and sued Lank for the pay. And +they had a law-suit. And the law bein' such that a woman can't testify in +court, in any matter that is of mutual interest to husband and wife, and +Lank wantin' to act mean, said that they wuz good sound teeth. + +And there Serepta sot right in front of 'em with her gooms achin' and her +face all swelled out, and lookin' like furiation, and couldn't say a word. +But she had to give in to the law. And ruther than go toothless she wears +'em to this day, and I believe it is the raspin' of them teeth aginst her +gooms and her discouraged, mad feelin's every time she looks in the glass +that helps embitter her towards men, and the laws men have made, so's a +woman can't have control of her own teeth and her own bones. + +Serepta went home about 5 P.M., I promisin' sacred to do her errents for +her. + +And I gin a deep, happy sithe after I shot the door behind her, and I sez +to Josiah I do hope that's the very last errent we will have to carry to +Washington, D.C., for the Jonesvillians. + +"Yes," says he, "an' I guess I will get a fresh pail of water and hang on +the tea kettle for you." + +"And," I says, "it's pretty early for supper, but I'll start it, for I do +feel kinder gone to the stomach. Sympathy is real exhaustin'. Sometimes I +think it tires me more'n hard work. And Heaven knows I sympathized with +Serepta. I felt for her full as much as if she was one of the relations on +_his_ side." + +But if you'll believe it, I had hardly got the words out of my mouth and +Josiah had jest laid holt of the water pail, when in comes Philander +Dagget, the President of the Jonesville Creation Searchin' Society and, of +course, he had a job for us to do on our tower. This Society was started +by the leadin' men of Jonesville, for the purpose of searchin' out and +criticizin' the affairs of the world, an' so far as possible advisin' and +correctin' the meanderin's an' wrong-doin's of the universe. + +This Society, which we call the C.S.S. for short, has been ruther quiet for +years. But sence woman's suffrage has got to be such a prominent question, +they bein' so bitterly opposed to it, have reorganized and meet every once +in a while, to sneer at the suffragettes and poke fun at 'em and show in +every way they can their hitter antipathy to the cause. + +Philander told me if I see anything new and strikin' in the way of Society +badges and regalia, to let him know about it, for he said the C.S.S. was +goin' to take a decided stand and show their colors. They wuz goin' to +help protect his women endangered sect, an' he wanted sunthin' showy and +suggestive. + +I thought of a number of badges and mottoes that I felt would be suitable +for this Society, but dassent tell 'em to him, for his idees and mine on +this subject are as fur apart as the two poles. He talked awful bitter to +me once about it, and I sez to him: + +"Philander, the world is full of good men, and there are also bad men in +the world, and, sez I, did you ever in your born days see a bad man that +wuzn't opposed to Woman's Suffrage? All the men who trade in, and profit +by, the weakness and sin of men and women, they every one of 'em, to +a man, fight agin it. And would they do this if they didn't think that +their vile trades would suffer if women had the right to vote? It is the +great-hearted, generous, noble man who wants women to become a real citizen +with himself--which she is not now--she is only a citizen just enough to be +taxed equally with man, or more exhorbitantly, and be punished and executed +by the law she has no hand in makin'." + +Philander sed, "I have always found it don't pay to talk with women on +matters they don't understand." + +An' he got up and started for the door, an' Josiah sed, "No, it don't pay, +not a cent; I've always said so." + +But I told Philander I'd let him know if I see anything appropriate to the +C.S.S. Holdin' back with a almost Herculaneum effort the mottoes and +badges that run through my mind as bein' appropriate to their society; +knowin' it would make him so mad if I told him of 'em--he never would +neighbor with us again. And in three days' time we sot sail. We got to +the depo about an hour too early, but I wuz glad we wuz on time, for it +would have worked Josiah up dretfully ef we hadn't been, for he had spent +most of the latter part of the night in gittin' up and walkin' out to the +clock seein' if it wuz train time. Jest before we started, who should come +runnin' down to the depo but Sam Nugent wantin' to send a errent by me to +Washington. He wunk me out to one side of the waitin' room, and ast "if I'd +try to git him a license to steal horses." + +It kinder runs in the blood of the Nugents to love to steal, and he owned +up it did, but he said he wanted the profit of it. But I told him I +wouldn't do any sech thing, an' I looked at him in such a witherin' way +that I should most probable withered him, only he is blind in one side, and +I wuz on the blind side, but he argued with me, and said that it wuz no +worse than to give licenses for other kinds of meanness. + +He said they give licenses now to steal--steal folkses senses away, and +then they could steal everything else, and murder and tear round into every +kind of wickedness. But he didn't ask that. He wanted things done fair and +square: he jest wanted to steal horses. He wuz goin' West, and he thought +he could do a good bizness, and lay up somethin'. If he had a license he +shouldn't be afraid of bein' shet up or shot. + +But I refused the job with scorn; and jest as I wuz refusin', the cars +snorted, and I wuz glad they did. They seemed to express in that wild snort +something of the indignation I felt. + +The idee! + + + + +III + +"POLLY'S EYES CROWED TENDER" + + +Lorinda wuz dretful glad to see us and so wuz her husband and Polly. But +the Reunion had to be put off on account of a spell her husband wuz havin'. +Lorinda said she could not face such a big company as she'd invited while +Hiram wuz havin' a spell, and I agreed with her. + +Sez I, "Never, never, would I have invited company whilst Josiah wuz +sufferin' with one of his cricks." + +Men hain't patient under pain, and outsiders hain't no bizness to hear +things they say and tell on 'em. So Polly had to write to the relations +puttin' off the Reunion for one week. But Lorinda kep' on cookin' fruit +cake and such that would keep, she had plenty of help, but loved to do her +company cookin' herself. And seein' the Reunion wuz postponed and Lorinda +had time on her hands, I proposed she should go with me to the big out-door +meetin' of the Suffragists, which wuz held in a nigh-by city. + +"Good land!" sez she, "nothin' would tempt me to patronize anything so +brazen and onwomanly as a out-door meetin' of wimmen, and so onhealthy and +immodest." I see she looked reproachfully at Polly as she said it. Polly +wuz arrangin' some posies in a vase, and looked as sweet as the posies did, +but considerable firm too, and I see from Lorinda's looks that Polly wuz +one who had to leave father and mother for principle's sake. + +But I sez, "You're cookin' this minute, Lorinda, for a out-door meetin'" +(she wuz makin' angel cake). "And why is this meetin' any more onwomanly or +immodest than the camp-meetin' where you wuz converted, and baptized the +next Sunday in the creek?" + +"Oh, them wuz religious meetin's," sez she. + +"Well," sez I, "mebby these wimmen think their meetin' is religious. You +know the Bible sez, 'Faith and works should go together,' and some of the +leaders of this movement have showed by their works as religious a sperit +and wielded aginst injustice to young workin' wimmen as powerful a weepon +as that axe of the 'Postles the Bible tells about. And you said you went +every day to the Hudson-Fulton doin's and hearn every out-door lecture; you +writ me that there wuz probable a million wimmen attendin' them out-door +meetin's, and that wuz curosity and pleasure huntin' that took them, and +this is a meetin' of justice and right." + +"Oh, shaw!" sez Lorinda agin, with her eye on Polly. "Wimmen have all the +rights they want or need." Lorinda's husband bein' rich and lettin' her +have her way she is real foot loose, and don't feel the need of any more +rights for herself, but I told her then and there some of the wrongs and +sufferin's of Serepta Pester, and bein' good-hearted (but obstinate and +bigoted) she gin in that the errents wuz hefty, and that Serepta wuz to be +pitied, but she insisted that wimmen's votin' wouldn't help matters. + +But Euphrasia Pottle, a poor relation from Troy, spoke up. "After my +husband died one of my girls went into a factory and gits about half what +the men git for the same work, and my oldest girl who teaches in the +public school don't git half as much for the same work as men do, and her +school rooms are dark, stuffy, onhealthy, and crowded so the children are +half-choked for air, and the light so poor they're havin' their eyesight +spilte for life, and new school books not needed at all, are demanded +constantly, so some-one can make money." + +"Yes," sez I, "do you spoze, Lorinda, if intelligent mothers helped control +such things they would let their children be made sick and blind and the +money that should be used for food for poor hungry children be squandered +on _on_-necessary books they are too faint with hunger to study." + +"But wimmen's votin' wouldn't help in such things," sez Lorinda, as she +stirred her angel cake vigorously. + +But Euphrasia sez, "My niece, Ellen, teaches in a state where wimmen vote +and she gits the same wages men git for the same work, and her school rooms +are bright and pleasant and sanitary, and the pupils, of course, are well +and happy. And if you don't think wimmen can help in such public matters +just go to Seattle and see how quick a bad man wuz yanked out of his public +office and a good man put in his place, mostly by wimmen's efforts and +votes." + +"Yes," sez I, "it is a proved fact that wimmen's votes do help in these +matters. And do you think, Lorinda, that if educated, motherly, thoughtful +wimmen helped make the laws so many little children would be allowed to +toil in factories and mines, their tender shoulders bearin' the burden of +constant labor that wears out the iron muscles of men?" + +Polly's eyes growed tender and wistful, and her little white hands +lingered over her posies, and I knowed the hard lot of the poor, the +wrongs of wimmen and children, the woes of humanity, wuz pressin' down +on her generous young heart. And I could see in her sweet face the brave +determination to do and to dare, to try to help ondo the wrongs, and try to +lift the burdens from weak and achin' shoulders. But Lorinda kep' on with +the same old moth-eaten argument so broke down and feeble it ort to be +allowed to die in peace. + +"Woman's suffrage would make women neglect their homes and housework and +let their children run loose into ruin." + +I knowed she said it partly on Polly's account, but I sez in surprise, +"Why, Lorinda, it must be you hain't read up on the subject or you would +know wherever wimmen has voted they have looked out first of all for the +children's welfare. They have raised the age of consent, have closed +saloons and other places of licensed evil, and in every way it has been +their first care to help 'em to safer and more moral surroundin's, for who +has the interest of children more at heart than the mothers who bore them, +children who are the light of their eyes and the hope of the future." + +Lorinda admitted that the state of the children in the homes of the poor +and ignorant wuz pitiful. "But," sez she, "the Bible sez 'ye shall always +have the poor with you,' and I spoze we always shall, with all their +sufferin's and wants. But," sez she, "in well-to-do homes the children are +safe and well off, and don't need any help from woman legislation." + +"Why, Lorinda," sez I, "did you ever think on't how such mothers may +watch over and be the end of the law to their children with the father's +full consent during infancy when they're wrastlin' with teethin', +whoopin'-cough, mumps, etc., can be queen of the nursery, dispensor of +pure air, sunshine, sanitary, and safe surroundin's in every way, and then +in a few years see 'em go from her into dark, overcrowded, unsanitary, +carelessly guarded places, to spend the precious hours when they are the +most receptive to influence and pass man-made pitfalls on their way to and +fro, must stand helpless until in too many cases the innocent healthy child +that went from her care returns to her half-blind, a physical and moral +wreck. The mother who went down to death's door for 'em, and had most to do +in mouldin' their destiny during infancy should have at least equal rights +with the father in controllin' their surroundin's during their entire +youth, and to do this she must have equal legal power or her best efforts +are wasted. That this is just and right is as plain to me as the nose on my +face and folks will see it bom-bye and wonder they didn't before. + +"And wimmen who suffer most by the lack on't, will be most interested in +openin' schools to teach the fine art of domestic service, teachin' young +girls how to keep healthy comfortable homes and fit themselves to be +capable wives and mothers. I don't say or expect that wimmen's votin' will +make black white, or wash all the stains from the legislative body at once, +but I say that jest the effort to git wimmen's suffrage has opened hundreds +of bolted doors and full suffrage will open hundreds more. And I'm goin' to +that woman's suffrage meetin' if I walk afoot." + +But here Josiah spoke up, I thought he wuz asleep, he wuz layin' on the +lounge with a paper over his face. But truly the word, "Woman's Suffrage," +rousts him up as quick as a mouse duz a drowsy cat, so, sez he, "I can't +let you go, Samantha, into any such dangerous and onwomanly affair." + +"Let?" sez I in a dry voice; "that's a queer word from one old pardner to +another." + +"I'm responsible for your safety, Samantha, and if anybody goes to that +dangerous and onseemly meetin' I will. Mebby Polly would like to go with +me." As stated, Polly is as pretty as a pink posy, and no matter how old +a man is, nor how interestin' and noble his pardner is, he needs girl +blinders, yes, he needs 'em from the cradle to the grave. But few, indeed, +are the female pardners who can git him to wear 'em. + +He added, "You know I represent you legally, Samantha; what I do is jest +the same as though you did it." + +Sez I, "Mebby that is law, but whether it is gospel is another question. +But if you represent me, Josiah, you will have to carry out my plans; I +writ to Diantha Smith Trimble that if I went to the city I'd take care of +Aunt Susan a night or two, and rest her a spell; you know Diantha is a +widder and too poor to hire a nurse. But seein' you represent me you can +set up with her Ma a night or two; she's bed-rid and you'll have to lift +her round some, and give her her medicine and take care of Diantha's twins, +and let her git a good sleep." + +"Well, as it were--Samantha--you know--men hain't expected to represent +wimmen in everything, it is mostly votin' and tendin' big meetin's and +such." + +"Oh, I see," sez I; "men represent wimmen when they want to, and when they +don't wimmen have got to represent themselves." + +"Well, yes, Samantha, sunthin' like that." + +He didn't say anything more about representin' me, and Polly said she +wuz goin' to ride in the parade with some other college girls. Lorinda's +linement looked dark and forbiddin' as Polly stated in her gentle, but firm +way this ultimatum. Lorinda hated the idee of Polly's jinin' in what she +called onwomanly and immodest doin's, but I looked beamin'ly at her and +gloried in her principles. + +After she went out Lorinda said to me in a complainin' way, "I should +think that a girl that had every comfort and luxury would be contented and +thankful, and be willin' to stay to home and act like a lady." + +Sez I, "Nothin' could keep Polly from actin' like a lady, and mebby it is +because she is so well off herself that makes her sorry for other young +girls that have nothin' but poverty and privation." + +"Oh, nonsense!" sez Lorinda. But I knowed jest how it wuz. Polly bein' +surrounded by all the good things money could give, and bein' so +tender-hearted her heart ached for other young girls, who had to spend the +springtime of their lives in the hard work of earnin' bread for themselves +and dear ones, and she longed to help 'em to livin' wages, so they +could exist without the wages of sin, and too many on 'em had to choose +between them black wages and starvation. She wanted to help 'em to better +surroundin's and she knowed the best weepon she could put into their hands +to fight the wolves of Want and Temptation, wuz the ballot. Polly hain't a +mite like her Ma, she favors the Smiths more, her grand-ma on her pa's side +wuz a Smith and a woman of brains and principle. + +Durin' my conversation with Lorinda, I inquired about Royal Gray, for as +stated, he wuz a great favorite of ourn, and I found out (and I could see +it gaulded her) that when Polly united with the Suffragists he shied off +some, and went to payin' attention to another girl. Whether it wuz to make +Polly jealous and bring her round to his way of thinkin', I didn't know, +but mistrusted, for I could have took my oath that he loved Polly deeply +and truly. To be sure he hadn't confided in me, but there is a language +of the eyes, when the soul speaks through 'em, and as I'd seen him look +at Polly my own soul had hearn and understood that silent language and +translated it, that Polly wuz the light of his eyes, and the one woman in +the world for him. And I couldn't think his heart had changed so sudden. +But knowin' as I did the elastic nature of manly affection, I felt +dubersome. + +This other girl, Maud Vincent, always said to her men friends, it wuz +onwomanly to try to vote. She wuz one of the girls who always gloried in +bein' a runnin' vine when there wuz any masculine trees round to lean +on and twine about. One who always jined in with all the idees they +promulgated, from neckties to the tariff, who declared cigar smoke wuz so +agreeable and welcome; it did really make her deathly sick, but she would +choke herself cheerfully and willin'ly if by so chokin' she could gain +manly favor and admiration. + +She said she didn't believe in helpin' poor girls, they wuz well enough +off as it wuz, she wuz sure they didn't feel hunger and cold as rich girls +did, their skin wuz thicker and their stomachs different and stronger, and +constant labor didn't harm them, and working girls didn't need recreation +as rich girls did, and woman's suffrage wouldn't help them any; in her +opinion it would harm them, and anyway the poor wuz on-grateful. + +She had the usual arguments on the tip of her tongue, for old Miss Vincent, +the aunt she lived with, wuz a ardent She Aunty and very prominent in the +public meetin's the She Auntys have to try to compel the Suffragists not +to have public meetin's. They talk a good deal in public how onwomanly +and immodest it is for wimmen to talk in public. And she wuz one of the +foremost ones in tryin' to git up a school to teach wimmen civics, to prove +that they mustn't ever have anything to do with civics. + +Yes, old Miss Vincent wuz a real active, ardent She Aunty, and Maud +Genevieve takes after her. Royal Gray, his handsome attractive personality, +and his millions, had long been the goal of Maud's ambition. And how +ardently did she hail the coolness growing between him and Polly, the +little rift in the lute, and how zealously did she labor to make it larger. + +Polly and Royal had had many an argument on the subject, that is, he would +begin by makin' fun of the Suffragists and their militant doin's, which if +he'd thought on't wuz sunthin' like what his old revolutionary forbears +went through for the same reasons, bein' taxed without representation, and +bein' burdened and punished by the law they had no voice in making, only +the Suffragettes are not nearly so severe with their opposers, they haven't +drawed any blood yet. Why, them old Patriots we revere so, would consider +their efforts for freedom exceedingly gentle and tame compared to their own +bloody battles. + +And Royal would make light of the efforts of college girls to help workin' +girls, and the encouragement and aid they'd gin 'em when they wuz strikin' +for less death-dealin' hours of labor, and livin' wages, and so forth. I +don't see how such a really noble young man as Royal ever come to argy that +way, but spoze it wuz the dead hand of some rough onreasonable old ancestor +reachin' up out of the shadows of the past and pushin' him on in the wrong +direction. + +So when he begun to ridicule what Polly's heart wuz sot on, when she felt +that he wuz fightin' agin right and justice, before they knowed it both +pairs of bright eyes would git to flashin' out angry sparks, and hash words +would be said on both sides. That old long-buried Tory ancestor of hisen +eggin' him on, so I spoze, and Polly's generous sperit rebellin' aginst the +injustice and selfishness, and mebby some warlike ancestor of hern pushin' +her on to say hash things. 'Tennyrate he had grown less attentive to her, +and wuz bestowin' his time and attentions elsewhere. + +And when she told him she wuz goin' to ride in the automobile parade of the +suffragists, but really ridin' she felt towards truth and justice to half +the citizens of the U.S., he wuz mad as a wet hen, a male wet hen, and wuz +bound she shouldn't go. + +Some men, and mebby it is love that makes 'em feel so (they say it is), and +mebby it is selfishness (though they won't own up to it), but they want +the women they love to belong to them alone, want to rule absolutely over +their hearts, their souls, their bodies, and all their thoughts and aims, +desires, and fancies. They don't really say they want 'em to wear veils, +and be shet in behind lattice-windowed harems, but I believe they would +enjoy it. + +They want to be foot loose and heart loose themselves, but always after +Ulysses is tired of world wandering, he wants to come back and open the +barred doors of home with his own private latch-key, and find Penelope +knitting stockings for him with her veil on, waitin' for him. + +That sperit is I spoze inherited from the days when our ancestor, the Cave +man, would knock down the woman he fancied, with a club, and carry her off +into his cave and keep her there shet up. But little by little men are +forgettin' their ancestral traits, and men and wimmen are gradually comin' +out of their dark caverns into the sunshine (for women too have inherited +queer traits and disagreeable ones, but that is another story). + +Well, as I said, Royal wuz mad and told Polly that he guessed that the day +of the Parade he would take Maud Vincent out in the country in his motor, +to gather May-flowers. Polly told him she hoped they would have a good +time, and then, after he had gone, drivin' his car lickety-split, harem +skarum, owin' to his madness I spoze, Polly went upstairs and cried, for I +hearn her, her room wuz next to ourn. + +And I deeply respected her for her principles, for he had asked her first +to go May-flowering with him the day of the Suffrage meeting. But she +refused, havin' in her mind, I spoze, the girls that couldn't hunt flowers, +but had to handle weeds and thistles with bare hands (metaforically) and +wanted to help them and all workin' wimmen to happier and more prosperous +lives. + + + + +IV + +"STRIVIN' WITH THE EMISSARY" + + +But I am hitchin' the horse behind the wagon and to resoom backwards. The +Reunion wuz put off a week and the Suffrage Meetin' wuz two days away, so I +told Lorinda I didn't believe I would have a better time to carry Serepta +Pester's errents to Washington, D.C. Josiah said he guessed he would stay +and help wait on Hiram Cagwin, and I approved on't, for Lorinda wuz gittin' +wore out. + +And then Josiah made so light of them errents I felt that he would be a +drawback instead of a help, for how could I keep a calm and noble frame of +mind befittin' them lofty errents, and how could I carry 'em stiddy with a +pardner by my side pokin' fun at 'em, and at me for carryin' 'em, jarrin' +my sperit with his scorfin' and onbelievin' talk? + +And as I sot off alone in the trolley I thought of how they must have felt +in old times a-carryin' the Urim and Thumim. And though I hadn't no idee +what them wuz, yet I always felt that the carriers of 'em must have felt +solemn and high-strung. Yes, my feelin's wuz such as I felt of the heft +and importance of them errents not alone to Serepta Pester, but to the +hull race of wimmen that it kep' my mental head rained up so high that I +couldn't half see and enjoy the sight of the most beautiful city in the +world, and still I spoze its grandeur and glory sort o' filtered down +through my conscientiousness, as cloth grows white under the sun's rays +onbeknown to it. + +Anon I left the trolley and walked some ways afoot. It wuz a lovely day, +the sun shone down in golden splendor upon the splendor beneath it. Broad, +beautiful clean streets, little fresh green parks, everywhere you could +turn about, and big ones full of flowers and fountains, and trees and +statutes. + +And anon or oftener I passed noble big stun buildings, where everything is +made for the nation's good and profit. Money and fish and wisdom and all +sorts of patented things and garden seeds and tariffs and resolutions and +treaties and laws of every shape and size, good ones and queer ones and +reputations and rates and rebates, etc., etc. But it would devour too much +time to even name over all that is made and onmade there, even if I knowed +by name the innumerable things that are flowin' constant out of that great +reservoir of the Nation, with its vast crowd of law-makers settin' on the +lid, regulatin' its flow and spreadin' it abroad over the country, thick +and thin. + +But on I went past the Capitol, the handsomest buildin' on the Globe, +standin' in its own Eden of beauty. By the Public Library as long as from +our house to Grout Hozleton's, and I guess longer, and every foot on't more +beautifler ornamented than tongue can tell. But I didn't dally tryin' to +pace off the size on't, though it wuz enormous, for the thought of what I +wuz carryin' bore me on almost regardless of my matchless surroundin's and +the twinges of rumatiz. + +And anon I arrived at the White House, where my hopes and the hopes of +my sect and Serepta Pester wuz sot. I will pass over my efforts to git +into the Presence, merely sayin' that they were arjous and extreme, and I +wouldn't probably have got in at all had not the Presence appeared with a +hat on jest goin' out for a walk, and see me as I wuz strivin' with the +emissary for entrance. I spoze my noble mean, made more noble fur by the +magnitude of what I wuz carryin', impressed him, for suffice it to say +inside of five minutes the Presence wuz back in his augience room, and I +wuz layin' out them errents of Serepta's in front of him. + +He wuz very hefty, a good-lookin' smilin' man, a politer demeanored +gentlemanly appearner man I don't want to see. But his linement which had +looked so pleasant and cheerful growed gloomy and deprested as I spread +them errents before him and sez in conclusion: + +"Serepta Pester sent these errents to you, she wanted intemperance done +away with, the Whiskey Ring broke up and destroyed, she wanted you to +have nothin' stronger than root beer when you had company to dinner, she +offerin' to send you some burdock and dandeline roots and some emptins to +start it with, and she wanted her rights, and wanted 'em all by week after +next without fail." + +He sithed hard, and I never see a linement fall furder than hisen fell, +and kep' a-fallin'. I pitied him, I see it wuz a hard stent for him to do +it in the time she had sot, and he so fleshy too. But knowin' how much +wuz at the stake, and how the fate of Serepta and wimmen wuz tremblin' in +the balances, I spread them errents out before him. And bein' truthful +and above board, I told him that Serepta wuz middlin' disagreeable and +very humbly, but she needed her rights jest as much as though she wuz a +wax-doll. And I went on and told him how she and her relations had suffered +from want of rights, and how dretfully she had suffered from the Ring till +I declare talkin' about them little children of hern, and her agony, I got +about as fierce actin' as Serepta herself, and entirely onbeknown to myself +I talked powerful on intemperance and Rings, and such. + +When I got down agin onto my feet I see he had a still more worried and +anxious look on his good-natured face, and he sez: "The laws of the United +States are such that I can't do them errands, I can't interfere." + +"Then," sez I, "why don't you make the United States do right?" + +He said sunthin' about the might of the majority, and the powerful +corporations and rings, and that sot me off agin. And I talked very +powerful and allegored about allowin' a ring to be put round the United +States and let a lot of whiskey dealers and corporations lead her round, +a pitiful sight for men and angels. Sez I, "How duz it look before the +nations to see Columbia led round half-tipsy by a Ring?" + +He seemed to think it looked bad, I knew by his looks. + +Sez I, "Intemperance is bad for Serepta and bad for the Nation." + +He murmured sunthin' about the revenue the liquor trade brought the +Govermunt. + +But I sez, "Every penny is money right out of the people's pockets; every +dollar the people pay into the liquor traffic that gives a few cents into +the treasury, is costin' the people ten times that dollar in the loss +intemperance entails, loss of labor, by the inability of drunken men to do +anything but wobble and stagger, loss of wealth by the enormous losses of +property and taxation, of alms-houses, mad-houses, jails, police forces, +paupers' coffins, and the diggin' of thousands and thousands of graves +that are filled yearly by them that reel into 'em." Sez I, "Wouldn't it +be better for the people to pay that dollar in the first place into the +treasury than to let it filter through the dram-seller's hands, a few cents +of it fallin' into the national purse at last, putrid and heavy with all +these losses and curses and crimes and shames and despairs and agonies?" + +He seemed to think it would, I see by the looks of his linement he did. +Every honorable man feels so in his heart, and yet they let the Liquor Ring +control 'em and lead 'em round. "It is queer, queer as a dog." Sez I, "The +intellectual and moral power of the United States are rolled up and thrust +into that Whiskey Ring and bein' drove by the whiskey dealers jest where +they want to drive 'em." Sez I, "It controls New York village and nobody +denies it, and the piety and philanthropy and culture and philosophy of +that village has to be drawed along by that Ring." And sez I, in low but +startlin' tones of principle: + +"Where, where is it a-drawin' 'em to? Where is it drawin' the hull nation +to? Is it drawin' 'em down into a slavery ten times more abject and +soul-destroyin' than African slavery ever wuz? Tell me," sez I firmly, +"tell me!" + +He did not try to frame a reply, he could not find a frame. He knowed it +wuz a conundrum boundless as truth and God's justice, and as solemnly deep +in its sure consequences of evil as eternity, and as sure to come as that +is. + +Oh, how solemn he looked, and how sorry I felt for him, for I knowed worse +wuz to come, I knowed the sharpest arrow Serepta Pester had sent wuz yet +to pierce his sperit. But I sort o' blunted the edge on't what I could +conscientiously. Sez I, "I think myself Serepta is a little onreasonable, I +myself am willin' to wait three or four weeks. But she's suffered dretful +from intemperance from the Rings and from the want of rights, and her +sufferin's have made her more voylent in her demands and impatienter," and +then I fairly groaned as I did the rest of the errent, and let the sharpest +arrow fly from the bo. + +"Serepta told me to tell you if you didn't do these errents you should not +be President next year." + +He trembled like a popple leaf, and I felt that Serepta wuz threatenin' him +too hard. Sez he, "I do not wish to be President again, I shall refuse to +be nominated. At the same time I _do_ wish to be President and shall +work hard for the nomination if you can understand the paradox." + +"Yes," sez I, "I understand them paradoxes. I've lived with 'em as you may +say, all through my married life." + +A clock struck in the next room and I knowed time wuz passin' swift. + +Sez the President, "I would be glad to do Serepta's errents, I think she is +justified in askin' for her rights, and to have the Ring destroyed, but I +am not the one to do them." + +Sez I, "Who is the man or men?" + +He looked all round the room and up and down as if in hopes he could see +someone layin' round on the floor, or danglin' from the ceilin', that would +take the responsibility offen him, and in the very nick of time the door +opened after a quick rap, and the President jumped up with a relieved look +on his linement, and sez: + +"Here is the very man to do the errents." And he hastened to introduce me +to the Senator who entered. And then he bid me a hasty adoo, but cordial +and polite, and withdrew himself. + + + + +V + +"HE WUZ DRETFUL POLITE" + + +I felt glad to have this Senator do Serepta's errents, but I didn't like +his looks. My land! talk about Serepta Pester bein' disagreeable, he wuz as +disagreeable as she any day. He wuz kinder tall and looked out of his eyes +and wore a vest. He wuz some bald-headed, and wore a large smile all the +while, it looked like a boughten one that didn't fit him, but I won't say +it wuz. I presoom he'll be known by this description. But his baldness +didn't look to me like Josiah Allen's baldness, and he didn't have the +noble linement of the President, no indeed. He wuz dretful polite, good +land! politeness is no name for it, but I don't like to see anybody too +good. He drawed a chair up for me and himself and asked me: + +If he should have the inexpressible honor and delightful joy of aiding me +in any way, if so to command him to do it or words to that effect. I can't +put down his second-hand smiles and genteel looks and don't want to if I +could. + +But tacklin' hard jobs as I always tackle 'em, I sot down calm in front +of him with my umbrell on my lap and told him all of Serepta's errents, +and how I had brought 'em from Jonesville on my tower. I told over all her +sufferin's and wrongs from the Rings and from not havin' her rights, and +all her sister's Azuba Clapsaddle's, and her Aunt Cassandra Keeler's, and +Hulda and Drusilly's and Abagail Flanderses injustices and sufferin's. I +did her errents as honorable as I'd love to have one done for me, I told +him all the petickulars, and as I finished I said firmly: + +"Now can you do Serepta Pesterses errents and will you?" + +He leaned forward with that disagreeable boughten smile of hisen and took +up one corner of my mantilly, it wuz cut tab fashion, and he took up the +tab and said in a low insinuatin' voice, lookin' clost at the edge of the +tab: + +"Am I mistaken, or is this beautiful creation pipein' or can it be +Kensington tattin'?" + +I drawed the tab back coldly and never dained a reply; agin he sez, in +a tone of amiable anxiety, "Have I not heard a rumor that bangs are +going out of style? I see you do not wear your lovely hair bang-like or +a-pompadouris? Ah, women are lovely creatures, lovely beings, every one of +'em." And he sithed, "You are very beautiful," and he sithed agin, a sort +of a deceitful lovesick sithe. I sot demute as the Spinks, and a chippin' +bird tappin' his wing aginst her stuny breast would move it jest as much as +he moved me by his talk or his sithes. But he kep' on, puttin' on a sort of +a sad injured look as if my coldness wuz ondoin' of him. + +"My dear madam, it is my misfortune that the topics I introduce, however +carefully selected by me, do not seem to be congenial to you. Have you +a leanin' toward Natural history, madam? Have you ever studied into the +habits and traits of our American Wad?" + +"What?" sez I. For truly a woman's curosity, however parlyzed by just +indignation, can stand only just so much strain. "The what?" + +"The wad. The animal from which is obtained the valuable fur that tailors +make so much use of." + +Sez I, "Do you mean waddin' eight cents a sheet?" + +"Eight cents a pelt--yes, the skins are plentiful and cheap, owing to the +hardy habits of the animal." + +Sez I, "Cease instantly. I will hear no more." + +Truly, I had heard much of the flattery and little talk statesmen will use +to wimmen, and I'd hearn of their lies, etc.; but truly I felt that the +half had not been told. And then I thought out-loud and sez: + +"I've hearn how laws of eternal right and justice are sot one side in +Washington, D.C., as bein' too triflin' to attend to, while the Legislators +pondered over and passed laws regardin' hen's eggs and bird's nests. But +this is goin' too fur--too fur. But," sez I firmly, "I shall do Serepta's +errents, and do 'em to the best of my ability, and you can't draw off my +attention from her wrongs and sufferin's by talkin' about wads." + +"I would love to obleege Serepta," sez he, "because she belongs to such a +lovely sect. Wimmen are the loveliest, most angelic creatures that ever +walked the earth; they are perfect, flawless, like snow and roses." + +Sez I firmly, "They hain't no such thing; they are disagreeable creeters a +good deal of the time. They hain't no better than men, but they ort to have +their rights all the same. Now Serepta is disagreeable and kinder fierce +actin', and jest as humbly as they make wimmen, but that hain't no sign she +ort to be imposed upon; Josiah sez she hadn't ort to have rights she is so +humbly, but I don't feel so." + +"Who is Josiah?" sez he. + +Sez I, "My husband." + +"Ah, your husband! Yes, wimmen should have husbands instead of rights. They +do not need rights; they need freedom from all cares and sufferin'. Sweet +lovely beings! let them have husbands to lift them above all earthly cares +and trials! Oh! angels of our homes!" sez he, liftin' his eyes to the +heavens and kinder shettin' 'em, some as if he wuz goin' into a spazzum. +"Fly around, ye angels, in your native hants; mingle not with rings and +vile laws, flee away, flee above them!" + +And he kinder waved his hand back and forth in a floatin' fashion up in the +air, as if it wuz a woman flyin' up there smooth and serene. It would have +impressed some folks dretful, but it didn't me. I sez reasonably: + +"Serepta would have been glad to flew above 'em, but the Ring and the vile +laws lay holt of her onbeknown to her and dragged her down. And there +she is all bruised and broken-hearted by 'em. She didn't meddle with the +political Ring, but the Ring meddled with her. How can she fly when the +weight of this infamous traffic is holdin' her down?" + +"Ahem!" sez he. "Ahem, as it were. As I was saying, my dear madam, these +angelic angels of our homes are too ethereal, too dainty to mingle with +rude crowds. We political men would fain keep them as they are now; we are +willing to stand the rude buffetin' of--of--voting, in order to guard these +sweet delicate creatures from any hardships. Sweet tender beings, we would +fain guard thee--ah, yes, ah, yes." + +Sez I, "Cease instantly, or my sickness will increase, for such talk is +like thoroughwort or lobelia to my moral and mental stomach. You know and I +know that these angelic tender bein's, half-clothed, fill our streets on +icy midnights, huntin' up drunken husbands and fathers and sons. They are +driven to death and to moral ruin by the miserable want liquor drinkin' +entails. They are starved, they are froze, they are beaten, they are +made childless and hopeless by drunken husbands killin' their own flesh +and blood. They go down into the cold waves and are drowned by drunken +captains; they are cast from railways into death by drunken engineers; they +go up on the scaffold and die for crimes committed by the direct aid of +this agent of Hell. + +"Wimmen had ruther be flyin' round than to do all this, but they can't. +If men really believed all they say about wimmen, and I think some on 'em +do in a dreamy sentimental way--If wimmen are angels, give 'em the rights +of angels. Who ever hearn of a angel foldin' up her wings and goin' to a +poor-house or jail through the fault of somebody else? Who ever hearn of a +angel bein' dragged off to police court for fightin' to defend her children +and herself from a drunken husband that had broke her wings and blacked +her eyes, got the angel into the fight and then she got throwed into the +streets and imprisoned by it? Who ever hearn of a angel havin' to take in +washin' to support a drunken son or father or husband? Who ever hearn of +a angel goin' out as wet-nurse to git money to pay taxes on her home to +a Govermunt that in theory idolizes her, and practically despises her, +and uses that money in ways abominable to that angel. If you want to be +consistent, if you're bound to make angels of wimmen, you ort to furnish a +free safe place for 'em to soar in. You ort to keep the angels from bein' +tormented and bruised and killed, etc." + +"Ahem," sez he, "as it were, ahem." + +But I kep' right on, for I begun to feel noble and by the side of myself: + +"This talk about wimmen bein' outside and above all participation in the +laws of her country, is jest as pretty as anything I ever hearn, and jest +as simple. Why, you might jest as well throw a lot of snowflakes into the +street, and say, 'Some of 'em are female flakes and mustn't be trompled +on.' The great march of life tromples on 'em all alike; they fall from one +common sky, and are trodden down into one common ground. + +"Men and wimmen are made with divine impulses and desires, and human +needs and weaknesses, needin' the same heavenly light, and the same human +aids and helps. The law should mete out to them the same rewards and +punishments. + +"Serepta sez you call wimmen angels, and you don't give 'em the rights of +the lowest beasts that crawl on the earth. And Serepta told me to tell you +that she didn't ask the rights of a angel; she would be perfectly contented +and proud, if you would give her the rights of a dog--the assured political +rights of a yeller dog.' She said yeller and I'm bound on doin' her 'errent +jest as she wanted it done, word for word. + +"A dog, Serepta sez, don't have to be hung if it breaks the laws it is not +allowed any hand in making; a dog don't have to pay taxes on its bone to a +Govermunt that withholds every right of citizenship from it; a dog hain't +called undogly if it is industrious and hunts quietly round for its bone +to the best of its ability, and tries to git its share of the crumbs that +falls from that table bills are laid on. + +"A dog hain't preached to about its duty to keep home sweet and sacred, and +then see that home turned into a place of danger and torment under laws +that these very preachers have made legal and respectable. A dog don't have +to see its property taxed to advance laws it believes ruinous, and that +breaks its own heart and the heart of other dear dogs. A dog don't have +to listen to soul-sickening speeches from them that deny it freedom and +justice, about its bein' a damask rose and a seraph, when it knows it +hain't; it knows, if it knows anything, that it is jest a plain dog. + +"You see Serepta has been embittered by the trials that politics, corrupt +legislation have brought right onto her. She didn't want nothin' to do with +'em, but they come onto her onexpected and onbeknown, and she feels that +she must do everything she can to alter matters. She wants to help make the +laws that have such a overpowerin' influence over her. She believes they +can't be much worse than they are now, and may be a little better." + +"Ah," interrupted the Senator, "if Serepta wishes to change political +affairs, let her influence her children, her boys, and they will carry her +benign and noble influence forward into the centuries." + +"But the law took her boy, her little boy and girl, away from her. Through +the influence of the Whiskey Ring, of which her husband wuz a shinin' +member, he got possession of her boy. And so the law has made it perfectly +impossible for her to mould it indirectly through him, what Serepta duz she +must do herself." + +"Ah! my dear woman. A sad thing for Serepta; I trust _you_ have no +grievance of this kind, I trust that your estimable husband is, as it were, +estimable." + +"Yes, Josiah Allen is a good man, as good as men can be. You know men or +wimmen can't be only jest about so good anyway. But he's my choice, and he +don't drink a drop." + +"Pardon me, madam, but if you are happy in your married relations, and your +husband is a temperate good man, why do you feel so upon this subject?" + +"Why, good land! if you understood the nature of a woman you would know my +love for him, my happiness, the content and safety I feel about him and our +boy, makes me realize the sufferin's of Serepta in havin' her husband and +boy lost to her; makes me realize the depth of a wife's and mother's agony +when she sees the one she loves goin' down, down so low she can't reach +him; makes me feel how she must yearn to help him in some safe sure way. + +"High trees cast long shadows. The happier and more blessed a woman's life +is, the more duz she feel for them that are less blessed than she. Highest +love goes lowest, like that love that left Heaven and descended to earth, +and into it that He might lift up the lowly. The pityin' words of Him who +went about pleasin' not Himself, hants me and inspires me; I'm sorry for +Serepta, sorry for the hull wimmen race of the nation, and for the men too. +Lots of 'em are good creeters, better than wimmen, some on 'em. They want +to do right, but don't exactly see the way to do it. In the old slavery +times some of the masters wuz more to be pitied than the slaves. They could +see the injustice, feel the wrong they wuz doin', but old chains of Custom +bound 'em, social customs and idees had hardened into habits of thought. + +"They realized the size and heft of the evil, but didn't know how to +grapple with it, and throw it. So now, many men see the evils of this time, +want to help, but don't know the best way to lay holt of 'em. Life is a +curious conundrum anyway, and hard to guess. But we can try to git the +right answer to it as fur as we can. Serepta feels that one of the answers +to the conundrum is in gittin' her rights. I myself have got all the rights +I need or want, as fur as my own happiness is concerned. My home is my +castle (a story and a half wooden one, but dear). My towers elevate me, +the companionship of my friends give social happiness, our children are +prosperous and happy. We have property enough for all the comforts of life. +And above all other things my Josiah is my love and my theme." + +"Ah, yes!" sez he, "love is a woman's empire, and in that she should find +her full content--her entire happiness and thought. A womanly woman will +not look outside that lovely and safe and beautious empire." + +Sez I firmly, "If she hain't a idiot she can't help it. Love is the most +beautiful thing on earth, the most holy and satisfyin'. But I do not ask +you as a politician, but as a human bein', which would you like best, the +love of a strong, earnest tender nature, for in man or woman 'the strongest +are the tenderest, the loving are the daring,' which would you like best, +the love and respect of such a nature full of wit, of tenderness, of +infinite variety, or the love of a fool? + +"A fool's love is wearin', it is insipid at best, and it turns to vinegar. +Why, sweetened water must turn to vinegar, it is its nater. And if a woman +is bright and true-hearted, she can't help seein' through an injustice. She +may be happy in her own home. Domestic affection, social enjoyments, the +delights of a cultured home and society, and the companionship of the man +she loves and who loves her, will, if she is a true woman, satisfy her own +personal needs and desires, and she would far ruther for her own selfish +happiness rest quietly in that love, that most blessed home. + +"But the bright quick intellect that delights you can't help seein' an +injustice, can't help seein' through shams of all kinds, sham sentiment, +sham compliments, sham justice. The tender lovin' nature that blesses your +life can't help feelin' pity for them less blessed than herself. She looks +down through the love-guarded lattice of her home from which your care +would fain bar out all sights of woe and squaler, she looks down and sees +the weary toilers below, the hopeless, the wretched. She sees the steep +hills they have to climb, carryin' their crosses, she sees 'em go down into +the mire, dragged there by the love that should lift 'em up. She would not +be the woman you love if she could restrain her hand from liftin' up the +fallen, wipin' tears from weepin' eyes, speakin' brave words for them that +can't speak for themselves. The very strength of her affection that would +hold you up if you were in trouble or disgrace yearns to help all sorrowin' +hearts. + +"Down in your heart you can't help admirin' her for this, we can't help +respectin' the one that advocates the right, the true, even if they are our +conquerors. Wimmen hain't angels; now to be candid, you know they hain't. +They hain't any better than men. Men are considerable likely; and it seems +curious to me that they should act so in this one thing. For men ort to be +more honest and open than wimmen. They hain't had to cajole and wheedle and +use little trickeries and deceits and indirect ways as wimmen have. Why, +cramp a tree limb and see if it will grow as straight and vigorous as it +would in full freedom and sunshine. + +"Men ort to be nobler than women, sincerer, braver. And they ort to be +ashamed of this one trick of theirn, for they know they hain't honest in +it, they hain't generous. Give wimmen two or three generations of moral and +legal freedom and see if men will laugh at 'em for their little deceits and +affectations. No, men will be gentler, and wimmen nobler, and they will +both come nearer bein' angels, though most probable they won't be any too +good then, I hain't a mite afraid of it." + + + + +VI + +"CONCERNING MOTH-MILLERS AND MINNY FISH" + + +The Senator kinder sithed, and that sithe sort o' brought me down onto my +feet agin as it were, and a sense of my duty, and I spoke out agin: + +"Can you and will you do Serepta's errents?" + +He evaded a direct answer by sayin', "As you alluded to the little indirect +ways of women, dearest madam, you will pardon me for saying that it is +my belief that the soft gentle brains of females are unfitted for the +deep hard problems men have to grapple with. They are too doll-like, too +angelically and sweetly frivolous." + +"No doubt," sez I, "some wimmen are frivolous and some men foolish, for +as Mrs. Poyser said, 'God made women to match the men,' but these few +hadn't ort to disfranchise the hull race of men and wimmen. And as to soft +brains, Maria Mitchell discovered planets hid from masculine eyes from the +beginnin' of time, and do you think that wimmen can't see the black spots +on the body politic, that darkens the life of her and her children? + +"Madame Curie discovered the light that looks through solid wood and iron, +and you think wimmen can't see through unjust laws and practices, the +rampant evils of to-day, and see what is on the other side, see a remedy +for 'em. Florence Nightingale could mother and help cure an army, and why +hain't men willin' to let wimmen help cure a sick legislation, kinder +mother it, and encourage it to do better? She might much better be doin' +that, than playin' bridge-whist, or rastlin' with hobble skirts, and it +wouldn't devour any more time." + +He sot demute for a few minutes and then he sez, "While on the subject of +women's achievements, dearest madam, allow me to ask you, if they have +reached the importance you claim for them, why is it that so few women are +made immortal by bein' represented in the Hall of Fame? And why are the +four or five females represented there put away by themselves in a remote +unadorned corner with no roof to protect them from the rough winds and +storms that beat upon them?" + +Sez I, "That's a good illustration of what I've been sayin'. It wuz owin' +to a woman's gift that America has a Hall of Fame, and it would seem that +common courtesy would give wimmen an equally desirable place amongst +the Immortals. Do you spoze that if women formed half the committee of +selection--which they should since it wuz a woman's gift that made such a +place possible--do you spoze that if she had an equal voice with men, the +names of noble wimmen would be tucked away in a remote unroofed corner? + +"Edgar Allan Poe's genius wuz worthy a place among the Immortals, no doubt; +his poems and stories excite wonder and admiration. But do they move the +soul like Mrs. Stowe's immortal story that thrilled the world and helped +free a race?--yes, two races--for the curse of slavery held the white race +in bondage, too. Yet she and her three or four woman companions face the +stormy winds in an out-of-the-way corner, while Poe occupies his honorable +sightly place among his fifty or more male companions. + +"Wimmen have always been admonished to not strive for right and justice +but to lean on men's generosity and chivalry. Here wuz a place where that +chivalry would have shone, but it didn't seem to materialize, and if wimmen +had leaned on it, it would have proved a weak staff, indeed. + +"Such things as this are constantly occurring and show plain that wimmen +needs the ballot to protect her from all sorts of wrongs and indignities. +Men take wimmen's money, as they did here, and use it to uplift themselves, +and lower her, like taxin' her heavily and often unjustly and usin' this +money to help forward unjust laws which she abominates. And so it goes on, +and will, until women are men's equals legally and politically." + +"Ahem--you present things in a new light. I never looked at this matter +with your eyes." + +"No, you looked at 'em through a man's eyes; such things are so customary +that men do 'em without thinkin', from habit and custom, like hushin' up +children's talk, when they interrupt grown-ups." + +Agin he sot demute for a short space, and then said, "I feel that natural +human instinct is aginst the change. In savage races that knew nothin' of +civilization, male force and strength always ruled." + +"Why," sez I, "history tells us of savage races where wimmen always rule, +though I don't think they ort to--ability and goodness ort to rule." + +"Nature is aginst it," sez he. + +But I sez firmly, "Bees and lots of other insects and animals always have +a female for queen and ruler. They rule blindly and entirely, right on +through the centuries, but we are enlightened and should not encourage it. +In my opinion the male bee has just as good a right to be monarch as his +female pardner has, if he is as good and knows as much. I never believed in +the female workin' ones killin' off the male drones to save winterin' 'em; +they might give 'em some light chores to do round the hive to pay for their +board. I love justice and that would be _my_ way." + +Agin he sithed. "Modern history don't seem to favor the scheme--" But his +axent wuz as weak as a cat and his boughten smile seemed crackin' and +wearin' out; he knowed better. + +Sez I, "We won't argy long on that p'int, for I might overwhelm you if +I approved of overwhelmin', but, will merely ask you to cast one eye on +England. Was the rain of Victoria the Good less peaceful and prosperous +than that of the male rulers who preceded her? And you can then throw your +other eye over to Holland: is their sweet queen less worthy and beloved +to-day than other European monarchs? And is her throne more shaky and +tottlin' than theirn?" + +He didn't try to dispute me and bowed his head on his breast in a almost +meachin' way. He knowed he wuz beat on every side, and almost to the end of +his chain of rusty, broken old arguments. But anon he brightened up agin +and sez, ketchin' holt of the last shackly link of his argument: + +"You seem to place a great deal of dependence on the Bible. The Bible is +aginst the idee. The Bible teaches man's supremacy, man's absolute power +and might and authority." + +"Why, how you talk," sez I. "In the very first chapter the Bible tells how +man wuz turned right round by a woman, tells how she not only turned man +round to do as she wanted him to, but turned the hull world over. + +"That hain't nothin' I approve of; I don't speak of it because I like the +idee. That wuzn't done in a open honorable manner as things should be done. +No, Eve ruled by indirect influence, the gently influencing men way, that +politicians are so fond of. And she brought ruin and destruction onto the +hull world by it. + +"A few years later when men and wimmen grew wiser, when we hear of wimmen +rulin' Israel openly and honestly, like Miriam, Deborah and other likely +old four mothers, things went on better. They didn't act meachin' and +tempt, and act indirect." + +He sithed powerful and sot round oneasy in his chair. And sez he, "I +thought wimmen wuz taught by the Bible to serve and love their homes." + +"So they be. And every true woman loves to serve. Home is my supreme +happiness and delight, and my best happiness is found in servin' them I +love. But I must tell the truth, in the house or outdoors." + +Sez he faintly, "The Old Testament may teach that women have some strength +and power. But in the New Testament in every great undertaken' and plan men +have been chosen by God to carry them through." + +"Why-ee!" sez I, "how you talk! Have you ever read the Bible?" + +He said evasively, his grandmother owned one, and he had seen it in early +youth. And then he went on in a sort of apologizin' way. He had always +meant to read it, but he had entered political life at an early age where +the Bible wuzn't popular, and he believed that he had never read further +than the Epistles of Gulliver to the Liliputians. + +Sez I, "That hain't Bible, there hain't no Gulliver in it, and you mean +Galatians." + +Well, he said, that might be it, it wuz some man he knew, and he had always +heard and believed that man wuz the only worker that God had chosen. + +"Why," sez I, "the one great theme of the New Testament--the salvation of +the world through the birth of Christ--no man had anything to do with. Our +divine Lord wuz born of God and Woman. Heavenly plan of redemption for +fallen humanity. God Himself called woman into that work, the divine work +of saving a world, and why shouldn't she continue in it? God called her. +Mary had no dream of publicity, no desire of a world's work of suffering +and renunciation. The soft air of Galilee wropped her about in its sweet +content, as she dreamed her quiet dreams in maiden peace--dreamed, perhaps, +of domestic love and happiness. + +"From that sweetest silence, the restful peace of happy innocent girlhood, +God called her to her divine work of helpin' redeem a world from sin. And +did not this woman's love and willin' obedience, and sufferin' set her +apart, baptize her for this work of liftin' up the fallen, helpin' the +weak? + +[Illustration: "He'd entered political life where the Bible wuzn't +popular; he'd never read further than Gulliver's Epistle to the +Liliputians."] + +"Is it not a part of woman's life that she gave at the birth and +crucifixion? Her faith, her hope, her sufferin', her glow of divine pity +and joyful martyrdom. These, mingled with the divine, the pure heavenly, +have they not for nineteen hundred years been blessin' the world? The God +in Christ would awe us too much; we would shield our eyes from the too +blindin' glory of the pure God-like. But the tender Christ who wept over a +sinful city, and the grave of His friend, who stopped dyin' on the cross +to comfort His mother's heart, provide for her future--it is this womanly +element in our Lord's nature that makes us dare to approach Him, dare to +kneel at His feet? + +"And since woman wuz so blessed as to be counted worthy to be co-worker +with God in the beginnin' of the world's redemption; since He called +her from the quiet obscurity of womanly rest and peace into the blessed +martyrdom of renunciation and toil and sufferin', all to help a world that +cared nothin' for her, that cried out shame upon her. + +"He will help her carry on the work of helpin' a sinful world. He will +protect her in it, she cannot be harmed or hindered, for the cause she +loves of helpin' men and wimmen, is God's cause too, and God will take care +of His own. Herods full of greed and frightened selfishness may try to +break her heart by efforts to kill the child she loves, but she will hold +it so clost to her bosom he can't destroy it; and the light of the Divine +will go before her, showin' the way through the desert and wilderness +mebby, but she shall bear it into safety." + +"You spoke of Herod," sez he dreamily, "the name sounds familiar to me. Was +not Mr. Herod once in the United States Senate?" + +"Not that one," sez I. "He died some time ago, but I guess he has relatives +there now, judgin' from laws made there. You ask who Herod wuz, and as it +all seems a new story to you, I will tell you. When the Saviour of the +world wuz born in Bethlehem, and a woman wuz tryin' to save His life, a man +by the name of Herod wuz tryin' his best out of selfishness and greed to +murder Him." + +"Ah! that was not right in Herod." + +"No, it hain't been called so. And what wuzn't right in him hain't right in +his relations who are tryin' to do the same thing to-day. Sellin' for money +the right to destroy the child the mother carries on her heart. Surroundin' +him with temptations so murderous, yet so enticin' to youthful spirits, +that the mother feels that as the laws are now, the grave is the only place +of safety that God Himself can find for her boy. But because Herod wuz so +mean it hain't no sign that all men are mean. Joseph wuz as likely as he +could be." + +"Joseph?" sez he pensively. "Do you allude to our venerable speaker, Joe +Cannon?" + +"No," sez I. "I'm talkin' Bible--I'm talkin' about Joseph; jest plain +Joseph." + +"Ah! I see. I am not fully familiar with that work. Being so engrossed in +politics, and political literature, I don't git any time to devote to less +important publications." + +Sez I candidly, "I knew you hadn't read it the minute you mentioned the +book of Liliputians. But as I wuz sayin', Joseph wuz a likely man. He had +the strength to lead the way, overcome obstacles, keep dangers from Mary, +protect her tenderer form with the mantilly of his generous devotion. + +"_But she carried the Child on her bosom_; ponderin' high things in +her heart that Joseph never dreamed of. That is what is wanted now, and +in the future. The man and the woman walkin' side by side. He a little +ahead, mebby, to keep off dangers by his greater strength and courage. She +a-carryin' the infant Christ of Love, bearin' the baby Peace in her bosom, +carryin' it into safety from them that seek to destroy it. + +"And as I said before, if God called woman into this work, He will enable +her to carry it through. He will protect her from her own weaknesses, and +the misapprehensions and hard judgments and injustices of a gain-sayin' +world. + +"Yes, the star of hope is risin' in the sky brighter and brighter, and +wise men are even now comin' to the mother of the new Redeemer, led by the +star." + +He sot demute. Silence rained for some time; and finally I spoke out +solemnly through the rain: + +"Will you do Serepta's errents? Will you give her her rights? And will you +break the Whiskey Ring?" + +He said he would love to do the errents, I had convinced him that it would +be just and right to do 'em, but the Constitution of the United States +stood up firm aginst 'em. As the laws of the United States wuz, he could +not make any move toward doin' either of the errents. + +Sez I, "Can't the laws be changed?" + +"Be changed? Change the laws of the United States? Tamper with the glorious +Constitution that our fore-fathers left us--an immortal sacred legacy." + +He jumped up on his feet and his second-hand smile fell off. He kinder +shook as if he wuz skairt most to death and tremblin' with horrow. He did +it to skair me, I knew, but I knowed I meant well towards the Constitution +and our old forefathers; and my principles stiddied me and held me firm and +serene. And when he asked me agin in tones full of awe and horrow: + +"Can it be that I heard my ear aright? Or did you speak of changin' the +unalterable laws of the United States--tampering with the Constitution?" + +"Yes, that is what I said. Hain't they never been changed?" + +He dropped that skairful look and put on a firm judicial one. He see that +he could not skair me to death; an' sez he, "Oh, yes, they've been changed +in cases of necessity." + +Sez I, "For instance durin' the Oncivil war it wuz changed to make Northern +men cheap bloodhounds and hunters." + +"Yes," he said, "it seemed to be a case of necessity and economy." + +"I know it," sez I; "men wuz cheaper than any other breed of bloodhounds +the slave-holders could employ to hunt men and wimmen with, and more +faithful." + +"Yes," he said, "it wuz a case of clear economy." + +And sez I: "The laws have been changed to benefit liquor dealers." + +"Well, yes," he said, "it had been changed to enable whiskey dealers to +utilize the surplus liquor they import." + +Sez he, gittin' kinder animated, for he wuz on a congenial and familar +theme, "Nobody, the best calculators in drunkards, can exactly calculate +how much whiskey will be drunk in a year; and so, ruther than have the +whiskey dealers suffer loss, the law had to be changed. And then," sez he, +growin' still more candid in his excitement, "we are makin' a powerful +effort to change the laws now so as to take the tax off of whiskey, so it +can be sold cheaper, and obtained in greater quantities by the masses. Any +such great laws would justify a change in the Constitution and the laws; +but for any frivolous cause, any trivial cause, madam, we male custodians +of the sacred Constitution stand as walls of iron before it, guarding it +from any shadow of change. Faithful we will be, faithful unto death." + +Sez I, "As it has been changed, it can be agin. And you jest said I had +convinced you that Serepta's errents wuz errents of truth and justice, and +you would love to do 'em." + +"Well, yes, yes--I would love to--as it were--. But, my dear madam, much as +I would like to oblige you, I have not the time to devote to the cause of +Right and Justice. I don't think you realize the constant pressure of hard +work that is ageing us and wearing us out, before our day. + +"As I said, we have to watch the liquor interest constantly to see that the +liquor dealers suffer no loss--we have to do that, of course." + +And he continued dreamily, as if losin' sight of me and talkin' to himself: +"The wealthy Corporations and Trusts, we have to condemn them loudly to +please the common people, and help 'em secretly to please ourselves, or our +richest perkisits are lost. The Canal Ring, the Indian Agency, the Land +Grabbers, the political bosses. In fact, we are surrounded by a host of +bandits that we have to appease and profit by; oh, how these matters wear +into the gray matter of our brains!" + +"Gray matter!" sez I, with my nose uplifted to its extremest height, "I +should call it black matter!" + +"Well, the name is immaterial, but these labors, though pocket filling, are +brain wearing. And of late I and the rest of our loyal henchmen have been +worn out in our labors in tariff revision. You know how we claim to help +the common people by the revision; you've probable read about it in the +papers." + +"Yes," sez I coldly, "I've hearn _talk_." + +"Yes," sez he, "but if we do succeed, after the most strenious efforts in +getting the duty off champagne, green turtle, olives, etc., and put on to +sugar, tea, cotton cloth and such like, with all this brain fag and brain +labor--" + +"And tongue labor!" sez I in a icy axent. + +"Yes, after all this ceaseless toil the common people will not show any +gratitude; we statesmen labor oft with aching hearts." And he leaned his +forward on his hand and sithed. + +But my looks wuz like ice-suckles on the north side of a barn. And I +stopped his complaints and his sithes by askin' in a voice that demanded a +reply: + +"Can you and will you do Serepta's errents? Errents full of truth and +justice and eternal right?" + +He said he knew they wuz jest runnin' over with them qualities, but happy +as it would make him to do 'em, he had to refuse owin' to the fur more +important matters he had named, and the many, many other laws and preambles +that he hadn't time to name over to me. "Mebby you have heard," sez +he, "that we are now engaged in making most important laws concerning +moth-millers, and minny fish, and hog cholera. And take it with these +important bills and the constant strain on our minds in tryin' to pass laws +to increase our own salaries, you can see jest how cramped we are for time. +And though we would love to pass some laws of truth and righteousness--we +fairly ache to--yet not havin' the requisite time we are forced to lay 'em +on the table or under it." + +"Well," sez I, "I guess I may as well be a-goin'." And I bid him a cool +goodbye and started for the door. But jest as my hand wuz on the nub he +jumped up and opened the door, wearin' that boughten second-hand smile agin +on his linement, and sez he: + +"Dear madam, perhaps Senator B. will do the errents for you." + +Sez I, "Where is Senator B.?" And he said I would find him at his Post of +Duty at the Capitol. + +"Well," I said, "I will hunt up the Post," and did. A grand enough place +for a Emperor or a Zar is the Capitol of our great nation where I found +him, a good natured lookin' boy in buttons showin' me the Post. + + + + +VII + +"NO HAMPERIN' HITCHIN' STRAPS" + + +Well, Senator B. wanted to do the errents but said it wuz not his place, +and sent me to Senator C., and he almost cried, he wanted to do 'em so bad, +but stern duty tied him to his Post, he said, and he sent me to Senator D., +and he _did_ cry onto his handkerchief, he wanted to do the errents so +bad, and said it would be such a good thing to have 'em done. He bust right +into tears as he said he had to refuse to do 'em. Whether they wuz wet +tears or dry ones I couldn't tell, his handkerchief wuz so big, but I hearn +his sithes, and they wuz deep and powerful ones. + +But as I sez to him, "Wet tears, nor dry ones, nor windy sithes didn't help +do the errents." So I went on his sobbin' advice to Senator E., and he wuz +huffy and didn't want to do 'em and said so. And said his wife had thirteen +children, and wimmen instead of votin' ort to go and do likewise. + +And I told him it wouldn't look well in onmarried wimmen and widders, and +if they should foller her example folks would talk. + +And he said, "They ort to marry." + +And I said, "As the fashion is now, wimmen had to wait for some man to ask +'em, and if they didn't come up to the mark and ask 'em, who wuz to blame?" + +He wouldn't answer, and looked sulky, but honest, and wouldn't tell me who +to go to to git the errents done. + +But jest outside his door I met the Senator I had left sobbin' over the +errents. He looked real hilarious, but drawed his face down when he ketched +my eye, and sithed several times, and sent me to Senator F. and he sent me +to Senator G. + +And suffice it to say I wuz sent round, and talked to, and cried at, and +sulked to, and smiled at and scowled at, and encouraged and discouraged, +'till my head swum and my knees wobbled under me. And with all my efforts +and outlay of oratory and shue leather not one of Serepta Pester's errents +could I git done, and no hopes held out of their ever bein' done. And about +the middle of the afternoon I gin up, there wuz no use in tryin' any longer +and I turned my weary tracks towards the outside door. But as bad as I +felt, I couldn't help my sperit bein' lifted up some by the grandeur about +me. + +Oh, my land! to stand in the immense hall and look up, and up, and see all +the colors of the rain-bow and see what wonderful pictures there wuz up +there in the sky above me as it were. Why, it seemed curiouser than any +Northern lights I ever see in my life, and they stream up dretful curious +sometimes. And as I walked through that lofty and most beautiful place and +realized the size and majestic proportions of the buildin' I wondered to +myself that a small law, a little unjust law could ever be passed in such +grand and magnificent surroundin's. And I sez to myself, it can't be the +fault of the place anyway; the law-makers have a chance for their souls +to soar if they want to, here is room and to spare to pass laws big as +elephants and camels, and I wondered that they should ever try to pass laws +as small as muskeeters and nats. Thinkses I, I wonder them little laws +don't git to strollin' round and git lost in them magnificent corridors. +But I consoled myself, thinkin' it wouldn't be no great loss if they did. +But right here, as I wuz thinkin' on these deep and lofty subjects, I met +the good natured young chap that had showed me round and he sez: + +"You look fatigued, mom." (Soarin' even to yourself is tuckerin'.) "You +look very fatigued; won't you take something?" + +I looked at him with a curious silent sort of a look; for I didn't know +what he meant. Agin he looked clost at me and sort o' pityin'; and sez he, +"You look tired out, mom. Won't you take something? Let me treat you to +something; what will you take, mom?" + +I thought he wuz actin' dretful liberal, but I knew they had strange ways +in Washington anyway. And I didn't know but it wuz their way to make some +present to every woman that comes there, and I didn't want to act awkward +and out of style, so I sez: + +"I don't want to take anything, and don't see any reason why you should +insist on't. But if I have got to take sunthin' I had jest as soon have a +few yards of factory cloth as anything. That always comes handy." + +I thought that if he wuz determined to treat me to show his good feelin's +towards me, I would git sunthin' useful and that would do me some good, +else what wuz the good of bein' treated? And I thought that if I had got to +take a present from a strange man, I would make a shirt for Josiah out of +it. I thought that would save jealousy and make it right so fur as goodness +went. + +"But," sez he, "I mean beer or wine or liquor of some kind." + +I riz right up in my shues and dignity, and glared at him. + +Sez he, "There is a saloon right here handy in the buildin'." + +Sez I in awful axents, "It is very appropriate to have it here handy!" Sez +I, "Liquor duz more towards makin' the laws of the United States from +Caucus to Convention than anything else duz, and it is highly proper to +have it here so they can soak the laws in it right off before they lay 'em +onto the table or under 'em, or pass 'em onto the people. It is highly +appropriate," sez I. + +"Yes," sez he. "It is very handy for the Senators and Congressmen, and let +me get you a glass." + +"No, you won't!" sez I firmly. "The nation suffers enough from that room +now without havin' Josiah Allen's wife let in." + +Sez he, "If you have any feeling of delicacy in goin' in there, let me make +some wine here. I will get a glass of water and make you some pure grape +wine, or French brandy, or corn or rye whiskey. I have all the drugs right +here." And he took a little box out of his pocket. "My father is a importer +of rare old wines, and I know just how it is done. I have 'em all here, +Capsicum, Coculus Indicus, alum, copperas, strychnine; I will make some of +the choicest, oldest, and purest imported liquors we have in the country, +in five minutes if you say so." + +"No!" sez I firmly, "when I want to foller Cleopatra's fashion and commit +suicide, I will hire a rattlesnake and take my pizen as she did, on the +outside." + +Well, I got back to Hiram Cagwin's tired as a dog, and Serepta's errents +ondone. But my conscience opholded me and told me I had done my very best, +and man or woman can do no more. + +Well, the next day but one wuz the big outdoor suffrage meetin'. And we sot +off in good season, Hiram feelin' well enough to be left with the hired +help. Polly started before we did with some of her college mates, lookin' +pretty as a pink with a red rose pinned over a achin' heart, so I spoze, +for she loved the young man who wuz out with another girl May-flowering. +Burnin' zeal and lofty principle can't take the place in a woman's heart of +love and domestic happiness, and men needn't be afraid it will. There is no +more danger on't than there is of a settin' hen wantin' to leave her nest +to be a commercial traveler. Nature has made laws for wimmen and hens that +no ballot, male or female, can upset. + +Josiah and Lorinda and I went in the trolley in good season, so's to git a +sightly place, Lorinda protestin' all the time aginst the indelicacy and +impropriety of wimmen's appearin' in outdoor meetin's, forgittin', I spose, +the dense procession of wimmen that fills the avenues every day, follerin' +Fashion and Display. As nigh as I could make out the impropriety consisted +in wimmen's follerin' after Justice and Right. + +Josiah's face looked dubersome. I guess he wuz worryin' over his offer to +represent me, and thinkin' of Aunt Susan and the twins. + +But as it turned out I met Diantha while Josiah wuz in a shop buyin' some +peppermint lozengers, and she said her niece had come from the West, and +they got along all right. So that lifted my burden. But I thought best not +to tell Josiah, as he wuz so bound to represent me. I thought it wouldn't +do any hurt to let him think it over about the job a man took on himself +when he sot out to represent a woman. They wouldn't like it in lots of +ways, as willin' as they seem to be in print. + +Wimmen go through lots of things calm and patient that would make a man +flinch and shy off like a balky horse, and visey versey. I wouldn't want +to represent Josiah lots of times, breakin' colts, ploughin' greensward, +cuttin' cord-wood etc., etc. Men and wimmen want equal legal rights to +represent themselves and their own sex which are different, and always must +be, and both sexes don't want to be hampered and sot down on by the other +one. That is gauldin' to human nater, male or female. + +We got a good place nigh the speakers' stand, and we hadn't stood there +long before the parade hove in sight, the yeller banners streamin' out like +sunshine on a rainy day, police outriders, music, etc. + +More than a hundred automobiles led the parade and five times as many +wimmen walkin' afoot. A big grand-stand with the lady speakers and +their friends on it, all dressed pretty as pinks. For the old idee that +suffragists don't care for attractive dress and domestic life wuz exploded +long ago, and many other old superstitions went up in the blaze. + +Those of us who have gray hair can remember when if a man spoke favorably +of women's rights the sarcastic question was asked him: "How old is Susan +B. Anthony?" + +And this fine wit and cuttin' ridicule would silence argument and quench +the spirit of the upholder. + +But the world moves. Susan's memory is beloved and revered, and the +contemptious ridicule of the onthinkin' and ignorant only nourished the +laurels the world lays on her tomb. + +At that time accordin' to popular opinion a suffragist wuz a slatternly +woman with uncombed locks, dangling shoe strings, and bloomers, stridin' +through an unswept house onmindful of dirty children or hungry husband, but +the world moves onward and public opinion with it. Suffragists are the best +mothers, the best housekeepers, the best dressers of any wimmen in the +land. Search the records and you'll find it so, and why? + +Because they know sunthin', it takes common sense to make a gooseberry +pie as it ort to be. And the more a woman knows and the more justice she +demands, the better for her husband. The same sperit that rebels at tyranny +and injustice rebels at dirt, disorder, discomfort, and all unpleasant +conditions. + +I looked ahead with my mind's eye and see them pretty college girls settled +down in pleasant homes of their own, where sanitary laws prevailed, +where the babies wuzn't fed pickles and cabbage, and kep' in air-tight +enclosures. Where the husbands did not have to go outside their own homes +to find cheer and comfort, and intelligent conversation, and where Love and +Common Sense walked hand in hand toward Happiness and Contentment, Justice, +with her blinders offen her eyes, goin' ahead on 'em. I never liked the +idee of Justice wearin' them bandages over her eyes. She ort to have both +eyes open; if anybody ever needed good eyesight she duz, to choose the +straight and narrer road, lookin' backward to see the mistakes she has made +in the past, so's to shun 'em in the future, and lookin' all round her in +the present to see where she can help matters, and lookin' fur off in the +future to the bright dawn of a Tomorrow. To the shinin' mount of Equal +Rights and full Liberty. Where she sees men and wimmen standin' side by +side with no halters or hamperin' hitchin' straps on either on 'em. He more +gentle and considerate, and she less cowardly and emotional. + +Good land! what could Justice do blind in one eye and wimmen on the blind +side? But good sensible wimmen are reachin' up and pullin' the bandages +offen her eyes. She's in a fair way to git her eyesight. But I'm +eppisodin', and to resoom forward. + + + + +VIII + +"OLD MOM NATER LISTENIN'" + + +There wuz some pleasant talkin' and jokin' between bystanders and +suffragettes, and then some good natured but keen and sensible speeches. +And one pretty speaker told about the doin's at Albany and Washington. How +women's respectful pleas for justice are treated there. How the law-makers, +born and nussed by wimmen and dependent on 'em for comfort and happiness, +use the wimmen's tax money to help make laws makin' her of no legal +importance only as helpless figgers to hang taxation and punishment on. + +Old Mom Nater had been listenin' clost, her sky-blue eyes shinin' with joy +to see her own sect present such a noble appearance in the parade. But +when these insults and indignities wuz brung up to her mind agin and she +realized afresh how wimmen couldn't git no more rights accorded to her than +a dog or a hen, and worse. For a hen or a dog wouldn't be taxed to raise +money for turkle soup and shampain to nourish the law-makers whilst they +made the laws agin 'em--Mom Nater's eyes clouded over with indignation and +resentment, and she boo-hooed right out a-cryin'. Helpless tears, of no +more account than other females have shed, and will, as they set on their +hard benches with idiots, lunaticks, and criminals. + +Of course she wiped up her tears pretty soon, not willin' to lose any of +the wimmen's bright speeches. But when her tear-drops fell fast, Josiah sez +to me, "You'll see them wimmen run like hikers now, wimmen always thought +more of shiffon and fol-de-rols than they did of principle." + +But I sez, "Wait and see," (we wuz under a awnin' and protected). + +But the young and pretty speaker who wore a light silk dress and exquisite +bunnet, kep' right on talkin' jest as calmly as if she didn't know her +pretty dress wuz bein' spilte and her bunnet gittin' wet as sop, and I sez +to Josiah: + +"When wimmen are so in earnest, and want anything so much they can stand +soakin' in their best dresses, and let their Sunday bunnets be spilte on +their heads, not noticin' 'em seemin'ly, but keep right on pleadin' for +right and justice, they are in a fair way of gittin' what they are after." + +He looked kinder meachin' but didn't dispute me. + +The speeches wuz beautiful and convincin', and pretty soon old Mom Nater +stopped cryin' to hear 'em, and she and I both listened full of joy and +happiness to see with what eloquence and justice our sect wuz pleadin' our +cause. Their arguments wuz so reasonable and convincin' that I said to +myself, I don't see how anybody can help bein' converted to this righteous +cause, the liftin' up of wimmen from her uncomfortable crouchin' poster +with criminals and idiots, up to the place she should occupy by the side +of other good citizens of the United States, with all the legal and moral +rights that go with that noble title. + +And right whilst I wuz thinkin' this, sunthin' wuz happenin' that proved +I wuz right in my eppisodin', and somebody awful sot agin it wuz bein' +converted then and there (but of this more anon and bom-bye). We stayed +till we heard the last word of the last speech, I happy and proud in +sperit, Lorinda partly converted, she couldn't help it, though she wouldn't +own up to it at that juncter. And Josiah lookin' real deprested, the +thought of representin' me wuz worryin' him I knew, for I hearn him say +(soty vosy), "Represent wimmen or not, I hain't goin' to set up all night +with no old woman, and lift her round, nor dry nuss no twins." + +And thinkin' his sperit wuz pierced to a sufficient depth by his +apprehension, so reason could be planted and take root, and he wouldn't be +so anxious in the future to represent a woman, I told him what Diantha said +and we all went home in good sperits. The sun shone clear, the rain had +washed the face of the Earth till it shone, and everything looked gay and +joyous. + +When we got to Lorinda's we see a auto standin' in front of the door full +of flowery branches in front and the pink posies lookin' no more bright and +rosy than the faces of the two young folks settin' there. It wuz Polly and +Royal. + +It seemed that when he and Maud got back from the country (and they didn't +stay long, Royal wuz so restless and oneasy) Maud insisted on his takin' +her to the suffrage meetin' jest to make fun on't, so I spoze. She thought +she had rubbed out Polly's image and made a impression herself on Royal's +heart that only needed stompin' in a little deeper, and she thought +ridicule would be the stomper she needed. + +But when they got to the meetin' and he see Polly settin' like a lily +amongst flowers, and read in her lovely face the earnest desire to lift the +burden from the heavy laden, comfort the sorrowful, right the wrong, and do +what she could in her day and generation-- + +I spoze his eyes could only see her sweet face. But he couldn't help his +ears from hearin' the reasonable, eloquent words of earnest and womanly +wimmen, so full of good sense and truth and justice that no reasonable +person could dispute 'em, and when he contrasted all this with the sneerin' +face, the sarcastic egotistic prattle of Maud, the veil dropped from his +eyes, and he see with the New Vision. + +You know how it wuz with Saul the Scoffer who went breathin' out vengeance, +and Eternal Right stopped him on his way with its great light. Well, I +spoze it wuz a bright ray from that same light that shone down into Royal's +heart and made him see. He wuz always good hearted and generous--men have +always been better than the laws they have made. He left Maud at her home +not fur away and hastened back, way-laid Polly, and bore her home in +triumph and a thirty-horse-power car. + +It don't make much difference I spoze how or where anybody is converted. +The Bible speaks of some bein' ketched out of the fire, and I spoze it is +about the same if they are ketched out of the rain. 'Tennyrate the same +rain that washed some of the color off Maud's cheeks, seemed to wash away +the blindin' mist of prejudice and antagonism from Royal's mental vision, +leavin' his sperit ready for the great white light of truth and justice +to strike in. And that very day and hour he come round to Polly's way of +thinkin', and bein' smart as a whip and so rich, I suppose he will be a +great accusation to the cause. + +Well, the next day but one the Allens met in a pleasant grove on the river +shore and we had a good growin' time. Royal bein' as you may say one of the +family, took us all to the grove in his big tourin' car, and the fourth +trip he took Polly alone, and wuzn't it queer that, though the load wuz fur +lighter, it took him three times as long as the other three trips together? +Why, they never got there till dinner wuz on the table, and then they +didn't seem to care a mite about the extra good food. + +But I made allowances, for as I looked into their glowin' faces I knowed +they wuz partakin' of fruit from the full branches of first love, true +love. Rich fruit that gives the divinest satisfaction of any this old earth +affords. Food that never changes through the centuries, though fashion +often changes, and riotous plenty or food famine may exalt or depress the +sperit of the householder. Nothin' but time has any power over this divine +fruitage. He gradually, as the light of the honeymoon wanes, whets his old +scythe and mows down some of the luxuriant branches, either cuttin' a full +swath, or one at a time, and the blessed consumers have to come down to the +ordinary food of mortals. But this wuz still fur away from them. + +And I knowed too that the ordinary food of ordinary mortals partook of +under the full harvest moon of domestic comfort and contentment wuz not to +be despised, though fur different. And the light fur different from the +glow and the glamour that wropped them two together and all the rest of the +world away from 'em. + +But I'm eppisodin' too much, and to resoom forward. + +As I said, we had a happy growin' time at the Reunion, Josiah bein' in fine +feather to see the relation on his side presentin' such a noble appearance. +And like a good wife I sympathized with him in his pride and happiness, +though I told him they didn't present any better appearance than the same +number of Smiths would. And their cookin', though excellent, wuz no better +than the Smiths could cook if they sot out to. + +He bein' so good natered didn't dispute me outright, but said he thought +the Allens made better nut-cakes than the Smiths. + +But they don't, no such thing. In fact I think the Smith nut-cakes are +lighter and have a more artistic twist to 'em and don't devour so much fat +a-fryin'. + +But I'd hate to set Josiah down to any better vittles. I d'no as I would +dast let him loose at the table at a Smith reunion, for he eat fur too much +as it wuz. I had to give him five pepsin lozengers and some pepper tea. And +then I looked out all night for night mairs to ride on his chist. But he +come through it alive though with considerable pain. + +We stayed two or three days longer with Lorinda, and then she and Hiram +went part way with us as we visited our way home. We've got relations +livin' all along the river that we owed visits to. And we went to see a +number of 'em and enjoyed our four selves first rate. These things all took +place more than a year ago and another man sets in the high chair, before +which I laid Serepta's errents, a man not so hefty mebby weighed by common +steelyards, but one of noble weight judged by mental and moral scales. + +I d'no whether I'd had any better luck if I'd presented Serepta's errents +to him. Sometimes when I look in the kind eyes of his picter, and read his +noble and eloquent words that I believe come from his very soul, I think +mebby I'd been more lucky if he'd sot in the chair that day. But then I +d'no, there are so many influences and hendrances planted like thorns in +the cushion of that chair that a man, no matter how earnest he strives to +do jest right, can't help bein' pricked by 'em and held back. And I know he +could never done them errents in the time she sot, but I'm in hopes he'll +throw his powerful influence jest as fur as he can on the side of right, +and justice to all the citizens of the U.S., wimmen as well as men. + +'Tennyrate, he has showed more heroism now than many soldiers who risk life +on the battle field. For the worst foe to fight and conquer is Ridicule; +and he and others in high places have attackted Fashion so entrenched in +the solid armour of Habit that most public men wouldn't have dasted to take +arms agin it. + +And the long waves of Time must swash up agin the shores of Eternity, +before the good it has done can be estimated. How fur the influence has +extended. How many weak wills been strengthened. How many broken hearts +healed. How many young lives inspired to nobler and saner living. + +But to resoom forward, I can't nor won't carry them errents of Serepta's +there again. It is too wearin' for one of my age and my rheumatiz. What a +tedious time I did put in there. It wuz a day long to be remembered by me. + + + + +IX + +THE WOMEN'S PARADE + + +Josiah come home from Jonesville one day, all wrought up. He'd took off a +big crate of eggs and got returns from several crates he'd sent to New +York, an' he sez to me: + +"That consarned Middleman is cheatin' me the worst kind. I know the yaller +Plymouth Rock eggs ort to bring mor'n the white Leghorns; they're bigger +and it stands to reason they're worth more, and he don't give nigh so much. +I believe he eats 'em himself and that's why he wants to git 'em cheaper." + +"No Middleman," sez I, "could eat fifty dozen a week." + +"He could if he eat enough at one time. 'Tennyrate, I'm goin' to New York +to see about it." + +"When are you goin'?" sez I. + +"I'm goin' to-morrow mornin'. I'm goin' in onexpected and I lay out to +catch him devourin' them big eggs himself." + +"Oh, shaw!" sez I. "The idee!" + +"Well, I say the Trusts and Middlemen are dishonest as the old Harry. Don't +you remember what one on 'em writ to Uncle Sime Bentley and what he writ +back? He'd sent a great load of potatoes to him and he didn't get hardly +anything for 'em, only their big bill for sellin' 'em. They charged him for +freightage, carage, storage, porterage, weightage, and to make their bill +longer, they put in _ratage_ and _satage_. + +"Uncle Sime writ back 'You infarnel thief, you, put in "stealage" and keep +the whole on't.'" + +But I sez, "They're not all dishonest. There are good men among 'em as well +as bad." + +"Well, I lay out to see to it myself, and if they ever charge me for +'ratage' and 'satage' I'm goin' to see what they are, and how they look." + +"Well," sez I, "if you're bound to go, I'll get up and get a good breakfast +and go with you." It was the day of the Woman's Suffrage Parade and I +wanted to see it. I wanted to like a dog, and had ever since I hearn of it. +Though some of the Jonesvillians felt different. The Creation Searchin' +Society wuz dretful exercised about it. The President's stepma is a strong +She Aunty and has always ruled Philander with an iron hand. I've always +noticed that women who didn't want any rights always took the right to have +their own way. But 'tennyrate Philander come up a very strong He Aunty. +And he felt that the Creation Searchers ort to go to New York that day to +assist the Aunties in sneerin' at the marchers, writin' up the parade, +and helpin' count 'em. Philander wuz always good at figures, specially at +subtraction, and he and his Step Ma thought he ort to be there to help. + +I told Josiah I guessed the She Aunties didn't need no help at that. + +But Philander called a meetin' of the Creation Searchers to make +arrangements to go. And I spoze the speech he made at the meetin' wuz a +powerful effort. And the members most all on 'em believin' as he did--they +said it wuz a dretful interestin' meetin'. Sunthin' like a love feast, only +more wrought up and excitin'. + +The editor of the _Auger_ printed the whole thing in his paper, and +said it give a staggerin' blow agin Woman's Suffrage, and he didn't know +but it wuz a death blow--he hoped it wuz. + +"A Woman's Parade," sez Philander, "is the most abominable sight ever seen +on our planetary system. Onprotected woman dressed up in fine clothes +standin' up on her feet, and paradin' herself before strange men. Oh! how +bold! Oh! how onwomanly! No wonder," says he, "the She Aunties are shocked +at the sight, and say they marched to attract the attention of men. Why +can't women stay to home and set down and knit? And then men would love +'em. But if they keep on with these bold, forward actions, men won't love +'em, and they will find out so. And it has always been, and is now, man's +greatest desire and chiefest aim he has aimed at, to protect women, to +throw the shinin' mantilly of his constant devotion about her delikit form +and shield her and guard her like the very apples in his eyes. + +"Woman is too sweet and tender a flower to have any such hardship put upon +her, and it almost crazes a man, and makes him temporarily out of his head, +to see women do anything to hazard that inheriant delicacy of hern, that +always appealed so to the male man. + +"Let us go forth, clad in our principles (and ordinary clothing, of +course), and show just where we stand on the woman question, and do all we +can to assist the gentle feminine She Aunties. Lovely, retirin' females +whose pictures we so often see gracin' the sensational newspapers. Their +white womanly neck and shoulders, glitterin' with jewels, no brighter than +their eyes. They don't appear there for sex appeal, or to win admiration. +No indeed! No doubt they shrink from the publicity. And also shrink from +making speeches in the Senate chambers or the halls of Justice, but will do +so, angelic martyrs that they are, to hold their erring Suffrage sisters +back from their brazen efforts at publicity and public speakin'." + +They said his speech wuz cheered wildly, give out for publication, and +entered into the moments of the Society. + +But after all, it happened real curious the day of the Parade every leadin' +Creation Searcher had some impediment in his way, and couldn't go, and of +course, the Society didn't want to go without its leaders. + +Mis' Philander Daggett, the president's wife, wuz paperin' her settin' room +and parlor overhead. She wuz expectin' company and couldn't put it off. +And bein' jest married, and thinkin' the world of her, Philander said he +dassent leave home for fear she'd fall offen the barrel and break her neck. +She had a board laid acrost two barrels to stand up on. And every day +Philander would leave his outside work and come into the house, and set +round and watch her--he thought so much of her. I suppose he wanted to +catch her if she fell. But I didn't think she would fall. She is young and +tuff, and she papered it real good, though it wuz dretful hard on her arm +sockets and back. + +And the Secretary's wife wuz puttin' in a piece of onions. She thought she +would make considerable by it, and she will, if onions keep up. But it is +turrible hard on a woman's back to weed 'em. But she is ambitious; she +raised a flock of fifty-six turkeys last year besides doin' her house +work, and makin' seventy-five yards of rag carpet. And she thought onions +wouldn't be so wearin' on her as turkeys, for onions, she said, will stay +where they are put, but turkeys are born wanderers and hikers. And they led +her through sun and rain, swamp and swale, uphill and downhill, a-chasin' +'em up, but she made well by 'em. Well, in puttin' in her onion seed, she +overworked herself and got a crick in her back, so she couldn't stir hand +nor foot for two days. And bein' only just them two, her husband had to +stay home to see to things. + +And the Treasurer's wife is canvassin' for the life of William J. Bryan. +And wantin' to make all she could, she took a longer tramp than common, and +didn't hear of the Parade or meetin' of the C.S.S. at all. She writ home +a day or two before the meetin', that she wuz goin' as long as her legs +held out, and they needn't write to her, for she didn't know where she +would be. + +Well, of course, the Creation Searchers didn't want to go without their +officers. They said they couldn't make no show if they did. So they give up +goin'. But I spoze they made fun of the Woman's Parade amongst theirselves, +and mourned over their indelikit onwomanly actions, and worried about it +bein' too hard for 'em, and sneered at 'em considerable. + +Well, Josiah always loves to have me with him, an' though he'd made light +of the Parade, he didn't object to my goin'. And suffice it to say that we +arrove at that Middleman's safe and sound, though why we didn't git lost in +that grand immense depo and wander 'round there all day like babes in the +woods, is more'n I can tell. + +The Middleman wuzn't dishonest: he convinced Josiah on it. He had shipped +the colored eggs somewhere, and of course he couldn't pay as much, and he +never had hearn of _Ratage_ or _Satage_. He wuz a real pleasant +Middleman, and hearing me say how much I wanted to see the Woman's Parade, +he invited us to go upstairs and set by a winder, where there was a good +view on't. We'd eat our lunch on the train and we accepted his invitation, +and sot down by a winder then and there, though it wuz a hour or so before +the time sot for the Parade. And I should have taken solid comfort watchin' +the endless procession of men and women and vehicles of all sorts and +descriptions, but Josiah made so many slightin' remarks on the dress of +the females passin' below on the sidewalk, that it made me feel bad. And +to tell the truth, though I didn't think best to own up to it to him, I +_did_ blush for my sect to see the way some on 'em rigged themselves +out. + +"See that thing!" Josiah sez, as a woman passed by with her hat drawed down +over one eye, and a long quill standin' out straight behind more'n a foot, +an' her dress puckered in so 'round the bottom, she couldn't have took a +long step if a mad dog wuz chasin' her--to say nothin' of bein' perched up +on such high heels, that she fairly tottled when she walked. + +Sez Josiah: "Does that _thing_ know enough to vote?" + +"No," sez I, reasonably, "she don't. But most probable if she had bigger +things to think about she'd loosen the puckerin' strings 'round her ankles, +push her hat back out of her eyes, an' get down on her feet again." + +"Why, Samantha," says he, "if you had on one of them skirts tied 'round +your ankles, if I wuz a-dyin' on the upper shelf in the buttery, you +couldn't step up on a chair to get to me to save your life, an' I'd have +to die there alone." + +"Why should you be dyin' on the buttery shelf, Josiah?" sez I. + +"Oh, that wuz jest a figger of speech, Samantha." + +"But folks ort to be mejum in figgers of speech, Josiah, and not go too +fur." + +"Do you think, Samantha, that anybody can go too fur in describin' them +fool skirts, and them slit skirts, and the immodesty and indecensy of some +of them dresses?" + +[Illustration: "Sez Josiah, 'Does that thing know enough to vote?'"] + +"I don't know as they can," sez I, sadly. + +"Jest look at that thing," sez he again. + +And as I looked, the hot blush of shame mantillied my cheeks, for I felt +that my sect was disgraced by the sight. She wuz real pretty, but she +didn't have much of any clothes on, and what she did wear wuzn't in the +right place; not at all. + +Sez Josiah, "That girl would look much more modest and decent if she wuz +naked, for then she might be took for a statute." + +And I sez, "I don't blame the good Priest for sendin' them away from the +Lord's table, sayin', 'I will give no communion to a Jezabel.' And the pity +of it is," sez I, "lots of them girls are innocent and don't realize what +construction will be put on the dress they blindly copy from some furrin +fashion plate." + +Then quite an old woman passed by, also robed or disrobed in the prevailin' +fashion, and Josiah sez, soty vosy, "I should think she wuz old enough to +know sunthin'. Who wants to see her old bones?" And he sez to me, real +uppish, "Do you think them things know enough to vote?" + +But jest then a young man went by dressed fashionably, but if he hadn't had +the arm of a companion, he couldn't have walked a step; his face wuz red +and swollen, and dissipated, and what expression wuz left in his face wuz a +fool expression, and both had cigarettes in their mouths, and I sez, "Does +_that_ thing know enough to vote?" And jest behind them come a lot +of furrin laborers, rough and rowdy-lookin', with no more expression in +their faces than a mule or any other animal. "Do _they_ know enough +to vote?" sez I. "As for the fitness for votin' it is pretty even on both +sides. Good intelligent men ortn't to lose the right of suffrage for the +vice and ignorance of some of their sect, and that argument is jest as +strong for the other sect." + +But before Josiah could reply, we hearn the sound of gay music, and the +Parade began to march on before us. First a beautiful stately figure seated +fearlessly on a dancin' horse, that tossted his head as if proud of the +burden he wuz carryin'. She managed the prancin' steed with one hand, +and with the other held aloft the flag of our country. Jest as women ort +to, and have to. They have got to manage wayward pardners, children and +domestics who, no matter how good they are, will take their bits in their +mouths, and go sideways some of the time, but can be managed by a sensible, +affectionate hand, and with her other hand at the same time she can carry +her principles aloft, wavin' in every domestic breeze, frigid or torrid, +plain to be seen by everybody. + +Then come the wives and relations of Senators and Congressmen, showin' that +bein' right on the spot they knowed what wimmen needed. Then the wimmen +voters from free Suffrage states, showin' by their noble looks that votin' +hadn't hurt 'em any. They carried the most gorgeous banner in the whole +Parade. Then the Wimmen's Political Union, showin' plain in their faces +that understandin' the laws that govern her ain't goin' to keep woman from +looking beautiful and attractive. + +On and on they come, gray-headed women and curly-headed children from +every station in life: the millionairess by the working woman, and the +fashionable society woman by the business one. Two women on horseback, +and one blowin' a bugle, led the way for the carriage of Madam Antoinette +Blackwell. I wonder if she ever dreamed when she wuz tryin' to climb the +hill of knowledge through the thorny path of sex persecution, that she +would ever have a bugle blowed in front of her, to honor her for her +efforts, and form a part of such a glorious Parade of the sect she give her +youth and strength to free. + +How they swept on, borne by the waves of music, heralded by wavin' banners +of purple and white and gold, bearin' upliftin' and noble mottoes. +Physicians, lawyers, nurses, authors, journalists, artists, social workers, +dressmakers, milliners, women from furrin countries dressed in their quaint +costumes, laundresses, clerks, shop girls, college girls, all bearin' the +pennants and banners of their different colleges: Vassar, Wellesley, Smith, +etc., etc. High-school pupils, Woman's Suffrage League, Woman's Social +League, and all along the brilliant line each division dressed in beautiful +costumes and carryin' their own gorgeous banners. And anon or oftener all +along the long, long procession bands of music pealin' out high and sweet, +as if the Spirit of Music, who is always depictered as a woman, was glad +and proud to do honor to her own sect. And all through the Parade you could +see every little while men on foot and on horseback, not a great many, but +jest enough to show that the really noble men wuz on their side. For, as +I've said more formally, that is one of the most convincin' arguments for +Woman's Suffrage. In fact, it don't need any other. That bad men fight +against Women's Suffrage with all their might. + +Down by the big marble library, the grand-stand wuz filled with men seated +to see their wives march by on their road to Victory. I hearn and believe, +they wuz a noble-lookin' set of men. They had seen their wives in the past +chasin' Fashion and Amusement, and why shouldn't they enjoy seein' them +follow Principle and Justice? Well, I might talk all day and not begin +to tell of the beauty and splendor of the Woman's Parade. And the most +impressive sight to me wuz to see how the leaven of individual right and +justice had entered into all these different classes of society, and how +their enthusiasm and earnestness must affect every beholder. + +And in my mind I drawed pictures of the different modes of our American +women and our English sisters, each workin' for the same cause, but in what +a different manner. Of course, our English sisters may have more reason for +their militant doin's; more unjust laws regarding marriage--divorce, and +care of children, and I can't blame them married females for wantin' to +control their own money, specially if they earnt it by scrubbin' floors +and washin'. I can't blame 'em for not wantin' their husbands to take +that money from them and their children, specially if they're loafers and +drunkards. And, of course, there are no men so noble and generous as our +American men. But jest lookin' at the matter from the outside and comparin' +the two, I wuz proud indeed of our Suffragists. + +While our English sisters feel it their duty to rip and tear, burn and +pillage, to draw attention to their cause, and reach the gole (which +I believe they have sot back for years) through the smoke and fire of +carnage, our American Suffragettes employ the gentle, convincin' arts of +beauty and reason. Some as the quiet golden sunshine draws out the flowers +and fruit from the cold bosom of the earth. Mindin' their own business, +antagonizin' and troublin' no one, they march along and show to every +beholder jest how earnest they be. They quietly and efficiently answer that +argument of the She Auntys, that women don't want to vote, by a parade two +hours in length, of twenty thousand. They answer the argument that the +ballot would render women careless in dress and reckless, by organizin' +and carryin' on a parade so beautiful, so harmonious in color and design +that it drew out enthusiastic praise from even the enemies of Suffrage. +They quietly and without argument answered the old story that women was +onbusiness-like and never on time, by startin' the Parade the very minute +it was announced, which you can't always say of men's parades. + +It wuz a burnin' hot day, and many who'd always argued that women hadn't +strength enough to lift a paper ballot, had prophesied that woman wuz too +delicately organized, too "fraguile," as Betsy Bobbet would say, to endure +the strain of the long march in the torrid atmosphere. + +But I told Josiah that women had walked daily over the burning plow shares +of duty and domestic tribulation, till their feet had got calloused, and +could stand more'n you'd think for. + +And he said he didn't know as females had any more burnin' plow shares to +tread on than men had. + +And I sez, "I didn't say they had, Josiah. I never wanted women to get more +praise or justice than men. I simply want 'em to get as much--just an even +amount; for," sez I, solemnly, "'male and female created He them.'" + +Josiah is a deacon, and when I quote Scripture, he has to listen +respectful, and I went on: "I guess it wuz a surprise even to the marchers +that of all the ambulances that kept alongside the Parade to pick up faint +and swoonin' females, the only one occupied wuz by a man." + +Josiah denied it, but I sez, "I see his boots stickin' out of the ambulance +myself." Josiah couldn't dispute that, for he knows I am truthful. But he +sez, sunthin' in the sperit of two little children I hearn disputin'. Sez +one: "It wuzn't so; you've told a lie." + +"Well," sez the other, "You broke a piece of china and laid it to me." + +Sez Josiah, "You may have seen a pair of men's boots a-stickin' out of the +ambulance, but I'll bet they didn't have heels on 'em a inch broad, and +five or six inches high." + +"No, Josiah," sez I, "you're right. Men think too much of their comfort and +health to hist themselves up on such little high tottlin' things, and you +didn't see many on 'em in the Parade." + +But he went on drivin' the arrow of higher criticism still deeper into +my onwillin' breast. "I'll bet you didn't see his legs tied together at +the ankles, or his trouses slit up the sides to show gauze stockin's and +anklets and diamond buckles. And you didn't see my sect who honored the +Parade by marchin' in it, have a goose quill half a yard long, standin' +up straight in the air from a coal-scuttle hat, or out sideways, a hejus +sight, and threatenin' the eyes of friend and foe." + +"And you didn't see many on 'em in the Parade," sez I agin. "Women, as they +march along to Victory, have got to drop some of these senseless things. +In fact, they are droppin' em. You don't see waists now the size of a hour +glass. It is gettin' fashionable to breathe now, and women on their way to +their gole will drop by the way their high heels; it will git fashionable +to walk comfortable, and as they've got to take some pretty long steps to +reach the ballot in 1916, it stands to reason they've got to have a skirt +wide enough at the bottom to step up on the gole of Victory. It is a high +step, Josiah, but women are goin' to take it. They've always tended to +cleanin' their own house, and makin' it comfortable and hygenic for its +members, big and little. And when they turn their minds onto the best way +to clean the National house both sects have to live in to make it clean +and comfortable and safe for the weak and helpless as well as for the +strong--it stands to reason they won't have time or inclination to stand up +on stilts with tied-in ankles, quilled out like savages." + +"Well," said Josiah, with a dark, forebodin' look on his linement, "_we +shall see_." + +"Yes," sez I, with a real radiant look into the future. "_We shall +see_, Josiah." + +But he didn't have no idea of the beautiful prophetic vision I beheld +with the eyes of my sperit. Good men and good women, each fillin' their +different spears in life, but banded together for the overthrow of evil, +the uplift of the race. + + + + +X + +"THE CREATION SEARCHIN' SOCIETY" + + +It was only a few days after we got home from New York that Josiah come +into the house dretful excited. He'd had a invitation to attend a meetin' +of the Creation Searchin' Society. + +"Why," sez I, "did they invite you? You are not a member?" + +"No," sez he, "but they want me to help 'em be indignant. It is a +indignation meetin'." + +"Indignant about what?" I sez. + +"Fur be it from me, Samantha, to muddle up your head and hurt your feelin's +by tellin' you what it's fur." And he went out quick and shet the door. But +I got a splendid dinner and afterwards he told me of his own accord. + +I am not a member, of course, for the president, Philander Daggett, said it +would lower the prestige of the society in the eyes of the world to have +even one female member. This meetin' wuz called last week for the purpose +of bein' indignant over the militant doin's of the English Suffragettes. +Josiah and several others in Jonesville wuz invited to be present at this +meetin' as sort of honorary members, as they wuz competent to be jest as +indignant as any other male men over the tribulations of their sect. + +Josiah said so much about the meetin', and his Honorary Indignation, that +he got me curious, and wantin' to go myself, to see how it wuz carried on. +But I didn't have no hopes on't till Philander Daggett's new young wife +come to visit me and I told her how much I wanted to go, and she bein' real +good-natered said she would make Philander let me in. + +He objected, of course, but she is pretty and young, and his nater bein' +kinder softened and sweetened by the honey of the honeymoon, she got round +him. And he said that if we would set up in a corner of the gallery behind +the melodeon, and keep our veils on, he would let her and me in. But we +must keep it secret as the grave, for he would lose all the influence he +had with the other members and be turned out of the Presidential chair if +it wuz knowed that he had lifted wimmen up to such a hite, and gin 'em such +a opportunity to feel as if they wuz equal to men. + +Well, we went early and Josiah left me to Philander's and went on to do +some errents. He thought I wuz to spend the evenin' with her in becomin' +seclusion, a-knittin' on his blue and white socks, as a woman should. But +after visitin' a spell, jest after it got duskish, we went out the back +door and went cross lots, and got there ensconced in the dark corner +without anybody seein' us and before the meetin' begun. + +Philander opened the meetin' by readin' the moments of the last meetin', +which wuz one of sympathy with the police of Washington for their noble +efforts to break up the Woman's Parade, and after their almost Herculaneum +labor to teach wimmen her proper place, and all the help they got from the +hoodlum and slum elements, they had failed in a measure, and the wimmen, +though stunned, insulted, spit on, struck, broken boneded, maimed, and tore +to pieces, had succeeded in their disgustin' onwomanly undertakin'. + +But it wuz motioned and carried that a vote of thanks be sent 'em and +recorded in the moments that the Creation Searchers had no blame but only +sympathy and admiration for the hard worked Policemen for they had done all +they could to protect wimmen's delicacy and retirin' modesty, and put her +in her place, and no man in Washington or Jonesville could do more. He read +these moments, in a real tender sympathizin' voice, and I spoze the members +sympathized with him, or I judged so from their linements as I went +forward, still as a mouse, and peeked down on 'em. + +He then stopped a minute and took a drink of water; I spoze his sympathetic +emotions had het him up, and kinder dried his mouth, some. And then he went +on to state that this meetin' wuz called to show to the world, abroad and +nigh by, the burnin' indignation this body felt, as a society, at the +turrible sufferin's and insults bein' heaped onto their male brethren +in England by the indecent and disgraceful doin's of the militant +Suffragettes, and to devise, if possible, some way to help their male +brethren acrost the sea. "For," sez he, "pizen will spread. How do we know +how soon them very wimmen who had to be spit on and struck and tore to +pieces in Washington to try to make 'em keep their place, the sacred and +tender place they have always held enthroned as angels in a man's heart--" + +Here he stopped and took out his bandanna handkerchief, and wiped his eyes, +and kinder choked. But I knew it wuz all a orator's art, and it didn't +affect me, though I see a number of the members wipe their eyes, for this +talk appealed to the inheriant chivalry of men, and their desire to protect +wimmen, we have always hearn so much about. + +"How do we know," he continued, "how soon they may turn aginst their best +friends, them who actuated by the loftiest and tenderest emotions, and +determination to protect the weaker sect at any cost, took their valuable +time to try to keep wimmen down where they ort to be, _angels of the +home_, who knows but they may turn and throw stuns at the Capitol an' +badger an' torment our noble lawmakers, a-tryin' to make 'em listen to +their silly petitions for justice?" + +In conclusion, he entreated 'em to remember that the eye of the world wuz +on 'em, expectin' 'em to be loyal to the badgered and woman endangered sect +abroad, and try to suggest some way to stop them woman's disgraceful +doin's. + +Cyrenus Presly always loves to talk, and he always looks on the dark side +of things, and he riz up and said "he didn't believe nothin' could be done, +for by all he'd read about 'em, the men had tried everything possible to +keep wimmen down where they ort to be, they had turned deaf ears to their +complaints, wouldn't hear one word they said, they had tried drivin' +and draggin' and insults of all kinds, and breakin' their bones, and +imprisonment, and stuffin' 'em with rubber tubes, thrust through their nose +down into their throats. And he couldn't think of a thing more that could +be done by men, and keep the position men always had held as wimmen's +gardeens and protectors, and he said he thought men might jest as well keep +still and let 'em go on and bring the world to ruin, for that was what they +wuz bound to do, and they couldn't be stopped unless they wuz killed off." + +Phileman Huffstater is a old bachelder, and hates wimmen. He had been on a +drunk and looked dretful, tobacco juice runnin' down his face, his red hair +all towsled up, and his clothes stiff with dirt. He wuzn't invited, but had +come of his own accord. He had to hang onto the seat in front of him as he +riz up and said: + +"He believed that wuz the best and only way out on't, for men to rise up +and kill off the weaker sect, for their wuzn't never no trouble of any name +or nater, but what wimmen wuz to the bottom on't, and the world would be +better off without 'em." But Philander scorfed at him and reminded him that +such hullsale doin's would put an end to the world's bein' populated at +all. + +But Phileman said in a hicuppin', maudlin way that "the world had better +stop, if there had got to be such doin's, wimmen risin' up on every side, +and pretendin' to be equal with men." + +Here his knee jints kinder gin out under him, and he slid down onto the +seat and went to sleep. + +I guess the members wuz kinder shamed of Phileman, for Lime Peedick jumped +up quick as scat and said, "It seemed the Englishmen had tried most +everything else, and he wondered how it would work if them militant wimmen +could be ketched and a dose of sunthin' bitter and sickenin' poured down +'em. Every time they broached that loathsome doctrine of equal rights, and +tried to make lawmakers listen to their petitions, jest ketch 'em and pour +down 'em a big dose of wormwood or sunthin' else bitter and sickenin', and +he guessed they would git tired on't." + +But here Josiah jumped up quick and said, "he objected," he said, "that +would endanger the right wimmen always had, and ort to have of cookin' good +vittles for men and doin' their housework, and bearin' and bringin' up +their children, and makin' and mendin' and waitin' on 'em. He said nothin' +short of a Gatlin gun could keep Samantha from speakin' her mind about such +things, and he wuzn't willin' to have her made sick to the stomach, and +incapacitated from cookin' by any such proceedin's." + +The members argued quite awhile on this pint, but finally come round to +Josiah's idees, and the meetin' for a few minutes seemed to come to a +standstill, till old Cornelius Snyder got up slowly and feebly. He has +spazzums and can't hardly wobble. His wife has to support him, wash and +dress him, and take care on him like a baby. But he has the use of his +tongue, and he got some man to bring him there, and he leaned heavy on his +cane, and kinder stiddied himself on it and offered this suggestion: + +"How would it do to tie females up when they got to thinkin' they wuz equal +to men, halter 'em, rope 'em, and let 'em see if they wuz?" + +But this idee wuz objected to for the same reason Josiah had advanced, as +Philander well said, "wimmen had got to go foot loose in order to do the +housework and cookin'." + +Uncle Sime Bentley, who wuz awful indignant, said, "I motion that men shall +take away all the rights that wimmen have now, turn 'em out of the meetin' +house, and grange." + +But before he'd hardly got the words out of his mouth, seven of the members +riz up and as many as five spoke out to once with different exclamations: + +"That won't do! we can't do that! Who'll do all the work! Who'll git up +grange banquets and rummage sales, and paper and paint and put down carpets +in the meetin' house, and git up socials and entertainments to help pay the +minister's salary, and carry on the Sunday School? and tend to its picnics +and suppers, and take care of the children? We can't do this, much as we'd +love to." + +One horsey, sporty member, also under the influence of liquor, riz up, and +made a feeble motion, "Spozin' we give wimmen liberty enough to work, leave +'em hand and foot loose, and sort o' muzzle 'em so they can't talk." + +This seemed to be very favorably received, 'specially by the married +members, and the secretary wuz jest about to record it in the moments as +a scheme worth tryin', when old Doctor Nugent got up, and sez in a firm, +decided way: + +"Wimmen cannot be kept from talking without endangerin' her life; as a +medical expert I object to this motion." + +"How would you put the objection?" sez the secretary. + +"On the ground of cruelty to animals," sez the doctor. + +A fat Englishman who had took the widder Shelmadine's farm on shares, says, +"I 'old with Brother Josiah Hallen's hargument. As the father of nine young +children and thirty cows to milk with my wife's 'elp, I 'old she musn't be +kep' from work, but h'I propose if we can't do anything else that a card +of sympathy be sent to hold Hengland from the Creation Searchin' Society +of America, tellin' 'em 'ow our 'earts bleeds for the men's sufferin' and +'ardships in 'avin' to leave their hoccupations to beat and 'aul round and +drive females to jails, and feed 'em with rubber hose through their noses +to keep 'em from starvin' to death for what they call their principles." + +This motion wuz carried unanimously. + +But here an old man, who had jest dropped in and who wuz kinder deef and +slow-witted, asked, "What it is about anyway? what do the wimmen ask for +when they are pounded and jailed and starved?" + +Hank Yerden, whose wife is a Suffragist, and who is mistrusted to have a +leanin' that way himself, answered him, "Oh, they wanted the lawmakers to +read their petitions asking for the rights of ordinary citizens. They said +as long as their property wuz taxed they had the right of representation. +And as long as the law punished wimmen equally with men, they had a right +to help make that law, and as long as men claimed wimmen's place wuz home, +they wanted the right to guard that home. And as long as they brought +children into the world they wanted the right to protect 'em. And when the +lawmakers wouldn't hear a word they said, and beat 'em and drove 'em round +and jailed 'em, they got mad as hens, and are actin' like furiation and +wild cats. But claim that civil rights wuz never give to any class without +warfare." + +"Heavens! what doin's!" sez old Zephaniah Beezum, "what is the world comin' +to!" "Angle worms will be risin' up next and demandin' to not be trod on." +Sez he, "I have studied the subject on every side, and I claim the best +way to deal with them militant females is to banish 'em to some barren +wilderness, some foreign desert where they can meditate on their crimes, +and not bother men." + +This idee wuz received favorably by most of the members, but others +differed and showed the weak p'ints in it, and it wuz gin up. + +Well, at ten P.M., the Creation Searchers gin up after arguin' pro and con, +con and pro, that they could not see any way out of the matter, they could +not tell what to do with the wimmen without danger and trouble to the male +sect. + +They looked dretful dejected and onhappy as they come to this conclusion, +my pardner looked as if he wuz most ready to bust out cryin'. And as I +looked on his beloved linement I forgot everything else and onbeknown to me +I leaned over the railin' and sez: + +"Here is sunthin' that no one has seemed to think on at home or abroad. How +would it work to stop the trouble by givin' the wimmen the rights they ask +for, the rights of any other citizen?" + +I don't spoze there will ever be such another commotion and upheaval in +Jonesville till Michael blows his last trump as follered my speech. Knowin' +wimmen wuz kep' from the meetin', some on 'em thought it wuz a voice from +another spear. Them wuz the skairt and horrow struck ones, and them that +thought it wuz a earthly woman's voice wuz so mad that they wuz by the side +of themselves and carried on fearful. But when they searched the gallery +for wimmen or ghosts, nothin' wuz found, for Philander's wife and I had +scooted acrost lots and wuz to home a-knittin' before the men got there. + +And I d'no as anybody but Philander to this day knows what, or who it wuz. + +And I d'no as my idee will be follered, but I believe it is the best way +out on't for men and wimmen both, and would stop the mad doin's of the +English Suffragettes, which I don't approve of, no indeed! much as I +sympathize with the justice of their cause. + + + + + + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Samantha on the Woman Question, by Marietta Holley + +*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SAMANTHA ON THE WOMAN QUESTION *** + +***** This file should be named 7833.txt or 7833.zip ***** +This and all associated files of various formats will be found in: + http://www.gutenberg.org/7/8/3/7833/ + +Produced by Eric Eldred, William Flis and the Online +Distributed Proofreading Team. + +Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions will +be renamed. + +Creating the works from print editions not protected by U.S. copyright +law 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. 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Be sure to check the +copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing +this or any other Project Gutenberg eBook. + +This header should be the first thing seen when viewing this Project +Gutenberg file. Please do not remove it. Do not change or edit the +header without written permission. + +Please read the "legal small print," and other information about the +eBook and Project Gutenberg at the bottom of this file. Included is +important information about your specific rights and restrictions in +how the file may be used. You can also find out about how to make a +donation to Project Gutenberg, and how to get involved. + + +**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts** + +**eBooks Readable By Both Humans and By Computers, Since 1971** + +*****These eBooks Were Prepared By Thousands of Volunteers!***** + + +Title: Samantha on the Woman Question + +Author: Marietta Holley + +Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7833] +[Yes, we are more than one year ahead of schedule] +[This file was first posted on May 20, 2003] + +Edition: 10 + +Language: English + +Character set encoding: ASCII + +*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SAMANTHA ON THE WOMAN QUESTION *** + + + + +Produced by Eric Eldred, William Flis +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. + + + + +[Illustration: "And I wonder if there is a woman in the land that can +blame Serepta for wantin' her rights."] + + + SAMANTHA ON THE + + WOMAN QUESTION + + BY + + MARIETTA HOLLEY + + "Josiah Allen's Wife" + + Author of + + "Samantha at Saratoga," "My Opinions" and + "Betsey Bobbet's," etc. + + + + +CONTENTS + + I. "SHE WANTED HER RIGHTS" + + II. "THEY CAN'T BLAME HER" + + III. "POLLY'S EYES GROWED TENDER" + + IV. "STRIVIN' WITH THE EMISSARY" + + V. "HE WUZ DRETFUL POLITE" + + VI. "CONCERNING MOTH-MILLERS AND MINNY FISH" + + VII. "NO HAMPERIN' HITCHIN' STRAPS" + +VIII. "OLD MOM NATER LISTENIN'" + + IX. THE WOMEN'S PARADE + + X. "THE CREATION SEARCHIN' SOCIETY" + + + + +ILLUSTRATIONS + +"AND I WONDER IF THERE'S A WOMAN IN THE LAND THAT CAN BLAME SEREPTA FOR +WANTIN' HER RIGHTS" (p. 29). Frontispiece + +"I WANTED TO VISIT THE CAPITOL OF OUR COUNTRY.... SO WE LAID OUT TO GO" + +"HE'D ENTERED POLITICAL LIFE WHERE THE BIBLE WUZN'T POPULAR; HE'D NEVER +READ FURTHER THAN GULLIVER'S EPISTLE TO THE LILIPUTIANS" + +"SEZ JOSIAH, 'DOES THAT THING KNOW ENOUGH TO VOTE?'" + + + + +I + +"SHE WANTED HER RIGHTS" + + +Lorinda Cagwin invited Josiah and me to a reunion of the Allen family at +her home nigh Washington, D.C., the birthplace of the first Allen we knowed +anything about, and Josiah said: + +"Bein' one of the best lookin' and influential Allens on earth now, it +would be expected on him to attend to it." + +And I fell in with the idee, partly to be done as I would be done by if +it wuz the relation on my side, and partly because by goin' I could hit +two birds with one stun, as the poet sez. Indeed, I could hit four on 'em. + +My own cousin, Diantha Trimble, lived in a city nigh Lorinda's and I had +promised to visit her if I wuz ever nigh her, and help bear her burdens for +a spell, of which burden more anon and bom-by. + +Diantha wuz one bird, the Reunion another, and the third bird I had in my +mind's eye wuz the big outdoor meeting of the suffragists that wuz to be +held in the city where Diantha lived, only a little ways from Lorinda's. + +And the fourth bird and the biggest one I wuz aimin' to hit from this tower +of ourn wuz Washington, D.C. I wanted to visit the Capitol of our country, +the center of our great civilization that stands like the sun in the solar +system, sendin' out beams of power and wisdom and law and order, and +justice and injustice, and money and oratory, and talk and talk, and wind +and everything, to the uttermost points of our vast possessions, and from +them clear to the ends of the earth. I wanted to see it, I wanted to like a +dog. So we laid out to go. + +[Illustration: "I wanted to visit the Capitol of our country.... So we +laid out to go."] + +Lorinda lived on the old Allen place, and I always sot store by her, and +her girl, Polly, wuz, as Thomas J. said, a peach. She had spent one of her +college vacations with us, and a sweeter, prettier, brighter girl I don't +want to see. Her name is Pauline, but everybody calls her Polly. + +The Cagwins are rich, and Polly had every advantage money could give, +and old Mom Nater gin her a lot of advantages money couldn't buy, beauty +and intellect, a big generous heart and charm. And you know the Cagwins +couldn't bought that at no price. Charm in a girl is like the perfume in a +rose, and can't be bought or sold. And you can't handle or describe either +on 'em exactly. But what a influence they have; how they lay holt of your +heart and fancy. + +Royal Gray, the young man who wuz payin' attention to her, stopped once +for a day or two in Jonesville with Polly and her Ma on their way to the +Cagwins' camp in the Adirondacks. And we all liked him so well that we +agreed in givin' him this extraordinary praise, we said he wuz worthy of +Polly, we knowed of course that wuz the highest enconium possible for us to +give. + +Good lookin', smart as a whip, and deep, you could see that by lookin' into +his eyes, half laughin' and half serious eyes and kinder sad lookin' too +under the fun, as eyes must be in this world of ourn if they look back fur, +or ahead much of any. A queer world this is, and kinder sad and mysterious, +behind all the good and glory on't. + +He wuz jest out of Harvard school and as full of life and sperits as a +colt let loose in a clover field. He went out in the hay field, he and +Polly, and rode home on top of a load of hay jest as nateral and easy and +bare-headed as if he wuz workin' for wages, and he the only son of a +millionaire--we all took to him. + +Well, when the news got out that I wuz goin' to visit Washington, D.C., all +the neighbors wanted to send errents by me. Betsy Bobbet Slimpsey wanted a +dozen Patent Office books for scrap books for her poetry. + +Uncle Nate Gowdey wanted me to go to the Agricultural Buro and git him a +paper of lettuce seed. And Solomon Sypher wanted me to git him a new kind +of string beans and some cowcumber seeds. + +Uncle Jarvis Bentley, who wuz goin' to paint his house, wanted me to ask +the President what kind of paint he used on the White House. He thought it +ort to be a extra kind to stand the sharp glare that wuz beatin' down on it +constant, and to ask him if he didn't think the paint would last longer and +the glare be mollified some if they used pure white and clear ile in it, +and left off whitewash and karseen. + +Ardelia Rumsey, who is goin' to be married, wanted me, if I see any new +kinds of bedquilt patterns at the White House or the Senator's housen, to +git patterns for 'em. She said she wuz sick of sun flowers and blazin' +stars. She thought mebby they'd have sunthin' new, spread eagle style. She +said her feller wuz goin' to be connected with the Govermunt and she +thought it would be appropriate. + +And I asked her how. And she said he wuz goin' to git a patent on a new +kind of jack knife. + +I told her that if she wanted a govermunt quilt and wanted it appropriate +she ort to have a crazy quilt. + +And she said she had jest finished a crazy quilt with seven thousand +pieces of silk in it, and each piece trimmed with seven hundred stitches +of feather stitchin'--she'd counted 'em. And then I remembered seein' it. +There wuz a petition fer wimmen's rights and I remember Ardelia couldn't +sign it for lack of time. She wanted to, but she hadn't got the quilt more +than half done. It took the biggest heft of two years to do it. And so less +important things had to be put aside. + +And Ardelia's mother wanted to sign it, but she couldn't owin' to a +bed-spread she wuz makin'. She wuz quiltin' in Noah's Ark and all the +animals on a Turkey red quilt. I remember she wuz quiltin' the camel that +day and couldn't be disturbed, so we didn't git the names. It took the old +lady three years, and when it wuz done it wuz a sight to behold, though I +wouldn't want to sleep under so many animals. But folks went from fur and +near to see it, and I enjoyed lookin' at it that day. + +Zebulin Coon wanted me to carry a new hen coop of hisen to git patented. +And I thought to myself I wonder if they will ask me to carry a cow. + +And sure enough Elnathan Purdy wanted me to dicker for a calf from Mount +Vernon, swop one of his yearlin's for it. + +But the errents Serepta Pester sent wuz fur more hefty and momentous than +all the rest put together, calves, hen coop, cow and all. + +And when she told 'em over to me, and I meditated on her reasons for +sendin' 'em and her need of havin' 'em done, I felt that I would do the +errents for her if a breath wuz left in my body. She come for a all day's +visit; and though she is a vegetable widow and humbly, I wuz middlin' glad +to see her. But thinkses I as I carried her things into my bedroom, "She'll +want to send some errent by me"; and I wondered what it would be. + +And so it didn't surprise me when she asked me if I would lobby a little +for her in Washington. I spozed it wuz some new kind of tattin' or fancy +work. I told her I shouldn't have much time but would try to git her some +if I could. + +And she said she wanted me to lobby myself. And then I thought mebby it wuz +a new kind of dance and told her, "I wuz too old to lobby, I hadn't lobbied +a step since I wuz married." + +And then she explained she wanted me to canvas some of the Senators. + +And I hung back and asked her in a cautious tone, "How many she wanted +canvassed, and how much canvas it would take?" + +I had a good many things to buy for my tower, and though I wanted to +obleege Serepta, I didn't feel like runnin' into any great expense for +canvas. + +And then she broke off from that subject, and said she wanted her rights +and wanted the Whiskey Ring broke up. + +And she talked a sight about her children, and how bad she felt to be +parted from 'em, and how she used to worship her husband and how her +hull life wuz ruined and the Whiskey Ring had done it, that and wimmen's +helpless condition under the law and she cried and wep' and I did. And +right while I wuz cryin' onto that gingham apron, she made me promise to +carry them two errents of hern to the President and git 'em done for her if +I possibly could. + +She wanted the Whiskey Ring destroyed and her rights, and she wanted 'em +both inside of two weeks. + +I told her I didn't believe she could git 'em done inside that length of +time, but I would tell the President about it, and I thought more'n likely +as not he would want to do right by her. "And," sez I, "if he sets out to, +he can haul them babies of yourn out of that Ring pretty sudden." + +And then to git her mind offen her sufferin's, I asked how her sister Azuba +wuz gittin' along? I hadn't heard from her for years. She married Phileman +Clapsaddle, and Serepty spoke out as bitter as a bitter walnut, and sez +she: + +"She's in the poor-house." + +"Why, Serepta Pester!" sez I, "what do you mean?" + +"I mean what I say, my sister, Azuba Clapsaddle, is in the poor-house." + +"Why, where is their property gone?" sez I. "They wuz well off. Azuba had +five thousand dollars of her own when she married him." + +"I know it," sez she, "and I can tell you, Josiah Alien's wife, where their +property has gone, it has gone down Phileman Clapsaddle's throat. Look down +that man's throat and you will see 150 acres of land, a good house and +barn, twenty sheep and forty head of cattle." + +"Why-ee!" sez I. + +"Yes, and you'll see four mules, a span of horses, two buggies, a double +sleigh, and three buffalo robes. He's drinked 'em all up, and two horse +rakes, a cultivator, and a thrashin' machine." + +"Why-ee!" sez I agin. "And where are the children?" + +"The boys have inherited their father's habits and drink as bad as he duz +and the oldest girl has gone to the bad." + +"Oh dear! oh dear me!" sez I, and we both sot silent for a spell. And then +thinkin' I must say sunthin' and wantin' to strike a safe subject and a +good lookin' one, I sez: + +"Where is your Aunt Cassandra's girl? That pretty girl I see to your house +once?" + +"That girl is in the lunatick asylum." + +"Serepta Pester," sez I, "be you tellin' the truth?" + +"Yes, I be, the livin' truth. She went to New York to buy millinery goods +for her mother's store. It wuz quite cool when she left home and she hadn't +took off her winter clothes, and it come on brilin' hot in the city, and in +goin' about from store to store the heat and hard work overcome her and she +fell down in a sort of faintin' fit and wuz called drunk and dragged off to +a police court by a man who wuz a animal in human shape. And he misused her +in such a way that she never got over the horror of what befell her when +she come to to find herself at the mercy of a brute in a man's shape. She +went into a melancholy madness and wuz sent to the asylum." + +I sithed a long and mournful sithe and sot silent agin for quite a spell. +But thinkin' I must be sociable I sez: + +"Your aunt Cassandra is well, I spoze?" + +"She is moulderin' in jail," sez she. + +"In jail? Cassandra in jail!" + +"Yes, in jail." And Serepta's tone wuz now like worm-wood and gall. + +"You know she owns a big property in tenement houses and other buildings +where she lives. Of course her taxes wuz awful high, and she didn't expect +to have any voice in tellin' how that money, a part of her own property +that she earned herself in a store, should be used. But she had been +taxed high for new sidewalks in front of some of her buildin's. And then +another man come into power in that ward, and he naterally wanted to make +some money out of her, so he ordered her to build new sidewalks. And she +wouldn't tear up a good sidewalk to please him or anybody else, so she wuz +put to jail for refusin' to comply with the law." + +Thinkses I, I don't believe the law would have been so hard on her if she +hadn't been so humbly. The Pesters are a humbly lot. But I didn't think it +out loud, and didn't ophold the law for feelin' so. I sez in pityin' tones, +for I wuz truly sorry for Cassandra Keeler: + +"How did it end?" + +"It hain't ended," sez she, "it only took place a month ago and she has got +her grit up and won't pay; and no knowin' how it will end; she lays there +amoulderin'." + +I don't believe Cassanda wuz mouldy, but that is Serepta's way of talkin', +very flowery. + +"Well," sez I, "do you think the weather is goin' to moderate?" + +I truly felt that I dassent speak to her about any human bein' under the +sun, not knowin' what turn she would give to the talk, bein' so embittered. +But I felt that the weather wuz safe, and cotton stockin's, and hens, and +factory cloth, and I kep' her down on them for more'n two hours. + +But good land! I can't blame her for bein' embittered agin men and the laws +they've made, for it seems as if I never see a human creeter so afflicted +as Serepta Pester has been all her life. + +Why, her sufferin's date back before she wuz born, and that's goin' pretty +fur back. Her father and mother had some difficulty and he wuz took down +with billerous colick, voylent four weeks before Serepta wuz born. And some +think it wuz the hardness between 'em and some think it wuz the gripin' of +the colick when he made his will, anyway he willed Serepta away, boy or +girl whichever it wuz, to his brother up on the Canada line. + +So when Serepta wuz born (and born a girl ontirely onbeknown to her) she +wuz took right away from her mother and gin to this brother. Her mother +couldn't help herself, he had the law on his side. But it killed her. +She drooped away and died before the baby wuz a year old. She wuz a +affectionate, tenderhearted woman and her husband wuz overbearin' and +stern always. + +But it wuz this last move of hisen that killed her, for it is pretty tough +on a mother to have her baby, a part of her own life, took right out of +her own arms and gin to a stranger. For this uncle of hern wuz a entire +stranger to Serepta, and almost like a stranger to her father, for he +hadn't seen him since he wuz a boy, but knew he hadn't any children and +spozed that he wuz rich and respectable. But the truth wuz he had been +runnin' down every way, had lost his property and his character, wuz +dissipated and mean. But the will wuz made and the law stood. Men are +ashamed now to think that the law wuz ever in voge, but it wuz, and is now +in some of the states, and the poor young mother couldn't help herself. It +has always been the boast of our American law that it takes care of wimmen. +It took care of her. It held her in its strong protectin' grasp so tight +that the only way she could slip out of it wuz to drop into the grave, +which she did in a few months. Then it leggo. + +But it kep' holt of Serepta, it bound her tight to her uncle while he run +through with what property she had, while he sunk lower and lower until at +last he needed the very necessaries of life and then he bound her out to +work to a woman who kep' a drinkin' den and the lowest hant of vice. + +Twice Serepta run away, bein' virtuous but humbly, but them strong +protectin' arms of the law that had held her mother so tight reached out +and dragged her back agin. Upheld by them her uncle could compel her to +give her service wherever he wanted her to work, and he wuz owin' this +woman and she wanted Serepta's work, so she had to submit. + +But the third time she made a effort so voyalent that she got away. A +good woman, who bein' nothin' but a woman couldn't do anything towards +onclinchin' them powerful arms that wuz protectin' her, helped her to slip +through 'em. And Serepta come to Jonesville to live with a sister of that +good woman; changed her name so's it wouldn't be so easy to find her; grew +up to be a nice industrious girl. And when the woman she wuz took by died +she left Serepta quite a handsome property. + +And finally she married Lank Burpee, and did considerable well it wuz +spozed. Her property, put with what little he had, made 'em a comfortable +home and they had two pretty children, a boy and a girl. But when the +little girl wuz a baby he took to drinkin', neglected his bizness, got +mixed up with a whiskey ring, whipped Serepta--not so very hard. He went +accordin' to law, and the law of the United States don't approve of a man's +whippin' his wife enough to endanger her life, it sez it don't. He made +every move of hisen lawful and felt that Serepta hadn't ort to complain +and feel hurt. But a good whippin' will make anybody feel hurt, law or no +law. And then he parted with her and got her property and her two little +children. Why, it seemed as if everything under the sun and moon, that +could happen to a woman, had happened to Serepta, painful things and +gauldin'. + +Jest before Lank parted with her, she fell on a broken sidewalk: some +think he tripped her up, but it never wuz proved. But anyway Serepta fell +and broke her hip hone; and her husband sued the corporation and got ten +thousand dollars for it. Of course the law give the money to him and she +never got a cent of it. But she wouldn't have made any fuss over that, +knowin' that the law of the United States wuz such. But what made it so +awful mortifyin' to her wuz, that while she wuz layin' there achin' in +splints, he took that very money and used it to court up another woman +with. Gin her presents, jewelry, bunnets, head-dresses, artificial flowers +out of Serepta's own hip money. + +And I don't know as anything could be much more gauldin' to a woman than +that--while she lay there groanin' in splints, to have her husband take the +money for her own broken bones and dress up another woman like a doll with +it. + +But the law gin it to him, and he wuz only availin' himself of the glorious +liberty of our free Republic, and doin' as he wuz a mind to. And it wuz +spozed that that very hip money wuz what made the match. For before she wuz +fairly out of splints he got a divorce from her and married agin. And by +the help of Serepta's hip money and the Whiskey Ring he got her two little +children away from her. + + + + +II + +"THEY CAN'T BLAME HER" + + +And I wonder if there is a woman in the land that can blame Serepta for +gittin' mad and wantin' her rights and wantin' the Whiskey Ring broke up, +when they think how she's been fooled round with by men; willed away, and +whipped, and parted with, and stole from. Why, they can't blame her for +feelin' fairly savage about 'em, as she duz. + +For as she sez to me once, when we wuz talkin' it over, how everything had +happened to her. "Yes," sez she, with a axent like bone-set and vinegar, +"and what few things hain't happened to me has happened to my folks." + +And sure enough I couldn't dispute her. Trouble and wrongs and sufferin's +seemed to be epidemic in the race of Pester wimmen. Why, one of her aunts +on her father's side, Huldah Pester, married for her first husband, +Eliphelet Perkins. He wuz a minister, rode on a circuit, and he took Huldah +on it too, and she rode round with him on it a good deal of the time. But +she never loved to, she wuz a woman that loved to be still, and kinder +settled down at home. + +But she loved Eliphelet so well that she would do anything to please him, +so she rode round with him on that circuit till she wuz perfectly fagged +out. + +He wuz a dretful good man to her, but he wuz kinder poor and they had hard +times to git along. But what property they had wuzn't taxed, so that helped +some, and Huldah would make one dollar go a good ways. + +No, their property wuzn't taxed till Eliphelet died. Then the supervisor +taxed it the very minute the breath left his body; run his horse, so it wuz +said, so's to be sure to git it onto the tax list, and comply with the law. + +You see Eliphelet's salary stopped when his breath did. And I spoze the +law thought, seein' she wuz havin' trouble, she might jest as well have a +little more; so it taxed all the property it never had taxed a cent for +before. + +But she had this to console her that the law didn't forgit her in her +widowhood. No; the law is quite thoughtful of wimmen by spells. It sez it +protects wimmen. And I spoze that in some mysterious way, too deep for +wimmen to understand, it wuz protectin' her now. + +Well, she suffered along and finally married agin. I wondered why she did. +But she wuz such a quiet, home-lovin' woman that it wuz spozed she wanted +to settle down and be kinder still and sot. But of all the bad luck she +had. She married on short acquaintance, and he proved to be a perfect +wanderer. He couldn't keep still, it wuz spozed to be a mark. + +He moved Huldah thirteen times in two years, and at last he took her into +a cart, a sort of covered wagon, and traveled right through the western +states with her. He wanted to see the country and loved to live in the +wagon, it wuz his make. And, of course, the law give him control of her +body, and she had to go where he moved it, or else part with him. And +I spoze the law thought it wuz guardin' and nourishin' her when it wuz +joltin' her over them prairies and mountains and abysses. But it jest kep' +her shook up the hull of the time. + +It wuz the regular Pester luck. + +And then another of her aunts, Drusilly Pester, married a industrious, +hard-workin' man, one that never drinked, wuz sound on the doctrines, and +give good measure to his customers, he wuz a groceryman. And a master hand +for wantin' to foller the laws of his country as tight as laws could be +follered. And so knowin' that the law approved of moderate correction for +wimmen, and that "a man might whip his wife, but not enough to endanger her +life"; he bein' such a master hand for wantin' to do everything faithful +and do his very best for his customers, it wuz spozed he wanted to do the +best for the law, and so when he got to whippin' Drusilly, he would whip +her too severe, he would be too faithful to it. + +You see what made him whip her at all wuz she wuz cross to him. They had +nine little children, she thought two or three children would be about all +one woman could bring up well by hand, when that hand wuz so stiff and sore +with hard work. + +But he had read some scareful talk from high quarters about Race Suicide. +Some men do git real wrought up about it and want everybody to have all the +children they can, jest as fast as they can, though wimmen don't all feel +so. + +Aunt Hetty Sidman said, "If men had to born 'em and nuss 'em themselves, +she didn't spoze they would be so enthusiastick about it after they had +had a few, 'specially if they done their own housework themselves," and +Aunt Hetty said that some of the men who wuz exhortin' wimmen to have big +families, had better spend some of their strength and wind in tryin' to +make this world a safer place for children to be born into. + +She said they'd be better off in Nonentity than here in this world with +saloons on every corner, and war-dogs howlin' at 'em. + +I don't know exactly what she meant by Nonentity, but guess she meant the +world we all stay in, before we are born into this one. + +Aunt Hetty has lost five boys, two by battle and three by licensed saloons, +that makes her talk real bitter, but to resoom. I told Josiah that men +needn't worry about Race Suicide, for you might as well try to stop a hen +from makin' a nest, as to stop wimmen from wantin' a baby to love and hold +on her heart. But sez I, "Folks ort to be moderate and mejum in babies as +well as in everything else." + +But Drusilly's husband wanted twelve boys he said, to be law-abidin' +citizens as their Pa wuz, and a protection to the Govermunt, and to be +ready to man the new warships, if a war broke out. But her babies wuz +real pretty and cunning, and she wuz so weak-minded she couldn't enjoy +the thought that if our male statesmen got to scrappin' with some other +nation's male law-makers and made another war, of havin' her grown-up +babies face the cannons. I spoze it wuz when she wuz so awful tired she +felt so. + +You see she had to do every mite of her housework, and milk cows, and make +butter and cheese, and cook and wash and scour, and take all the care of +the children day and night in sickness and health, and make their clothes +and keep 'em clean. And when there wuz so many of 'em and she enjoyin' real +poor health, I spoze she sometimes thought more of her own achin' back than +she did of the good of the Govermunt--and she would git kinder discouraged +sometimes and be cross to him. And knowin' his own motives wuz so high and +loyal, he felt that he ort to whip her, so he did. + +And what shows that Drusilly wuzn't so bad after all and did have her good +streaks and a deep reverence for the law is, that she stood his whippin's +first-rate, and never whipped him. Now she wuz fur bigger than he wuz, +weighed eighty pounds the most, and might have whipped him if the law had +been such. But they wuz both law-abidin' and wanted to keep every preamble, +so she stood it to be whipped, and never once whipped him in all the +seventeen years they lived together. She died when her twelfth child wuz +born. There wuz jest ten months difference between that and the one next +older. And they said she often spoke out in her last sickness, and said, +"Thank fortune, I've always kep' the law!" And they said the same thought +wuz a great comfort to him in his last moments. He died about a year after +she did, leavin' his second wife with twins and a good property. + +Then there wuz Abagail Pester. She married a sort of a high-headed man, +though one that paid his debts, wuz truthful, good lookin', and played well +on the fiddle. Why, it seemed as if he had almost every qualification for +makin' a woman happy, only he had this one little eccentricity, he would +lock up Abagail's clothes every time he got mad at her. + +Of course the law give her clothes to him, and knowin' that it wuz the +law in the state where they lived, she wouldn't have complained only when +they had company. But it wuz mortifyin', nobody could dispute it, to have +company come and have nothin' to put on. Several times she had to withdraw +into the woodhouse, and stay most all day there shiverin', and under the +suller stairs and round in clothes presses. But he boasted in prayer +meetin's and on boxes before grocery stores that he wuz a law-abidin' +citizen, and he wuz. Eben Flanders wouldn't lie for anybody. + +But I'll bet Abagail Flanders beat our old revolutionary four-mothers in +thinkin' out new laws, when she lay round under stairs and behind barrels +in her night-gown. When a man hides his wife's stockin's and petticoats +it is governin' without the consent of the governed. If you don't believe +it you'd ort to peeked round them barrels and seen Abagail's eyes, they +had hull reams of by-laws in 'em and preambles, and Declarations of +Independence, so I've been told. But it beat everything I ever hearn on, +the lawful sufferin's of them wimmen. For there wuzn't nothin' illegal +about one single trouble of theirn. They suffered accordin' to law, every +one on 'em. But it wuz tuff for 'em, very tuff. And their bein' so dretful +humbly wuz another drawback to 'em, though that too wuz perfectly lawful, +as everybody knows. + +And Serepta looked as bad agin as she would otherwise on account of her +teeth. It wuz after Lank had begun to git after this other woman, and wuz +indifferent to his wife's looks that Serepta had a new set of teeth on her +upper jaw. And they sot out and made her look so bad it fairly made her +ache to look at herself in the glass. And they hurt her gooms too, and she +carried 'em back to the dentist and wanted him to make her another set, but +he acted mean and wouldn't take 'em back, and sued Lank for the pay. And +they had a law-suit. And the law bein' such that a woman can't testify in +court, in any matter that is of mutual interest to husband and wife, and +Lank wantin' to act mean, said that they wuz good sound teeth. + +And there Serepta sot right in front of 'em with her gooms achin' and her +face all swelled out, and lookin' like furiation, and couldn't say a word. +But she had to give in to the law. And ruther than go toothless she wears +'em to this day, and I believe it is the raspin' of them teeth aginst her +gooms and her discouraged, mad feelin's every time she looks in the glass +that helps embitter her towards men, and the laws men have made, so's a +woman can't have control of her own teeth and her own bones. + +Serepta went home about 5 P.M., I promisin' sacred to do her errents for +her. + +And I gin a deep, happy sithe after I shot the door behind her, and I sez +to Josiah I do hope that's the very last errent we will have to carry to +Washington, D.C., for the Jonesvillians. + +"Yes," says he, "an' I guess I will get a fresh pail of water and hang on +the tea kettle for you." + +"And," I says, "it's pretty early for supper, but I'll start it, for I do +feel kinder gone to the stomach. Sympathy is real exhaustin'. Sometimes I +think it tires me more'n hard work. And Heaven knows I sympathized with +Serepta. I felt for her full as much as if she was one of the relations on +_his_ side." + +But if you'll believe it, I had hardly got the words out of my mouth and +Josiah had jest laid holt of the water pail, when in comes Philander +Dagget, the President of the Jonesville Creation Searchin' Society and, of +course, he had a job for us to do on our tower. This Society was started +by the leadin' men of Jonesville, for the purpose of searchin' out and +criticizin' the affairs of the world, an' so far as possible advisin' and +correctin' the meanderin's an' wrong-doin's of the universe. + +This Society, which we call the C.S.S. for short, has been ruther quiet for +years. But sence woman's suffrage has got to be such a prominent question, +they bein' so bitterly opposed to it, have reorganized and meet every once +in a while, to sneer at the suffragettes and poke fun at 'em and show in +every way they can their hitter antipathy to the cause. + +Philander told me if I see anything new and strikin' in the way of Society +badges and regalia, to let him know about it, for he said the C.S.S. was +goin' to take a decided stand and show their colors. They wuz goin' to +help protect his women endangered sect, an' he wanted sunthin' showy and +suggestive. + +I thought of a number of badges and mottoes that I felt would be suitable +for this Society, but dassent tell 'em to him, for his idees and mine on +this subject are as fur apart as the two poles. He talked awful bitter to +me once about it, and I sez to him: + +"Philander, the world is full of good men, and there are also bad men in +the world, and, sez I, did you ever in your born days see a bad man that +wuzn't opposed to Woman's Suffrage? All the men who trade in, and profit +by, the weakness and sin of men and women, they every one of 'em, to +a man, fight agin it. And would they do this if they didn't think that +their vile trades would suffer if women had the right to vote? It is the +great-hearted, generous, noble man who wants women to become a real citizen +with himself--which she is not now--she is only a citizen just enough to be +taxed equally with man, or more exhorbitantly, and be punished and executed +by the law she has no hand in makin'." + +Philander sed, "I have always found it don't pay to talk with women on +matters they don't understand." + +An' he got up and started for the door, an' Josiah sed, "No, it don't pay, +not a cent; I've always said so." + +But I told Philander I'd let him know if I see anything appropriate to the +C.S.S. Holdin' back with a almost Herculaneum effort the mottoes and +badges that run through my mind as bein' appropriate to their society; +knowin' it would make him so mad if I told him of 'em--he never would +neighbor with us again. And in three days' time we sot sail. We got to +the depo about an hour too early, but I wuz glad we wuz on time, for it +would have worked Josiah up dretfully ef we hadn't been, for he had spent +most of the latter part of the night in gittin' up and walkin' out to the +clock seein' if it wuz train time. Jest before we started, who should come +runnin' down to the depo but Sam Nugent wantin' to send a errent by me to +Washington. He wunk me out to one side of the waitin' room, and ast "if I'd +try to git him a license to steal horses." + +It kinder runs in the blood of the Nugents to love to steal, and he owned +up it did, but he said he wanted the profit of it. But I told him I +wouldn't do any sech thing, an' I looked at him in such a witherin' way +that I should most probable withered him, only he is blind in one side, and +I wuz on the blind side, but he argued with me, and said that it wuz no +worse than to give licenses for other kinds of meanness. + +He said they give licenses now to steal--steal folkses senses away, and +then they could steal everything else, and murder and tear round into every +kind of wickedness. But he didn't ask that. He wanted things done fair and +square: he jest wanted to steal horses. He wuz goin' West, and he thought +he could do a good bizness, and lay up somethin'. If he had a license he +shouldn't be afraid of bein' shet up or shot. + +But I refused the job with scorn; and jest as I wuz refusin', the cars +snorted, and I wuz glad they did. They seemed to express in that wild snort +something of the indignation I felt. + +The idee! + + + + +III + +"POLLY'S EYES CROWED TENDER" + + +Lorinda wuz dretful glad to see us and so wuz her husband and Polly. But +the Reunion had to be put off on account of a spell her husband wuz havin'. +Lorinda said she could not face such a big company as she'd invited while +Hiram wuz havin' a spell, and I agreed with her. + +Sez I, "Never, never, would I have invited company whilst Josiah wuz +sufferin' with one of his cricks." + +Men hain't patient under pain, and outsiders hain't no bizness to hear +things they say and tell on 'em. So Polly had to write to the relations +puttin' off the Reunion for one week. But Lorinda kep' on cookin' fruit +cake and such that would keep, she had plenty of help, but loved to do her +company cookin' herself. And seein' the Reunion wuz postponed and Lorinda +had time on her hands, I proposed she should go with me to the big out-door +meetin' of the Suffragists, which wuz held in a nigh-by city. + +"Good land!" sez she, "nothin' would tempt me to patronize anything so +brazen and onwomanly as a out-door meetin' of wimmen, and so onhealthy and +immodest." I see she looked reproachfully at Polly as she said it. Polly +wuz arrangin' some posies in a vase, and looked as sweet as the posies did, +but considerable firm too, and I see from Lorinda's looks that Polly wuz +one who had to leave father and mother for principle's sake. + +But I sez, "You're cookin' this minute, Lorinda, for a out-door meetin'" +(she wuz makin' angel cake). "And why is this meetin' any more onwomanly or +immodest than the camp-meetin' where you wuz converted, and baptized the +next Sunday in the creek?" + +"Oh, them wuz religious meetin's," sez she. + +"Well," sez I, "mebby these wimmen think their meetin' is religious. You +know the Bible sez, 'Faith and works should go together,' and some of the +leaders of this movement have showed by their works as religious a sperit +and wielded aginst injustice to young workin' wimmen as powerful a weepon +as that axe of the 'Postles the Bible tells about. And you said you went +every day to the Hudson-Fulton doin's and hearn every out-door lecture; you +writ me that there wuz probable a million wimmen attendin' them out-door +meetin's, and that wuz curosity and pleasure huntin' that took them, and +this is a meetin' of justice and right." + +"Oh, shaw!" sez Lorinda agin, with her eye on Polly. "Wimmen have all the +rights they want or need." Lorinda's husband bein' rich and lettin' her +have her way she is real foot loose, and don't feel the need of any more +rights for herself, but I told her then and there some of the wrongs and +sufferin's of Serepta Pester, and bein' good-hearted (but obstinate and +bigoted) she gin in that the errents wuz hefty, and that Serepta wuz to be +pitied, but she insisted that wimmen's votin' wouldn't help matters. + +But Euphrasia Pottle, a poor relation from Troy, spoke up. "After my +husband died one of my girls went into a factory and gits about half what +the men git for the same work, and my oldest girl who teaches in the +public school don't git half as much for the same work as men do, and her +school rooms are dark, stuffy, onhealthy, and crowded so the children are +half-choked for air, and the light so poor they're havin' their eyesight +spilte for life, and new school books not needed at all, are demanded +constantly, so some-one can make money." + +"Yes," sez I, "do you spoze, Lorinda, if intelligent mothers helped control +such things they would let their children be made sick and blind and the +money that should be used for food for poor hungry children be squandered +on _on_-necessary books they are too faint with hunger to study." + +"But wimmen's votin' wouldn't help in such things," sez Lorinda, as she +stirred her angel cake vigorously. + +But Euphrasia sez, "My niece, Ellen, teaches in a state where wimmen vote +and she gits the same wages men git for the same work, and her school rooms +are bright and pleasant and sanitary, and the pupils, of course, are well +and happy. And if you don't think wimmen can help in such public matters +just go to Seattle and see how quick a bad man wuz yanked out of his public +office and a good man put in his place, mostly by wimmen's efforts and +votes." + +"Yes," sez I, "it is a proved fact that wimmen's votes do help in these +matters. And do you think, Lorinda, that if educated, motherly, thoughtful +wimmen helped make the laws so many little children would be allowed to +toil in factories and mines, their tender shoulders bearin' the burden of +constant labor that wears out the iron muscles of men?" + +Polly's eyes growed tender and wistful, and her little white hands +lingered over her posies, and I knowed the hard lot of the poor, the +wrongs of wimmen and children, the woes of humanity, wuz pressin' down +on her generous young heart. And I could see in her sweet face the brave +determination to do and to dare, to try to help ondo the wrongs, and try to +lift the burdens from weak and achin' shoulders. But Lorinda kep' on with +the same old moth-eaten argument so broke down and feeble it ort to be +allowed to die in peace. + +"Woman's suffrage would make women neglect their homes and housework and +let their children run loose into ruin." + +I knowed she said it partly on Polly's account, but I sez in surprise, +"Why, Lorinda, it must be you hain't read up on the subject or you would +know wherever wimmen has voted they have looked out first of all for the +children's welfare. They have raised the age of consent, have closed +saloons and other places of licensed evil, and in every way it has been +their first care to help 'em to safer and more moral surroundin's, for who +has the interest of children more at heart than the mothers who bore them, +children who are the light of their eyes and the hope of the future." + +Lorinda admitted that the state of the children in the homes of the poor +and ignorant wuz pitiful. "But," sez she, "the Bible sez 'ye shall always +have the poor with you,' and I spoze we always shall, with all their +sufferin's and wants. But," sez she, "in well-to-do homes the children are +safe and well off, and don't need any help from woman legislation." + +"Why, Lorinda," sez I, "did you ever think on't how such mothers may +watch over and be the end of the law to their children with the father's +full consent during infancy when they're wrastlin' with teethin', +whoopin'-cough, mumps, etc., can be queen of the nursery, dispensor of +pure air, sunshine, sanitary, and safe surroundin's in every way, and then +in a few years see 'em go from her into dark, overcrowded, unsanitary, +carelessly guarded places, to spend the precious hours when they are the +most receptive to influence and pass man-made pitfalls on their way to and +fro, must stand helpless until in too many cases the innocent healthy child +that went from her care returns to her half-blind, a physical and moral +wreck. The mother who went down to death's door for 'em, and had most to do +in mouldin' their destiny during infancy should have at least equal rights +with the father in controllin' their surroundin's during their entire +youth, and to do this she must have equal legal power or her best efforts +are wasted. That this is just and right is as plain to me as the nose on my +face and folks will see it bom-bye and wonder they didn't before. + +"And wimmen who suffer most by the lack on't, will be most interested in +openin' schools to teach the fine art of domestic service, teachin' young +girls how to keep healthy comfortable homes and fit themselves to be +capable wives and mothers. I don't say or expect that wimmen's votin' will +make black white, or wash all the stains from the legislative body at once, +but I say that jest the effort to git wimmen's suffrage has opened hundreds +of bolted doors and full suffrage will open hundreds more. And I'm goin' to +that woman's suffrage meetin' if I walk afoot." + +But here Josiah spoke up, I thought he wuz asleep, he wuz layin' on the +lounge with a paper over his face. But truly the word, "Woman's Suffrage," +rousts him up as quick as a mouse duz a drowsy cat, so, sez he, "I can't +let you go, Samantha, into any such dangerous and onwomanly affair." + +"Let?" sez I in a dry voice; "that's a queer word from one old pardner to +another." + +"I'm responsible for your safety, Samantha, and if anybody goes to that +dangerous and onseemly meetin' I will. Mebby Polly would like to go with +me." As stated, Polly is as pretty as a pink posy, and no matter how old +a man is, nor how interestin' and noble his pardner is, he needs girl +blinders, yes, he needs 'em from the cradle to the grave. But few, indeed, +are the female pardners who can git him to wear 'em. + +He added, "You know I represent you legally, Samantha; what I do is jest +the same as though you did it." + +Sez I, "Mebby that is law, but whether it is gospel is another question. +But if you represent me, Josiah, you will have to carry out my plans; I +writ to Diantha Smith Trimble that if I went to the city I'd take care of +Aunt Susan a night or two, and rest her a spell; you know Diantha is a +widder and too poor to hire a nurse. But seein' you represent me you can +set up with her Ma a night or two; she's bed-rid and you'll have to lift +her round some, and give her her medicine and take care of Diantha's twins, +and let her git a good sleep." + +"Well, as it were--Samantha--you know--men hain't expected to represent +wimmen in everything, it is mostly votin' and tendin' big meetin's and +such." + +"Oh, I see," sez I; "men represent wimmen when they want to, and when they +don't wimmen have got to represent themselves." + +"Well, yes, Samantha, sunthin' like that." + +He didn't say anything more about representin' me, and Polly said she +wuz goin' to ride in the parade with some other college girls. Lorinda's +linement looked dark and forbiddin' as Polly stated in her gentle, but firm +way this ultimatum. Lorinda hated the idee of Polly's jinin' in what she +called onwomanly and immodest doin's, but I looked beamin'ly at her and +gloried in her principles. + +After she went out Lorinda said to me in a complainin' way, "I should +think that a girl that had every comfort and luxury would be contented and +thankful, and be willin' to stay to home and act like a lady." + +Sez I, "Nothin' could keep Polly from actin' like a lady, and mebby it is +because she is so well off herself that makes her sorry for other young +girls that have nothin' but poverty and privation." + +"Oh, nonsense!" sez Lorinda. But I knowed jest how it wuz. Polly bein' +surrounded by all the good things money could give, and bein' so +tender-hearted her heart ached for other young girls, who had to spend the +springtime of their lives in the hard work of earnin' bread for themselves +and dear ones, and she longed to help 'em to livin' wages, so they +could exist without the wages of sin, and too many on 'em had to choose +between them black wages and starvation. She wanted to help 'em to better +surroundin's and she knowed the best weepon she could put into their hands +to fight the wolves of Want and Temptation, wuz the ballot. Polly hain't a +mite like her Ma, she favors the Smiths more, her grand-ma on her pa's side +wuz a Smith and a woman of brains and principle. + +Durin' my conversation with Lorinda, I inquired about Royal Gray, for as +stated, he wuz a great favorite of ourn, and I found out (and I could see +it gaulded her) that when Polly united with the Suffragists he shied off +some, and went to payin' attention to another girl. Whether it wuz to make +Polly jealous and bring her round to his way of thinkin', I didn't know, +but mistrusted, for I could have took my oath that he loved Polly deeply +and truly. To be sure he hadn't confided in me, but there is a language +of the eyes, when the soul speaks through 'em, and as I'd seen him look +at Polly my own soul had hearn and understood that silent language and +translated it, that Polly wuz the light of his eyes, and the one woman in +the world for him. And I couldn't think his heart had changed so sudden. +But knowin' as I did the elastic nature of manly affection, I felt +dubersome. + +This other girl, Maud Vincent, always said to her men friends, it wuz +onwomanly to try to vote. She wuz one of the girls who always gloried in +bein' a runnin' vine when there wuz any masculine trees round to lean +on and twine about. One who always jined in with all the idees they +promulgated, from neckties to the tariff, who declared cigar smoke wuz so +agreeable and welcome; it did really make her deathly sick, but she would +choke herself cheerfully and willin'ly if by so chokin' she could gain +manly favor and admiration. + +She said she didn't believe in helpin' poor girls, they wuz well enough +off as it wuz, she wuz sure they didn't feel hunger and cold as rich girls +did, their skin wuz thicker and their stomachs different and stronger, and +constant labor didn't harm them, and working girls didn't need recreation +as rich girls did, and woman's suffrage wouldn't help them any; in her +opinion it would harm them, and anyway the poor wuz on-grateful. + +She had the usual arguments on the tip of her tongue, for old Miss Vincent, +the aunt she lived with, wuz a ardent She Aunty and very prominent in the +public meetin's the She Auntys have to try to compel the Suffragists not +to have public meetin's. They talk a good deal in public how onwomanly +and immodest it is for wimmen to talk in public. And she wuz one of the +foremost ones in tryin' to git up a school to teach wimmen civics, to prove +that they mustn't ever have anything to do with civics. + +Yes, old Miss Vincent wuz a real active, ardent She Aunty, and Maud +Genevieve takes after her. Royal Gray, his handsome attractive personality, +and his millions, had long been the goal of Maud's ambition. And how +ardently did she hail the coolness growing between him and Polly, the +little rift in the lute, and how zealously did she labor to make it larger. + +Polly and Royal had had many an argument on the subject, that is, he would +begin by makin' fun of the Suffragists and their militant doin's, which if +he'd thought on't wuz sunthin' like what his old revolutionary forbears +went through for the same reasons, bein' taxed without representation, and +bein' burdened and punished by the law they had no voice in making, only +the Suffragettes are not nearly so severe with their opposers, they haven't +drawed any blood yet. Why, them old Patriots we revere so, would consider +their efforts for freedom exceedingly gentle and tame compared to their own +bloody battles. + +And Royal would make light of the efforts of college girls to help workin' +girls, and the encouragement and aid they'd gin 'em when they wuz strikin' +for less death-dealin' hours of labor, and livin' wages, and so forth. I +don't see how such a really noble young man as Royal ever come to argy that +way, but spoze it wuz the dead hand of some rough onreasonable old ancestor +reachin' up out of the shadows of the past and pushin' him on in the wrong +direction. + +So when he begun to ridicule what Polly's heart wuz sot on, when she felt +that he wuz fightin' agin right and justice, before they knowed it both +pairs of bright eyes would git to flashin' out angry sparks, and hash words +would be said on both sides. That old long-buried Tory ancestor of hisen +eggin' him on, so I spoze, and Polly's generous sperit rebellin' aginst the +injustice and selfishness, and mebby some warlike ancestor of hern pushin' +her on to say hash things. 'Tennyrate he had grown less attentive to her, +and wuz bestowin' his time and attentions elsewhere. + +And when she told him she wuz goin' to ride in the automobile parade of the +suffragists, but really ridin' she felt towards truth and justice to half +the citizens of the U.S., he wuz mad as a wet hen, a male wet hen, and wuz +bound she shouldn't go. + +Some men, and mebby it is love that makes 'em feel so (they say it is), and +mebby it is selfishness (though they won't own up to it), but they want +the women they love to belong to them alone, want to rule absolutely over +their hearts, their souls, their bodies, and all their thoughts and aims, +desires, and fancies. They don't really say they want 'em to wear veils, +and be shet in behind lattice-windowed harems, but I believe they would +enjoy it. + +They want to be foot loose and heart loose themselves, but always after +Ulysses is tired of world wandering, he wants to come back and open the +barred doors of home with his own private latch-key, and find Penelope +knitting stockings for him with her veil on, waitin' for him. + +That sperit is I spoze inherited from the days when our ancestor, the Cave +man, would knock down the woman he fancied, with a club, and carry her off +into his cave and keep her there shet up. But little by little men are +forgettin' their ancestral traits, and men and wimmen are gradually comin' +out of their dark caverns into the sunshine (for women too have inherited +queer traits and disagreeable ones, but that is another story). + +Well, as I said, Royal wuz mad and told Polly that he guessed that the day +of the Parade he would take Maud Vincent out in the country in his motor, +to gather May-flowers. Polly told him she hoped they would have a good +time, and then, after he had gone, drivin' his car lickety-split, harem +skarum, owin' to his madness I spoze, Polly went upstairs and cried, for I +hearn her, her room wuz next to ourn. + +And I deeply respected her for her principles, for he had asked her first +to go May-flowering with him the day of the Suffrage meeting. But she +refused, havin' in her mind, I spoze, the girls that couldn't hunt flowers, +but had to handle weeds and thistles with bare hands (metaforically) and +wanted to help them and all workin' wimmen to happier and more prosperous +lives. + + + + +IV + +"STRIVIN' WITH THE EMISSARY" + + +But I am hitchin' the horse behind the wagon and to resoom backwards. The +Reunion wuz put off a week and the Suffrage Meetin' wuz two days away, so I +told Lorinda I didn't believe I would have a better time to carry Serepta +Pester's errents to Washington, D.C. Josiah said he guessed he would stay +and help wait on Hiram Cagwin, and I approved on't, for Lorinda wuz gittin' +wore out. + +And then Josiah made so light of them errents I felt that he would be a +drawback instead of a help, for how could I keep a calm and noble frame of +mind befittin' them lofty errents, and how could I carry 'em stiddy with a +pardner by my side pokin' fun at 'em, and at me for carryin' 'em, jarrin' +my sperit with his scorfin' and onbelievin' talk? + +And as I sot off alone in the trolley I thought of how they must have felt +in old times a-carryin' the Urim and Thumim. And though I hadn't no idee +what them wuz, yet I always felt that the carriers of 'em must have felt +solemn and high-strung. Yes, my feelin's wuz such as I felt of the heft +and importance of them errents not alone to Serepta Pester, but to the +hull race of wimmen that it kep' my mental head rained up so high that I +couldn't half see and enjoy the sight of the most beautiful city in the +world, and still I spoze its grandeur and glory sort o' filtered down +through my conscientiousness, as cloth grows white under the sun's rays +onbeknown to it. + +Anon I left the trolley and walked some ways afoot. It wuz a lovely day, +the sun shone down in golden splendor upon the splendor beneath it. Broad, +beautiful clean streets, little fresh green parks, everywhere you could +turn about, and big ones full of flowers and fountains, and trees and +statutes. + +And anon or oftener I passed noble big stun buildings, where everything is +made for the nation's good and profit. Money and fish and wisdom and all +sorts of patented things and garden seeds and tariffs and resolutions and +treaties and laws of every shape and size, good ones and queer ones and +reputations and rates and rebates, etc., etc. But it would devour too much +time to even name over all that is made and onmade there, even if I knowed +by name the innumerable things that are flowin' constant out of that great +reservoir of the Nation, with its vast crowd of law-makers settin' on the +lid, regulatin' its flow and spreadin' it abroad over the country, thick +and thin. + +But on I went past the Capitol, the handsomest buildin' on the Globe, +standin' in its own Eden of beauty. By the Public Library as long as from +our house to Grout Hozleton's, and I guess longer, and every foot on't more +beautifler ornamented than tongue can tell. But I didn't dally tryin' to +pace off the size on't, though it wuz enormous, for the thought of what I +wuz carryin' bore me on almost regardless of my matchless surroundin's and +the twinges of rumatiz. + +And anon I arrived at the White House, where my hopes and the hopes of +my sect and Serepta Pester wuz sot. I will pass over my efforts to git +into the Presence, merely sayin' that they were arjous and extreme, and I +wouldn't probably have got in at all had not the Presence appeared with a +hat on jest goin' out for a walk, and see me as I wuz strivin' with the +emissary for entrance. I spoze my noble mean, made more noble fur by the +magnitude of what I wuz carryin', impressed him, for suffice it to say +inside of five minutes the Presence wuz back in his augience room, and I +wuz layin' out them errents of Serepta's in front of him. + +He wuz very hefty, a good-lookin' smilin' man, a politer demeanored +gentlemanly appearner man I don't want to see. But his linement which had +looked so pleasant and cheerful growed gloomy and deprested as I spread +them errents before him and sez in conclusion: + +"Serepta Pester sent these errents to you, she wanted intemperance done +away with, the Whiskey Ring broke up and destroyed, she wanted you to +have nothin' stronger than root beer when you had company to dinner, she +offerin' to send you some burdock and dandeline roots and some emptins to +start it with, and she wanted her rights, and wanted 'em all by week after +next without fail." + +He sithed hard, and I never see a linement fall furder than hisen fell, +and kep' a-fallin'. I pitied him, I see it wuz a hard stent for him to do +it in the time she had sot, and he so fleshy too. But knowin' how much +wuz at the stake, and how the fate of Serepta and wimmen wuz tremblin' in +the balances, I spread them errents out before him. And bein' truthful +and above board, I told him that Serepta wuz middlin' disagreeable and +very humbly, but she needed her rights jest as much as though she wuz a +wax-doll. And I went on and told him how she and her relations had suffered +from want of rights, and how dretfully she had suffered from the Ring till +I declare talkin' about them little children of hern, and her agony, I got +about as fierce actin' as Serepta herself, and entirely onbeknown to myself +I talked powerful on intemperance and Rings, and such. + +When I got down agin onto my feet I see he had a still more worried and +anxious look on his good-natured face, and he sez: "The laws of the United +States are such that I can't do them errands, I can't interfere." + +"Then," sez I, "why don't you make the United States do right?" + +He said sunthin' about the might of the majority, and the powerful +corporations and rings, and that sot me off agin. And I talked very +powerful and allegored about allowin' a ring to be put round the United +States and let a lot of whiskey dealers and corporations lead her round, +a pitiful sight for men and angels. Sez I, "How duz it look before the +nations to see Columbia led round half-tipsy by a Ring?" + +He seemed to think it looked bad, I knew by his looks. + +Sez I, "Intemperance is bad for Serepta and bad for the Nation." + +He murmured sunthin' about the revenue the liquor trade brought the +Govermunt. + +But I sez, "Every penny is money right out of the people's pockets; every +dollar the people pay into the liquor traffic that gives a few cents into +the treasury, is costin' the people ten times that dollar in the loss +intemperance entails, loss of labor, by the inability of drunken men to do +anything but wobble and stagger, loss of wealth by the enormous losses of +property and taxation, of alms-houses, mad-houses, jails, police forces, +paupers' coffins, and the diggin' of thousands and thousands of graves +that are filled yearly by them that reel into 'em." Sez I, "Wouldn't it +be better for the people to pay that dollar in the first place into the +treasury than to let it filter through the dram-seller's hands, a few cents +of it fallin' into the national purse at last, putrid and heavy with all +these losses and curses and crimes and shames and despairs and agonies?" + +He seemed to think it would, I see by the looks of his linement he did. +Every honorable man feels so in his heart, and yet they let the Liquor Ring +control 'em and lead 'em round. "It is queer, queer as a dog." Sez I, "The +intellectual and moral power of the United States are rolled up and thrust +into that Whiskey Ring and bein' drove by the whiskey dealers jest where +they want to drive 'em." Sez I, "It controls New York village and nobody +denies it, and the piety and philanthropy and culture and philosophy of +that village has to be drawed along by that Ring." And sez I, in low but +startlin' tones of principle: + +"Where, where is it a-drawin' 'em to? Where is it drawin' the hull nation +to? Is it drawin' 'em down into a slavery ten times more abject and +soul-destroyin' than African slavery ever wuz? Tell me," sez I firmly, +"tell me!" + +He did not try to frame a reply, he could not find a frame. He knowed it +wuz a conundrum boundless as truth and God's justice, and as solemnly deep +in its sure consequences of evil as eternity, and as sure to come as that +is. + +Oh, how solemn he looked, and how sorry I felt for him, for I knowed worse +wuz to come, I knowed the sharpest arrow Serepta Pester had sent wuz yet +to pierce his sperit. But I sort o' blunted the edge on't what I could +conscientiously. Sez I, "I think myself Serepta is a little onreasonable, I +myself am willin' to wait three or four weeks. But she's suffered dretful +from intemperance from the Rings and from the want of rights, and her +sufferin's have made her more voylent in her demands and impatienter," and +then I fairly groaned as I did the rest of the errent, and let the sharpest +arrow fly from the bo. + +"Serepta told me to tell you if you didn't do these errents you should not +be President next year." + +He trembled like a popple leaf, and I felt that Serepta wuz threatenin' him +too hard. Sez he, "I do not wish to be President again, I shall refuse to +be nominated. At the same time I _do_ wish to be President and shall +work hard for the nomination if you can understand the paradox." + +"Yes," sez I, "I understand them paradoxes. I've lived with 'em as you may +say, all through my married life." + +A clock struck in the next room and I knowed time wuz passin' swift. + +Sez the President, "I would be glad to do Serepta's errents, I think she is +justified in askin' for her rights, and to have the Ring destroyed, but I +am not the one to do them." + +Sez I, "Who is the man or men?" + +He looked all round the room and up and down as if in hopes he could see +someone layin' round on the floor, or danglin' from the ceilin', that would +take the responsibility offen him, and in the very nick of time the door +opened after a quick rap, and the President jumped up with a relieved look +on his linement, and sez: + +"Here is the very man to do the errents." And he hastened to introduce me +to the Senator who entered. And then he bid me a hasty adoo, but cordial +and polite, and withdrew himself. + + + + +V + +"HE WUZ DRETFUL POLITE" + + +I felt glad to have this Senator do Serepta's errents, but I didn't like +his looks. My land! talk about Serepta Pester bein' disagreeable, he wuz as +disagreeable as she any day. He wuz kinder tall and looked out of his eyes +and wore a vest. He wuz some bald-headed, and wore a large smile all the +while, it looked like a boughten one that didn't fit him, but I won't say +it wuz. I presoom he'll be known by this description. But his baldness +didn't look to me like Josiah Allen's baldness, and he didn't have the +noble linement of the President, no indeed. He wuz dretful polite, good +land! politeness is no name for it, but I don't like to see anybody too +good. He drawed a chair up for me and himself and asked me: + +If he should have the inexpressible honor and delightful joy of aiding me +in any way, if so to command him to do it or words to that effect. I can't +put down his second-hand smiles and genteel looks and don't want to if I +could. + +But tacklin' hard jobs as I always tackle 'em, I sot down calm in front +of him with my umbrell on my lap and told him all of Serepta's errents, +and how I had brought 'em from Jonesville on my tower. I told over all her +sufferin's and wrongs from the Rings and from not havin' her rights, and +all her sister's Azuba Clapsaddle's, and her Aunt Cassandra Keeler's, and +Hulda and Drusilly's and Abagail Flanderses injustices and sufferin's. I +did her errents as honorable as I'd love to have one done for me, I told +him all the petickulars, and as I finished I said firmly: + +"Now can you do Serepta Pesterses errents and will you?" + +He leaned forward with that disagreeable boughten smile of hisen and took +up one corner of my mantilly, it wuz cut tab fashion, and he took up the +tab and said in a low insinuatin' voice, lookin' clost at the edge of the +tab: + +"Am I mistaken, or is this beautiful creation pipein' or can it be +Kensington tattin'?" + +I drawed the tab back coldly and never dained a reply; agin he sez, in +a tone of amiable anxiety, "Have I not heard a rumor that bangs are +going out of style? I see you do not wear your lovely hair bang-like or +a-pompadouris? Ah, women are lovely creatures, lovely beings, every one of +'em." And he sithed, "You are very beautiful," and he sithed agin, a sort +of a deceitful lovesick sithe. I sot demute as the Spinks, and a chippin' +bird tappin' his wing aginst her stuny breast would move it jest as much as +he moved me by his talk or his sithes. But he kep' on, puttin' on a sort of +a sad injured look as if my coldness wuz ondoin' of him. + +"My dear madam, it is my misfortune that the topics I introduce, however +carefully selected by me, do not seem to be congenial to you. Have you +a leanin' toward Natural history, madam? Have you ever studied into the +habits and traits of our American Wad?" + +"What?" sez I. For truly a woman's curosity, however parlyzed by just +indignation, can stand only just so much strain. "The what?" + +"The wad. The animal from which is obtained the valuable fur that tailors +make so much use of." + +Sez I, "Do you mean waddin' eight cents a sheet?" + +"Eight cents a pelt--yes, the skins are plentiful and cheap, owing to the +hardy habits of the animal." + +Sez I, "Cease instantly. I will hear no more." + +Truly, I had heard much of the flattery and little talk statesmen will use +to wimmen, and I'd hearn of their lies, etc.; but truly I felt that the +half had not been told. And then I thought out-loud and sez: + +"I've hearn how laws of eternal right and justice are sot one side in +Washington, D.C., as bein' too triflin' to attend to, while the Legislators +pondered over and passed laws regardin' hen's eggs and bird's nests. But +this is goin' too fur--too fur. But," sez I firmly, "I shall do Serepta's +errents, and do 'em to the best of my ability, and you can't draw off my +attention from her wrongs and sufferin's by talkin' about wads." + +"I would love to obleege Serepta," sez he, "because she belongs to such a +lovely sect. Wimmen are the loveliest, most angelic creatures that ever +walked the earth; they are perfect, flawless, like snow and roses." + +Sez I firmly, "They hain't no such thing; they are disagreeable creeters a +good deal of the time. They hain't no better than men, but they ort to have +their rights all the same. Now Serepta is disagreeable and kinder fierce +actin', and jest as humbly as they make wimmen, but that hain't no sign she +ort to be imposed upon; Josiah sez she hadn't ort to have rights she is so +humbly, but I don't feel so." + +"Who is Josiah?" sez he. + +Sez I, "My husband." + +"Ah, your husband! Yes, wimmen should have husbands instead of rights. They +do not need rights; they need freedom from all cares and sufferin'. Sweet +lovely beings! let them have husbands to lift them above all earthly cares +and trials! Oh! angels of our homes!" sez he, liftin' his eyes to the +heavens and kinder shettin' 'em, some as if he wuz goin' into a spazzum. +"Fly around, ye angels, in your native hants; mingle not with rings and +vile laws, flee away, flee above them!" + +And he kinder waved his hand back and forth in a floatin' fashion up in the +air, as if it wuz a woman flyin' up there smooth and serene. It would have +impressed some folks dretful, but it didn't me. I sez reasonably: + +"Serepta would have been glad to flew above 'em, but the Ring and the vile +laws lay holt of her onbeknown to her and dragged her down. And there +she is all bruised and broken-hearted by 'em. She didn't meddle with the +political Ring, but the Ring meddled with her. How can she fly when the +weight of this infamous traffic is holdin' her down?" + +"Ahem!" sez he. "Ahem, as it were. As I was saying, my dear madam, these +angelic angels of our homes are too ethereal, too dainty to mingle with +rude crowds. We political men would fain keep them as they are now; we are +willing to stand the rude buffetin' of--of--voting, in order to guard these +sweet delicate creatures from any hardships. Sweet tender beings, we would +fain guard thee--ah, yes, ah, yes." + +Sez I, "Cease instantly, or my sickness will increase, for such talk is +like thoroughwort or lobelia to my moral and mental stomach. You know and I +know that these angelic tender bein's, half-clothed, fill our streets on +icy midnights, huntin' up drunken husbands and fathers and sons. They are +driven to death and to moral ruin by the miserable want liquor drinkin' +entails. They are starved, they are froze, they are beaten, they are +made childless and hopeless by drunken husbands killin' their own flesh +and blood. They go down into the cold waves and are drowned by drunken +captains; they are cast from railways into death by drunken engineers; they +go up on the scaffold and die for crimes committed by the direct aid of +this agent of Hell. + +"Wimmen had ruther be flyin' round than to do all this, but they can't. +If men really believed all they say about wimmen, and I think some on 'em +do in a dreamy sentimental way--If wimmen are angels, give 'em the rights +of angels. Who ever hearn of a angel foldin' up her wings and goin' to a +poor-house or jail through the fault of somebody else? Who ever hearn of a +angel bein' dragged off to police court for fightin' to defend her children +and herself from a drunken husband that had broke her wings and blacked +her eyes, got the angel into the fight and then she got throwed into the +streets and imprisoned by it? Who ever hearn of a angel havin' to take in +washin' to support a drunken son or father or husband? Who ever hearn of +a angel goin' out as wet-nurse to git money to pay taxes on her home to +a Govermunt that in theory idolizes her, and practically despises her, +and uses that money in ways abominable to that angel. If you want to be +consistent, if you're bound to make angels of wimmen, you ort to furnish a +free safe place for 'em to soar in. You ort to keep the angels from bein' +tormented and bruised and killed, etc." + +"Ahem," sez he, "as it were, ahem." + +But I kep' right on, for I begun to feel noble and by the side of myself: + +"This talk about wimmen bein' outside and above all participation in the +laws of her country, is jest as pretty as anything I ever hearn, and jest +as simple. Why, you might jest as well throw a lot of snowflakes into the +street, and say, 'Some of 'em are female flakes and mustn't be trompled +on.' The great march of life tromples on 'em all alike; they fall from one +common sky, and are trodden down into one common ground. + +"Men and wimmen are made with divine impulses and desires, and human +needs and weaknesses, needin' the same heavenly light, and the same human +aids and helps. The law should mete out to them the same rewards and +punishments. + +"Serepta sez you call wimmen angels, and you don't give 'em the rights of +the lowest beasts that crawl on the earth. And Serepta told me to tell you +that she didn't ask the rights of a angel; she would be perfectly contented +and proud, if you would give her the rights of a dog--the assured political +rights of a yeller dog.' She said yeller and I'm bound on doin' her 'errent +jest as she wanted it done, word for word. + +"A dog, Serepta sez, don't have to be hung if it breaks the laws it is not +allowed any hand in making; a dog don't have to pay taxes on its bone to a +Govermunt that withholds every right of citizenship from it; a dog hain't +called undogly if it is industrious and hunts quietly round for its bone +to the best of its ability, and tries to git its share of the crumbs that +falls from that table bills are laid on. + +"A dog hain't preached to about its duty to keep home sweet and sacred, and +then see that home turned into a place of danger and torment under laws +that these very preachers have made legal and respectable. A dog don't have +to see its property taxed to advance laws it believes ruinous, and that +breaks its own heart and the heart of other dear dogs. A dog don't have +to listen to soul-sickening speeches from them that deny it freedom and +justice, about its bein' a damask rose and a seraph, when it knows it +hain't; it knows, if it knows anything, that it is jest a plain dog. + +"You see Serepta has been embittered by the trials that politics, corrupt +legislation have brought right onto her. She didn't want nothin' to do with +'em, but they come onto her onexpected and onbeknown, and she feels that +she must do everything she can to alter matters. She wants to help make the +laws that have such a overpowerin' influence over her. She believes they +can't be much worse than they are now, and may be a little better." + +"Ah," interrupted the Senator, "if Serepta wishes to change political +affairs, let her influence her children, her boys, and they will carry her +benign and noble influence forward into the centuries." + +"But the law took her boy, her little boy and girl, away from her. Through +the influence of the Whiskey Ring, of which her husband wuz a shinin' +member, he got possession of her boy. And so the law has made it perfectly +impossible for her to mould it indirectly through him, what Serepta duz she +must do herself." + +"Ah! my dear woman. A sad thing for Serepta; I trust _you_ have no +grievance of this kind, I trust that your estimable husband is, as it were, +estimable." + +"Yes, Josiah Allen is a good man, as good as men can be. You know men or +wimmen can't be only jest about so good anyway. But he's my choice, and he +don't drink a drop." + +"Pardon me, madam, but if you are happy in your married relations, and your +husband is a temperate good man, why do you feel so upon this subject?" + +"Why, good land! if you understood the nature of a woman you would know my +love for him, my happiness, the content and safety I feel about him and our +boy, makes me realize the sufferin's of Serepta in havin' her husband and +boy lost to her; makes me realize the depth of a wife's and mother's agony +when she sees the one she loves goin' down, down so low she can't reach +him; makes me feel how she must yearn to help him in some safe sure way. + +"High trees cast long shadows. The happier and more blessed a woman's life +is, the more duz she feel for them that are less blessed than she. Highest +love goes lowest, like that love that left Heaven and descended to earth, +and into it that He might lift up the lowly. The pityin' words of Him who +went about pleasin' not Himself, hants me and inspires me; I'm sorry for +Serepta, sorry for the hull wimmen race of the nation, and for the men too. +Lots of 'em are good creeters, better than wimmen, some on 'em. They want +to do right, but don't exactly see the way to do it. In the old slavery +times some of the masters wuz more to be pitied than the slaves. They could +see the injustice, feel the wrong they wuz doin', but old chains of Custom +bound 'em, social customs and idees had hardened into habits of thought. + +"They realized the size and heft of the evil, but didn't know how to +grapple with it, and throw it. So now, many men see the evils of this time, +want to help, but don't know the best way to lay holt of 'em. Life is a +curious conundrum anyway, and hard to guess. But we can try to git the +right answer to it as fur as we can. Serepta feels that one of the answers +to the conundrum is in gittin' her rights. I myself have got all the rights +I need or want, as fur as my own happiness is concerned. My home is my +castle (a story and a half wooden one, but dear). My towers elevate me, +the companionship of my friends give social happiness, our children are +prosperous and happy. We have property enough for all the comforts of life. +And above all other things my Josiah is my love and my theme." + +"Ah, yes!" sez he, "love is a woman's empire, and in that she should find +her full content--her entire happiness and thought. A womanly woman will +not look outside that lovely and safe and beautious empire." + +Sez I firmly, "If she hain't a idiot she can't help it. Love is the most +beautiful thing on earth, the most holy and satisfyin'. But I do not ask +you as a politician, but as a human bein', which would you like best, the +love of a strong, earnest tender nature, for in man or woman 'the strongest +are the tenderest, the loving are the daring,' which would you like best, +the love and respect of such a nature full of wit, of tenderness, of +infinite variety, or the love of a fool? + +"A fool's love is wearin', it is insipid at best, and it turns to vinegar. +Why, sweetened water must turn to vinegar, it is its nater. And if a woman +is bright and true-hearted, she can't help seein' through an injustice. She +may be happy in her own home. Domestic affection, social enjoyments, the +delights of a cultured home and society, and the companionship of the man +she loves and who loves her, will, if she is a true woman, satisfy her own +personal needs and desires, and she would far ruther for her own selfish +happiness rest quietly in that love, that most blessed home. + +"But the bright quick intellect that delights you can't help seein' an +injustice, can't help seein' through shams of all kinds, sham sentiment, +sham compliments, sham justice. The tender lovin' nature that blesses your +life can't help feelin' pity for them less blessed than herself. She looks +down through the love-guarded lattice of her home from which your care +would fain bar out all sights of woe and squaler, she looks down and sees +the weary toilers below, the hopeless, the wretched. She sees the steep +hills they have to climb, carryin' their crosses, she sees 'em go down into +the mire, dragged there by the love that should lift 'em up. She would not +be the woman you love if she could restrain her hand from liftin' up the +fallen, wipin' tears from weepin' eyes, speakin' brave words for them that +can't speak for themselves. The very strength of her affection that would +hold you up if you were in trouble or disgrace yearns to help all sorrowin' +hearts. + +"Down in your heart you can't help admirin' her for this, we can't help +respectin' the one that advocates the right, the true, even if they are our +conquerors. Wimmen hain't angels; now to be candid, you know they hain't. +They hain't any better than men. Men are considerable likely; and it seems +curious to me that they should act so in this one thing. For men ort to be +more honest and open than wimmen. They hain't had to cajole and wheedle and +use little trickeries and deceits and indirect ways as wimmen have. Why, +cramp a tree limb and see if it will grow as straight and vigorous as it +would in full freedom and sunshine. + +"Men ort to be nobler than women, sincerer, braver. And they ort to be +ashamed of this one trick of theirn, for they know they hain't honest in +it, they hain't generous. Give wimmen two or three generations of moral and +legal freedom and see if men will laugh at 'em for their little deceits and +affectations. No, men will be gentler, and wimmen nobler, and they will +both come nearer bein' angels, though most probable they won't be any too +good then, I hain't a mite afraid of it." + + + + +VI + +"CONCERNING MOTH-MILLERS AND MINNY FISH" + + +The Senator kinder sithed, and that sithe sort o' brought me down onto my +feet agin as it were, and a sense of my duty, and I spoke out agin: + +"Can you and will you do Serepta's errents?" + +He evaded a direct answer by sayin', "As you alluded to the little indirect +ways of women, dearest madam, you will pardon me for saying that it is +my belief that the soft gentle brains of females are unfitted for the +deep hard problems men have to grapple with. They are too doll-like, too +angelically and sweetly frivolous." + +"No doubt," sez I, "some wimmen are frivolous and some men foolish, for +as Mrs. Poyser said, 'God made women to match the men,' but these few +hadn't ort to disfranchise the hull race of men and wimmen. And as to soft +brains, Maria Mitchell discovered planets hid from masculine eyes from the +beginnin' of time, and do you think that wimmen can't see the black spots +on the body politic, that darkens the life of her and her children? + +"Madame Curie discovered the light that looks through solid wood and iron, +and you think wimmen can't see through unjust laws and practices, the +rampant evils of to-day, and see what is on the other side, see a remedy +for 'em. Florence Nightingale could mother and help cure an army, and why +hain't men willin' to let wimmen help cure a sick legislation, kinder +mother it, and encourage it to do better? She might much better be doin' +that, than playin' bridge-whist, or rastlin' with hobble skirts, and it +wouldn't devour any more time." + +He sot demute for a few minutes and then he sez, "While on the subject of +women's achievements, dearest madam, allow me to ask you, if they have +reached the importance you claim for them, why is it that so few women are +made immortal by bein' represented in the Hall of Fame? And why are the +four or five females represented there put away by themselves in a remote +unadorned corner with no roof to protect them from the rough winds and +storms that beat upon them?" + +Sez I, "That's a good illustration of what I've been sayin'. It wuz owin' +to a woman's gift that America has a Hall of Fame, and it would seem that +common courtesy would give wimmen an equally desirable place amongst +the Immortals. Do you spoze that if women formed half the committee of +selection--which they should since it wuz a woman's gift that made such a +place possible--do you spoze that if she had an equal voice with men, the +names of noble wimmen would be tucked away in a remote unroofed corner? + +"Edgar Allan Poe's genius wuz worthy a place among the Immortals, no doubt; +his poems and stories excite wonder and admiration. But do they move the +soul like Mrs. Stowe's immortal story that thrilled the world and helped +free a race?--yes, two races--for the curse of slavery held the white race +in bondage, too. Yet she and her three or four woman companions face the +stormy winds in an out-of-the-way corner, while Poe occupies his honorable +sightly place among his fifty or more male companions. + +"Wimmen have always been admonished to not strive for right and justice +but to lean on men's generosity and chivalry. Here wuz a place where that +chivalry would have shone, but it didn't seem to materialize, and if wimmen +had leaned on it, it would have proved a weak staff, indeed. + +"Such things as this are constantly occurring and show plain that wimmen +needs the ballot to protect her from all sorts of wrongs and indignities. +Men take wimmen's money, as they did here, and use it to uplift themselves, +and lower her, like taxin' her heavily and often unjustly and usin' this +money to help forward unjust laws which she abominates. And so it goes on, +and will, until women are men's equals legally and politically." + +"Ahem--you present things in a new light. I never looked at this matter +with your eyes." + +"No, you looked at 'em through a man's eyes; such things are so customary +that men do 'em without thinkin', from habit and custom, like hushin' up +children's talk, when they interrupt grown-ups." + +Agin he sot demute for a short space, and then said, "I feel that natural +human instinct is aginst the change. In savage races that knew nothin' of +civilization, male force and strength always ruled." + +"Why," sez I, "history tells us of savage races where wimmen always rule, +though I don't think they ort to--ability and goodness ort to rule." + +"Nature is aginst it," sez he. + +But I sez firmly, "Bees and lots of other insects and animals always have +a female for queen and ruler. They rule blindly and entirely, right on +through the centuries, but we are enlightened and should not encourage it. +In my opinion the male bee has just as good a right to be monarch as his +female pardner has, if he is as good and knows as much. I never believed in +the female workin' ones killin' off the male drones to save winterin' 'em; +they might give 'em some light chores to do round the hive to pay for their +board. I love justice and that would be _my_ way." + +Agin he sithed. "Modern history don't seem to favor the scheme--" But his +axent wuz as weak as a cat and his boughten smile seemed crackin' and +wearin' out; he knowed better. + +Sez I, "We won't argy long on that p'int, for I might overwhelm you if +I approved of overwhelmin', but, will merely ask you to cast one eye on +England. Was the rain of Victoria the Good less peaceful and prosperous +than that of the male rulers who preceded her? And you can then throw your +other eye over to Holland: is their sweet queen less worthy and beloved +to-day than other European monarchs? And is her throne more shaky and +tottlin' than theirn?" + +He didn't try to dispute me and bowed his head on his breast in a almost +meachin' way. He knowed he wuz beat on every side, and almost to the end of +his chain of rusty, broken old arguments. But anon he brightened up agin +and sez, ketchin' holt of the last shackly link of his argument: + +"You seem to place a great deal of dependence on the Bible. The Bible is +aginst the idee. The Bible teaches man's supremacy, man's absolute power +and might and authority." + +"Why, how you talk," sez I. "In the very first chapter the Bible tells how +man wuz turned right round by a woman, tells how she not only turned man +round to do as she wanted him to, but turned the hull world over. + +"That hain't nothin' I approve of; I don't speak of it because I like the +idee. That wuzn't done in a open honorable manner as things should be done. +No, Eve ruled by indirect influence, the gently influencing men way, that +politicians are so fond of. And she brought ruin and destruction onto the +hull world by it. + +"A few years later when men and wimmen grew wiser, when we hear of wimmen +rulin' Israel openly and honestly, like Miriam, Deborah and other likely +old four mothers, things went on better. They didn't act meachin' and +tempt, and act indirect." + +He sithed powerful and sot round oneasy in his chair. And sez he, "I +thought wimmen wuz taught by the Bible to serve and love their homes." + +"So they be. And every true woman loves to serve. Home is my supreme +happiness and delight, and my best happiness is found in servin' them I +love. But I must tell the truth, in the house or outdoors." + +Sez he faintly, "The Old Testament may teach that women have some strength +and power. But in the New Testament in every great undertaken' and plan men +have been chosen by God to carry them through." + +"Why-ee!" sez I, "how you talk! Have you ever read the Bible?" + +He said evasively, his grandmother owned one, and he had seen it in early +youth. And then he went on in a sort of apologizin' way. He had always +meant to read it, but he had entered political life at an early age where +the Bible wuzn't popular, and he believed that he had never read further +than the Epistles of Gulliver to the Liliputians. + +Sez I, "That hain't Bible, there hain't no Gulliver in it, and you mean +Galatians." + +Well, he said, that might be it, it wuz some man he knew, and he had always +heard and believed that man wuz the only worker that God had chosen. + +"Why," sez I, "the one great theme of the New Testament--the salvation of +the world through the birth of Christ--no man had anything to do with. Our +divine Lord wuz born of God and Woman. Heavenly plan of redemption for +fallen humanity. God Himself called woman into that work, the divine work +of saving a world, and why shouldn't she continue in it? God called her. +Mary had no dream of publicity, no desire of a world's work of suffering +and renunciation. The soft air of Galilee wropped her about in its sweet +content, as she dreamed her quiet dreams in maiden peace--dreamed, perhaps, +of domestic love and happiness. + +"From that sweetest silence, the restful peace of happy innocent girlhood, +God called her to her divine work of helpin' redeem a world from sin. And +did not this woman's love and willin' obedience, and sufferin' set her +apart, baptize her for this work of liftin' up the fallen, helpin' the +weak? + +[Illustration: "He'd entered political life where the Bible wuzn't +popular; he'd never read further than Gulliver's Epistle to the +Liliputians."] + +"Is it not a part of woman's life that she gave at the birth and +crucifixion? Her faith, her hope, her sufferin', her glow of divine pity +and joyful martyrdom. These, mingled with the divine, the pure heavenly, +have they not for nineteen hundred years been blessin' the world? The God +in Christ would awe us too much; we would shield our eyes from the too +blindin' glory of the pure God-like. But the tender Christ who wept over a +sinful city, and the grave of His friend, who stopped dyin' on the cross +to comfort His mother's heart, provide for her future--it is this womanly +element in our Lord's nature that makes us dare to approach Him, dare to +kneel at His feet? + +"And since woman wuz so blessed as to be counted worthy to be co-worker +with God in the beginnin' of the world's redemption; since He called +her from the quiet obscurity of womanly rest and peace into the blessed +martyrdom of renunciation and toil and sufferin', all to help a world that +cared nothin' for her, that cried out shame upon her. + +"He will help her carry on the work of helpin' a sinful world. He will +protect her in it, she cannot be harmed or hindered, for the cause she +loves of helpin' men and wimmen, is God's cause too, and God will take care +of His own. Herods full of greed and frightened selfishness may try to +break her heart by efforts to kill the child she loves, but she will hold +it so clost to her bosom he can't destroy it; and the light of the Divine +will go before her, showin' the way through the desert and wilderness +mebby, but she shall bear it into safety." + +"You spoke of Herod," sez he dreamily, "the name sounds familiar to me. Was +not Mr. Herod once in the United States Senate?" + +"Not that one," sez I. "He died some time ago, but I guess he has relatives +there now, judgin' from laws made there. You ask who Herod wuz, and as it +all seems a new story to you, I will tell you. When the Saviour of the +world wuz born in Bethlehem, and a woman wuz tryin' to save His life, a man +by the name of Herod wuz tryin' his best out of selfishness and greed to +murder Him." + +"Ah! that was not right in Herod." + +"No, it hain't been called so. And what wuzn't right in him hain't right in +his relations who are tryin' to do the same thing to-day. Sellin' for money +the right to destroy the child the mother carries on her heart. Surroundin' +him with temptations so murderous, yet so enticin' to youthful spirits, +that the mother feels that as the laws are now, the grave is the only place +of safety that God Himself can find for her boy. But because Herod wuz so +mean it hain't no sign that all men are mean. Joseph wuz as likely as he +could be." + +"Joseph?" sez he pensively. "Do you allude to our venerable speaker, Joe +Cannon?" + +"No," sez I. "I'm talkin' Bible--I'm talkin' about Joseph; jest plain +Joseph." + +"Ah! I see. I am not fully familiar with that work. Being so engrossed in +politics, and political literature, I don't git any time to devote to less +important publications." + +Sez I candidly, "I knew you hadn't read it the minute you mentioned the +book of Liliputians. But as I wuz sayin', Joseph wuz a likely man. He had +the strength to lead the way, overcome obstacles, keep dangers from Mary, +protect her tenderer form with the mantilly of his generous devotion. + +"_But she carried the Child on her bosom_; ponderin' high things in +her heart that Joseph never dreamed of. That is what is wanted now, and +in the future. The man and the woman walkin' side by side. He a little +ahead, mebby, to keep off dangers by his greater strength and courage. She +a-carryin' the infant Christ of Love, bearin' the baby Peace in her bosom, +carryin' it into safety from them that seek to destroy it. + +"And as I said before, if God called woman into this work, He will enable +her to carry it through. He will protect her from her own weaknesses, and +the misapprehensions and hard judgments and injustices of a gain-sayin' +world. + +"Yes, the star of hope is risin' in the sky brighter and brighter, and +wise men are even now comin' to the mother of the new Redeemer, led by the +star." + +He sot demute. Silence rained for some time; and finally I spoke out +solemnly through the rain: + +"Will you do Serepta's errents? Will you give her her rights? And will you +break the Whiskey Ring?" + +He said he would love to do the errents, I had convinced him that it would +be just and right to do 'em, but the Constitution of the United States +stood up firm aginst 'em. As the laws of the United States wuz, he could +not make any move toward doin' either of the errents. + +Sez I, "Can't the laws be changed?" + +"Be changed? Change the laws of the United States? Tamper with the glorious +Constitution that our fore-fathers left us--an immortal sacred legacy." + +He jumped up on his feet and his second-hand smile fell off. He kinder +shook as if he wuz skairt most to death and tremblin' with horrow. He did +it to skair me, I knew, but I knowed I meant well towards the Constitution +and our old forefathers; and my principles stiddied me and held me firm and +serene. And when he asked me agin in tones full of awe and horrow: + +"Can it be that I heard my ear aright? Or did you speak of changin' the +unalterable laws of the United States--tampering with the Constitution?" + +"Yes, that is what I said. Hain't they never been changed?" + +He dropped that skairful look and put on a firm judicial one. He see that +he could not skair me to death; an' sez he, "Oh, yes, they've been changed +in cases of necessity." + +Sez I, "For instance durin' the Oncivil war it wuz changed to make Northern +men cheap bloodhounds and hunters." + +"Yes," he said, "it seemed to be a case of necessity and economy." + +"I know it," sez I; "men wuz cheaper than any other breed of bloodhounds +the slave-holders could employ to hunt men and wimmen with, and more +faithful." + +"Yes," he said, "it wuz a case of clear economy." + +And sez I: "The laws have been changed to benefit liquor dealers." + +"Well, yes," he said, "it had been changed to enable whiskey dealers to +utilize the surplus liquor they import." + +Sez he, gittin' kinder animated, for he wuz on a congenial and familar +theme, "Nobody, the best calculators in drunkards, can exactly calculate +how much whiskey will be drunk in a year; and so, ruther than have the +whiskey dealers suffer loss, the law had to be changed. And then," sez he, +growin' still more candid in his excitement, "we are makin' a powerful +effort to change the laws now so as to take the tax off of whiskey, so it +can be sold cheaper, and obtained in greater quantities by the masses. Any +such great laws would justify a change in the Constitution and the laws; +but for any frivolous cause, any trivial cause, madam, we male custodians +of the sacred Constitution stand as walls of iron before it, guarding it +from any shadow of change. Faithful we will be, faithful unto death." + +Sez I, "As it has been changed, it can be agin. And you jest said I had +convinced you that Serepta's errents wuz errents of truth and justice, and +you would love to do 'em." + +"Well, yes, yes--I would love to--as it were--. But, my dear madam, much as +I would like to oblige you, I have not the time to devote to the cause of +Right and Justice. I don't think you realize the constant pressure of hard +work that is ageing us and wearing us out, before our day. + +"As I said, we have to watch the liquor interest constantly to see that the +liquor dealers suffer no loss--we have to do that, of course." + +And he continued dreamily, as if losin' sight of me and talkin' to himself: +"The wealthy Corporations and Trusts, we have to condemn them loudly to +please the common people, and help 'em secretly to please ourselves, or our +richest perkisits are lost. The Canal Ring, the Indian Agency, the Land +Grabbers, the political bosses. In fact, we are surrounded by a host of +bandits that we have to appease and profit by; oh, how these matters wear +into the gray matter of our brains!" + +"Gray matter!" sez I, with my nose uplifted to its extremest height, "I +should call it black matter!" + +"Well, the name is immaterial, but these labors, though pocket filling, are +brain wearing. And of late I and the rest of our loyal henchmen have been +worn out in our labors in tariff revision. You know how we claim to help +the common people by the revision; you've probable read about it in the +papers." + +"Yes," sez I coldly, "I've hearn _talk_." + +"Yes," sez he, "but if we do succeed, after the most strenious efforts in +getting the duty off champagne, green turtle, olives, etc., and put on to +sugar, tea, cotton cloth and such like, with all this brain fag and brain +labor--" + +"And tongue labor!" sez I in a icy axent. + +"Yes, after all this ceaseless toil the common people will not show any +gratitude; we statesmen labor oft with aching hearts." And he leaned his +forward on his hand and sithed. + +But my looks wuz like ice-suckles on the north side of a barn. And I +stopped his complaints and his sithes by askin' in a voice that demanded a +reply: + +"Can you and will you do Serepta's errents? Errents full of truth and +justice and eternal right?" + +He said he knew they wuz jest runnin' over with them qualities, but happy +as it would make him to do 'em, he had to refuse owin' to the fur more +important matters he had named, and the many, many other laws and preambles +that he hadn't time to name over to me. "Mebby you have heard," sez +he, "that we are now engaged in making most important laws concerning +moth-millers, and minny fish, and hog cholera. And take it with these +important bills and the constant strain on our minds in tryin' to pass laws +to increase our own salaries, you can see jest how cramped we are for time. +And though we would love to pass some laws of truth and righteousness--we +fairly ache to--yet not havin' the requisite time we are forced to lay 'em +on the table or under it." + +"Well," sez I, "I guess I may as well be a-goin'." And I bid him a cool +goodbye and started for the door. But jest as my hand wuz on the nub he +jumped up and opened the door, wearin' that boughten second-hand smile agin +on his linement, and sez he: + +"Dear madam, perhaps Senator B. will do the errents for you." + +Sez I, "Where is Senator B.?" And he said I would find him at his Post of +Duty at the Capitol. + +"Well," I said, "I will hunt up the Post," and did. A grand enough place +for a Emperor or a Zar is the Capitol of our great nation where I found +him, a good natured lookin' boy in buttons showin' me the Post. + + + + +VII + +"NO HAMPERIN' HITCHIN' STRAPS" + + +Well, Senator B. wanted to do the errents but said it wuz not his place, +and sent me to Senator C., and he almost cried, he wanted to do 'em so bad, +but stern duty tied him to his Post, he said, and he sent me to Senator D., +and he _did_ cry onto his handkerchief, he wanted to do the errents so +bad, and said it would be such a good thing to have 'em done. He bust right +into tears as he said he had to refuse to do 'em. Whether they wuz wet +tears or dry ones I couldn't tell, his handkerchief wuz so big, but I hearn +his sithes, and they wuz deep and powerful ones. + +But as I sez to him, "Wet tears, nor dry ones, nor windy sithes didn't help +do the errents." So I went on his sobbin' advice to Senator E., and he wuz +huffy and didn't want to do 'em and said so. And said his wife had thirteen +children, and wimmen instead of votin' ort to go and do likewise. + +And I told him it wouldn't look well in onmarried wimmen and widders, and +if they should foller her example folks would talk. + +And he said, "They ort to marry." + +And I said, "As the fashion is now, wimmen had to wait for some man to ask +'em, and if they didn't come up to the mark and ask 'em, who wuz to blame?" + +He wouldn't answer, and looked sulky, but honest, and wouldn't tell me who +to go to to git the errents done. + +But jest outside his door I met the Senator I had left sobbin' over the +errents. He looked real hilarious, but drawed his face down when he ketched +my eye, and sithed several times, and sent me to Senator F. and he sent me +to Senator G. + +And suffice it to say I wuz sent round, and talked to, and cried at, and +sulked to, and smiled at and scowled at, and encouraged and discouraged, +'till my head swum and my knees wobbled under me. And with all my efforts +and outlay of oratory and shue leather not one of Serepta Pester's errents +could I git done, and no hopes held out of their ever bein' done. And about +the middle of the afternoon I gin up, there wuz no use in tryin' any longer +and I turned my weary tracks towards the outside door. But as bad as I +felt, I couldn't help my sperit bein' lifted up some by the grandeur about +me. + +Oh, my land! to stand in the immense hall and look up, and up, and see all +the colors of the rain-bow and see what wonderful pictures there wuz up +there in the sky above me as it were. Why, it seemed curiouser than any +Northern lights I ever see in my life, and they stream up dretful curious +sometimes. And as I walked through that lofty and most beautiful place and +realized the size and majestic proportions of the buildin' I wondered to +myself that a small law, a little unjust law could ever be passed in such +grand and magnificent surroundin's. And I sez to myself, it can't be the +fault of the place anyway; the law-makers have a chance for their souls +to soar if they want to, here is room and to spare to pass laws big as +elephants and camels, and I wondered that they should ever try to pass laws +as small as muskeeters and nats. Thinkses I, I wonder them little laws +don't git to strollin' round and git lost in them magnificent corridors. +But I consoled myself, thinkin' it wouldn't be no great loss if they did. +But right here, as I wuz thinkin' on these deep and lofty subjects, I met +the good natured young chap that had showed me round and he sez: + +"You look fatigued, mom." (Soarin' even to yourself is tuckerin'.) "You +look very fatigued; won't you take something?" + +I looked at him with a curious silent sort of a look; for I didn't know +what he meant. Agin he looked clost at me and sort o' pityin'; and sez he, +"You look tired out, mom. Won't you take something? Let me treat you to +something; what will you take, mom?" + +I thought he wuz actin' dretful liberal, but I knew they had strange ways +in Washington anyway. And I didn't know but it wuz their way to make some +present to every woman that comes there, and I didn't want to act awkward +and out of style, so I sez: + +"I don't want to take anything, and don't see any reason why you should +insist on't. But if I have got to take sunthin' I had jest as soon have a +few yards of factory cloth as anything. That always comes handy." + +I thought that if he wuz determined to treat me to show his good feelin's +towards me, I would git sunthin' useful and that would do me some good, +else what wuz the good of bein' treated? And I thought that if I had got to +take a present from a strange man, I would make a shirt for Josiah out of +it. I thought that would save jealousy and make it right so fur as goodness +went. + +"But," sez he, "I mean beer or wine or liquor of some kind." + +I riz right up in my shues and dignity, and glared at him. + +Sez he, "There is a saloon right here handy in the buildin'." + +Sez I in awful axents, "It is very appropriate to have it here handy!" Sez +I, "Liquor duz more towards makin' the laws of the United States from +Caucus to Convention than anything else duz, and it is highly proper to +have it here so they can soak the laws in it right off before they lay 'em +onto the table or under 'em, or pass 'em onto the people. It is highly +appropriate," sez I. + +"Yes," sez he. "It is very handy for the Senators and Congressmen, and let +me get you a glass." + +"No, you won't!" sez I firmly. "The nation suffers enough from that room +now without havin' Josiah Allen's wife let in." + +Sez he, "If you have any feeling of delicacy in goin' in there, let me make +some wine here. I will get a glass of water and make you some pure grape +wine, or French brandy, or corn or rye whiskey. I have all the drugs right +here." And he took a little box out of his pocket. "My father is a importer +of rare old wines, and I know just how it is done. I have 'em all here, +Capsicum, Coculus Indicus, alum, copperas, strychnine; I will make some of +the choicest, oldest, and purest imported liquors we have in the country, +in five minutes if you say so." + +"No!" sez I firmly, "when I want to foller Cleopatra's fashion and commit +suicide, I will hire a rattlesnake and take my pizen as she did, on the +outside." + +Well, I got back to Hiram Cagwin's tired as a dog, and Serepta's errents +ondone. But my conscience opholded me and told me I had done my very best, +and man or woman can do no more. + +Well, the next day but one wuz the big outdoor suffrage meetin'. And we sot +off in good season, Hiram feelin' well enough to be left with the hired +help. Polly started before we did with some of her college mates, lookin' +pretty as a pink with a red rose pinned over a achin' heart, so I spoze, +for she loved the young man who wuz out with another girl May-flowering. +Burnin' zeal and lofty principle can't take the place in a woman's heart of +love and domestic happiness, and men needn't be afraid it will. There is no +more danger on't than there is of a settin' hen wantin' to leave her nest +to be a commercial traveler. Nature has made laws for wimmen and hens that +no ballot, male or female, can upset. + +Josiah and Lorinda and I went in the trolley in good season, so's to git a +sightly place, Lorinda protestin' all the time aginst the indelicacy and +impropriety of wimmen's appearin' in outdoor meetin's, forgittin', I spose, +the dense procession of wimmen that fills the avenues every day, follerin' +Fashion and Display. As nigh as I could make out the impropriety consisted +in wimmen's follerin' after Justice and Right. + +Josiah's face looked dubersome. I guess he wuz worryin' over his offer to +represent me, and thinkin' of Aunt Susan and the twins. + +But as it turned out I met Diantha while Josiah wuz in a shop buyin' some +peppermint lozengers, and she said her niece had come from the West, and +they got along all right. So that lifted my burden. But I thought best not +to tell Josiah, as he wuz so bound to represent me. I thought it wouldn't +do any hurt to let him think it over about the job a man took on himself +when he sot out to represent a woman. They wouldn't like it in lots of +ways, as willin' as they seem to be in print. + +Wimmen go through lots of things calm and patient that would make a man +flinch and shy off like a balky horse, and visey versey. I wouldn't want +to represent Josiah lots of times, breakin' colts, ploughin' greensward, +cuttin' cord-wood etc., etc. Men and wimmen want equal legal rights to +represent themselves and their own sex which are different, and always must +be, and both sexes don't want to be hampered and sot down on by the other +one. That is gauldin' to human nater, male or female. + +We got a good place nigh the speakers' stand, and we hadn't stood there +long before the parade hove in sight, the yeller banners streamin' out like +sunshine on a rainy day, police outriders, music, etc. + +More than a hundred automobiles led the parade and five times as many +wimmen walkin' afoot. A big grand-stand with the lady speakers and +their friends on it, all dressed pretty as pinks. For the old idee that +suffragists don't care for attractive dress and domestic life wuz exploded +long ago, and many other old superstitions went up in the blaze. + +Those of us who have gray hair can remember when if a man spoke favorably +of women's rights the sarcastic question was asked him: "How old is Susan +B. Anthony?" + +And this fine wit and cuttin' ridicule would silence argument and quench +the spirit of the upholder. + +But the world moves. Susan's memory is beloved and revered, and the +contemptious ridicule of the onthinkin' and ignorant only nourished the +laurels the world lays on her tomb. + +At that time accordin' to popular opinion a suffragist wuz a slatternly +woman with uncombed locks, dangling shoe strings, and bloomers, stridin' +through an unswept house onmindful of dirty children or hungry husband, but +the world moves onward and public opinion with it. Suffragists are the best +mothers, the best housekeepers, the best dressers of any wimmen in the +land. Search the records and you'll find it so, and why? + +Because they know sunthin', it takes common sense to make a gooseberry +pie as it ort to be. And the more a woman knows and the more justice she +demands, the better for her husband. The same sperit that rebels at tyranny +and injustice rebels at dirt, disorder, discomfort, and all unpleasant +conditions. + +I looked ahead with my mind's eye and see them pretty college girls settled +down in pleasant homes of their own, where sanitary laws prevailed, +where the babies wuzn't fed pickles and cabbage, and kep' in air-tight +enclosures. Where the husbands did not have to go outside their own homes +to find cheer and comfort, and intelligent conversation, and where Love and +Common Sense walked hand in hand toward Happiness and Contentment, Justice, +with her blinders offen her eyes, goin' ahead on 'em. I never liked the +idee of Justice wearin' them bandages over her eyes. She ort to have both +eyes open; if anybody ever needed good eyesight she duz, to choose the +straight and narrer road, lookin' backward to see the mistakes she has made +in the past, so's to shun 'em in the future, and lookin' all round her in +the present to see where she can help matters, and lookin' fur off in the +future to the bright dawn of a Tomorrow. To the shinin' mount of Equal +Rights and full Liberty. Where she sees men and wimmen standin' side by +side with no halters or hamperin' hitchin' straps on either on 'em. He more +gentle and considerate, and she less cowardly and emotional. + +Good land! what could Justice do blind in one eye and wimmen on the blind +side? But good sensible wimmen are reachin' up and pullin' the bandages +offen her eyes. She's in a fair way to git her eyesight. But I'm +eppisodin', and to resoom forward. + + + + +VIII + +"OLD MOM NATER LISTENIN'" + + +There wuz some pleasant talkin' and jokin' between bystanders and +suffragettes, and then some good natured but keen and sensible speeches. +And one pretty speaker told about the doin's at Albany and Washington. How +women's respectful pleas for justice are treated there. How the law-makers, +born and nussed by wimmen and dependent on 'em for comfort and happiness, +use the wimmen's tax money to help make laws makin' her of no legal +importance only as helpless figgers to hang taxation and punishment on. + +Old Mom Nater had been listenin' clost, her sky-blue eyes shinin' with joy +to see her own sect present such a noble appearance in the parade. But +when these insults and indignities wuz brung up to her mind agin and she +realized afresh how wimmen couldn't git no more rights accorded to her than +a dog or a hen, and worse. For a hen or a dog wouldn't be taxed to raise +money for turkle soup and shampain to nourish the law-makers whilst they +made the laws agin 'em--Mom Nater's eyes clouded over with indignation and +resentment, and she boo-hooed right out a-cryin'. Helpless tears, of no +more account than other females have shed, and will, as they set on their +hard benches with idiots, lunaticks, and criminals. + +Of course she wiped up her tears pretty soon, not willin' to lose any of +the wimmen's bright speeches. But when her tear-drops fell fast, Josiah sez +to me, "You'll see them wimmen run like hikers now, wimmen always thought +more of shiffon and fol-de-rols than they did of principle." + +But I sez, "Wait and see," (we wuz under a awnin' and protected). + +But the young and pretty speaker who wore a light silk dress and exquisite +bunnet, kep' right on talkin' jest as calmly as if she didn't know her +pretty dress wuz bein' spilte and her bunnet gittin' wet as sop, and I sez +to Josiah: + +"When wimmen are so in earnest, and want anything so much they can stand +soakin' in their best dresses, and let their Sunday bunnets be spilte on +their heads, not noticin' 'em seemin'ly, but keep right on pleadin' for +right and justice, they are in a fair way of gittin' what they are after." + +He looked kinder meachin' but didn't dispute me. + +The speeches wuz beautiful and convincin', and pretty soon old Mom Nater +stopped cryin' to hear 'em, and she and I both listened full of joy and +happiness to see with what eloquence and justice our sect wuz pleadin' our +cause. Their arguments wuz so reasonable and convincin' that I said to +myself, I don't see how anybody can help bein' converted to this righteous +cause, the liftin' up of wimmen from her uncomfortable crouchin' poster +with criminals and idiots, up to the place she should occupy by the side +of other good citizens of the United States, with all the legal and moral +rights that go with that noble title. + +And right whilst I wuz thinkin' this, sunthin' wuz happenin' that proved +I wuz right in my eppisodin', and somebody awful sot agin it wuz bein' +converted then and there (but of this more anon and bom-bye). We stayed +till we heard the last word of the last speech, I happy and proud in +sperit, Lorinda partly converted, she couldn't help it, though she wouldn't +own up to it at that juncter. And Josiah lookin' real deprested, the +thought of representin' me wuz worryin' him I knew, for I hearn him say +(soty vosy), "Represent wimmen or not, I hain't goin' to set up all night +with no old woman, and lift her round, nor dry nuss no twins." + +And thinkin' his sperit wuz pierced to a sufficient depth by his +apprehension, so reason could be planted and take root, and he wouldn't be +so anxious in the future to represent a woman, I told him what Diantha said +and we all went home in good sperits. The sun shone clear, the rain had +washed the face of the Earth till it shone, and everything looked gay and +joyous. + +When we got to Lorinda's we see a auto standin' in front of the door full +of flowery branches in front and the pink posies lookin' no more bright and +rosy than the faces of the two young folks settin' there. It wuz Polly and +Royal. + +It seemed that when he and Maud got back from the country (and they didn't +stay long, Royal wuz so restless and oneasy) Maud insisted on his takin' +her to the suffrage meetin' jest to make fun on't, so I spoze. She thought +she had rubbed out Polly's image and made a impression herself on Royal's +heart that only needed stompin' in a little deeper, and she thought +ridicule would be the stomper she needed. + +But when they got to the meetin' and he see Polly settin' like a lily +amongst flowers, and read in her lovely face the earnest desire to lift the +burden from the heavy laden, comfort the sorrowful, right the wrong, and do +what she could in her day and generation-- + +I spoze his eyes could only see her sweet face. But he couldn't help his +ears from hearin' the reasonable, eloquent words of earnest and womanly +wimmen, so full of good sense and truth and justice that no reasonable +person could dispute 'em, and when he contrasted all this with the sneerin' +face, the sarcastic egotistic prattle of Maud, the veil dropped from his +eyes, and he see with the New Vision. + +You know how it wuz with Saul the Scoffer who went breathin' out vengeance, +and Eternal Right stopped him on his way with its great light. Well, I +spoze it wuz a bright ray from that same light that shone down into Royal's +heart and made him see. He wuz always good hearted and generous--men have +always been better than the laws they have made. He left Maud at her home +not fur away and hastened back, way-laid Polly, and bore her home in +triumph and a thirty-horse-power car. + +It don't make much difference I spoze how or where anybody is converted. +The Bible speaks of some bein' ketched out of the fire, and I spoze it is +about the same if they are ketched out of the rain. 'Tennyrate the same +rain that washed some of the color off Maud's cheeks, seemed to wash away +the blindin' mist of prejudice and antagonism from Royal's mental vision, +leavin' his sperit ready for the great white light of truth and justice +to strike in. And that very day and hour he come round to Polly's way of +thinkin', and bein' smart as a whip and so rich, I suppose he will be a +great accusation to the cause. + +Well, the next day but one the Allens met in a pleasant grove on the river +shore and we had a good growin' time. Royal bein' as you may say one of the +family, took us all to the grove in his big tourin' car, and the fourth +trip he took Polly alone, and wuzn't it queer that, though the load wuz fur +lighter, it took him three times as long as the other three trips together? +Why, they never got there till dinner wuz on the table, and then they +didn't seem to care a mite about the extra good food. + +But I made allowances, for as I looked into their glowin' faces I knowed +they wuz partakin' of fruit from the full branches of first love, true +love. Rich fruit that gives the divinest satisfaction of any this old earth +affords. Food that never changes through the centuries, though fashion +often changes, and riotous plenty or food famine may exalt or depress the +sperit of the householder. Nothin' but time has any power over this divine +fruitage. He gradually, as the light of the honeymoon wanes, whets his old +scythe and mows down some of the luxuriant branches, either cuttin' a full +swath, or one at a time, and the blessed consumers have to come down to the +ordinary food of mortals. But this wuz still fur away from them. + +And I knowed too that the ordinary food of ordinary mortals partook of +under the full harvest moon of domestic comfort and contentment wuz not to +be despised, though fur different. And the light fur different from the +glow and the glamour that wropped them two together and all the rest of the +world away from 'em. + +But I'm eppisodin' too much, and to resoom forward. + +As I said, we had a happy growin' time at the Reunion, Josiah bein' in fine +feather to see the relation on his side presentin' such a noble appearance. +And like a good wife I sympathized with him in his pride and happiness, +though I told him they didn't present any better appearance than the same +number of Smiths would. And their cookin', though excellent, wuz no better +than the Smiths could cook if they sot out to. + +He bein' so good natered didn't dispute me outright, but said he thought +the Allens made better nut-cakes than the Smiths. + +But they don't, no such thing. In fact I think the Smith nut-cakes are +lighter and have a more artistic twist to 'em and don't devour so much fat +a-fryin'. + +But I'd hate to set Josiah down to any better vittles. I d'no as I would +dast let him loose at the table at a Smith reunion, for he eat fur too much +as it wuz. I had to give him five pepsin lozengers and some pepper tea. And +then I looked out all night for night mairs to ride on his chist. But he +come through it alive though with considerable pain. + +We stayed two or three days longer with Lorinda, and then she and Hiram +went part way with us as we visited our way home. We've got relations +livin' all along the river that we owed visits to. And we went to see a +number of 'em and enjoyed our four selves first rate. These things all took +place more than a year ago and another man sets in the high chair, before +which I laid Serepta's errents, a man not so hefty mebby weighed by common +steelyards, but one of noble weight judged by mental and moral scales. + +I d'no whether I'd had any better luck if I'd presented Serepta's errents +to him. Sometimes when I look in the kind eyes of his picter, and read his +noble and eloquent words that I believe come from his very soul, I think +mebby I'd been more lucky if he'd sot in the chair that day. But then I +d'no, there are so many influences and hendrances planted like thorns in +the cushion of that chair that a man, no matter how earnest he strives to +do jest right, can't help bein' pricked by 'em and held back. And I know he +could never done them errents in the time she sot, but I'm in hopes he'll +throw his powerful influence jest as fur as he can on the side of right, +and justice to all the citizens of the U.S., wimmen as well as men. + +'Tennyrate, he has showed more heroism now than many soldiers who risk life +on the battle field. For the worst foe to fight and conquer is Ridicule; +and he and others in high places have attackted Fashion so entrenched in +the solid armour of Habit that most public men wouldn't have dasted to take +arms agin it. + +And the long waves of Time must swash up agin the shores of Eternity, +before the good it has done can be estimated. How fur the influence has +extended. How many weak wills been strengthened. How many broken hearts +healed. How many young lives inspired to nobler and saner living. + +But to resoom forward, I can't nor won't carry them errents of Serepta's +there again. It is too wearin' for one of my age and my rheumatiz. What a +tedious time I did put in there. It wuz a day long to be remembered by me. + + + + +IX + +THE WOMEN'S PARADE + + +Josiah come home from Jonesville one day, all wrought up. He'd took off a +big crate of eggs and got returns from several crates he'd sent to New +York, an' he sez to me: + +"That consarned Middleman is cheatin' me the worst kind. I know the yaller +Plymouth Rock eggs ort to bring mor'n the white Leghorns; they're bigger +and it stands to reason they're worth more, and he don't give nigh so much. +I believe he eats 'em himself and that's why he wants to git 'em cheaper." + +"No Middleman," sez I, "could eat fifty dozen a week." + +"He could if he eat enough at one time. 'Tennyrate, I'm goin' to New York +to see about it." + +"When are you goin'?" sez I. + +"I'm goin' to-morrow mornin'. I'm goin' in onexpected and I lay out to +catch him devourin' them big eggs himself." + +"Oh, shaw!" sez I. "The idee!" + +"Well, I say the Trusts and Middlemen are dishonest as the old Harry. Don't +you remember what one on 'em writ to Uncle Sime Bentley and what he writ +back? He'd sent a great load of potatoes to him and he didn't get hardly +anything for 'em, only their big bill for sellin' 'em. They charged him for +freightage, carage, storage, porterage, weightage, and to make their bill +longer, they put in _ratage_ and _satage_. + +"Uncle Sime writ back 'You infarnel thief, you, put in "stealage" and keep +the whole on't.'" + +But I sez, "They're not all dishonest. There are good men among 'em as well +as bad." + +"Well, I lay out to see to it myself, and if they ever charge me for +'ratage' and 'satage' I'm goin' to see what they are, and how they look." + +"Well," sez I, "if you're bound to go, I'll get up and get a good breakfast +and go with you." It was the day of the Woman's Suffrage Parade and I +wanted to see it. I wanted to like a dog, and had ever since I hearn of it. +Though some of the Jonesvillians felt different. The Creation Searchin' +Society wuz dretful exercised about it. The President's stepma is a strong +She Aunty and has always ruled Philander with an iron hand. I've always +noticed that women who didn't want any rights always took the right to have +their own way. But 'tennyrate Philander come up a very strong He Aunty. +And he felt that the Creation Searchers ort to go to New York that day to +assist the Aunties in sneerin' at the marchers, writin' up the parade, +and helpin' count 'em. Philander wuz always good at figures, specially at +subtraction, and he and his Step Ma thought he ort to be there to help. + +I told Josiah I guessed the She Aunties didn't need no help at that. + +But Philander called a meetin' of the Creation Searchers to make +arrangements to go. And I spoze the speech he made at the meetin' wuz a +powerful effort. And the members most all on 'em believin' as he did--they +said it wuz a dretful interestin' meetin'. Sunthin' like a love feast, only +more wrought up and excitin'. + +The editor of the _Auger_ printed the whole thing in his paper, and +said it give a staggerin' blow agin Woman's Suffrage, and he didn't know +but it wuz a death blow--he hoped it wuz. + +"A Woman's Parade," sez Philander, "is the most abominable sight ever seen +on our planetary system. Onprotected woman dressed up in fine clothes +standin' up on her feet, and paradin' herself before strange men. Oh! how +bold! Oh! how onwomanly! No wonder," says he, "the She Aunties are shocked +at the sight, and say they marched to attract the attention of men. Why +can't women stay to home and set down and knit? And then men would love +'em. But if they keep on with these bold, forward actions, men won't love +'em, and they will find out so. And it has always been, and is now, man's +greatest desire and chiefest aim he has aimed at, to protect women, to +throw the shinin' mantilly of his constant devotion about her delikit form +and shield her and guard her like the very apples in his eyes. + +"Woman is too sweet and tender a flower to have any such hardship put upon +her, and it almost crazes a man, and makes him temporarily out of his head, +to see women do anything to hazard that inheriant delicacy of hern, that +always appealed so to the male man. + +"Let us go forth, clad in our principles (and ordinary clothing, of +course), and show just where we stand on the woman question, and do all we +can to assist the gentle feminine She Aunties. Lovely, retirin' females +whose pictures we so often see gracin' the sensational newspapers. Their +white womanly neck and shoulders, glitterin' with jewels, no brighter than +their eyes. They don't appear there for sex appeal, or to win admiration. +No indeed! No doubt they shrink from the publicity. And also shrink from +making speeches in the Senate chambers or the halls of Justice, but will do +so, angelic martyrs that they are, to hold their erring Suffrage sisters +back from their brazen efforts at publicity and public speakin'." + +They said his speech wuz cheered wildly, give out for publication, and +entered into the moments of the Society. + +But after all, it happened real curious the day of the Parade every leadin' +Creation Searcher had some impediment in his way, and couldn't go, and of +course, the Society didn't want to go without its leaders. + +Mis' Philander Daggett, the president's wife, wuz paperin' her settin' room +and parlor overhead. She wuz expectin' company and couldn't put it off. +And bein' jest married, and thinkin' the world of her, Philander said he +dassent leave home for fear she'd fall offen the barrel and break her neck. +She had a board laid acrost two barrels to stand up on. And every day +Philander would leave his outside work and come into the house, and set +round and watch her--he thought so much of her. I suppose he wanted to +catch her if she fell. But I didn't think she would fall. She is young and +tuff, and she papered it real good, though it wuz dretful hard on her arm +sockets and back. + +And the Secretary's wife wuz puttin' in a piece of onions. She thought she +would make considerable by it, and she will, if onions keep up. But it is +turrible hard on a woman's back to weed 'em. But she is ambitious; she +raised a flock of fifty-six turkeys last year besides doin' her house +work, and makin' seventy-five yards of rag carpet. And she thought onions +wouldn't be so wearin' on her as turkeys, for onions, she said, will stay +where they are put, but turkeys are born wanderers and hikers. And they led +her through sun and rain, swamp and swale, uphill and downhill, a-chasin' +'em up, but she made well by 'em. Well, in puttin' in her onion seed, she +overworked herself and got a crick in her back, so she couldn't stir hand +nor foot for two days. And bein' only just them two, her husband had to +stay home to see to things. + +And the Treasurer's wife is canvassin' for the life of William J. Bryan. +And wantin' to make all she could, she took a longer tramp than common, and +didn't hear of the Parade or meetin' of the C.S.S. at all. She writ home +a day or two before the meetin', that she wuz goin' as long as her legs +held out, and they needn't write to her, for she didn't know where she +would be. + +Well, of course, the Creation Searchers didn't want to go without their +officers. They said they couldn't make no show if they did. So they give up +goin'. But I spoze they made fun of the Woman's Parade amongst theirselves, +and mourned over their indelikit onwomanly actions, and worried about it +bein' too hard for 'em, and sneered at 'em considerable. + +Well, Josiah always loves to have me with him, an' though he'd made light +of the Parade, he didn't object to my goin'. And suffice it to say that we +arrove at that Middleman's safe and sound, though why we didn't git lost in +that grand immense depo and wander 'round there all day like babes in the +woods, is more'n I can tell. + +The Middleman wuzn't dishonest: he convinced Josiah on it. He had shipped +the colored eggs somewhere, and of course he couldn't pay as much, and he +never had hearn of _Ratage_ or _Satage_. He wuz a real pleasant +Middleman, and hearing me say how much I wanted to see the Woman's Parade, +he invited us to go upstairs and set by a winder, where there was a good +view on't. We'd eat our lunch on the train and we accepted his invitation, +and sot down by a winder then and there, though it wuz a hour or so before +the time sot for the Parade. And I should have taken solid comfort watchin' +the endless procession of men and women and vehicles of all sorts and +descriptions, but Josiah made so many slightin' remarks on the dress of +the females passin' below on the sidewalk, that it made me feel bad. And +to tell the truth, though I didn't think best to own up to it to him, I +_did_ blush for my sect to see the way some on 'em rigged themselves +out. + +"See that thing!" Josiah sez, as a woman passed by with her hat drawed down +over one eye, and a long quill standin' out straight behind more'n a foot, +an' her dress puckered in so 'round the bottom, she couldn't have took a +long step if a mad dog wuz chasin' her--to say nothin' of bein' perched up +on such high heels, that she fairly tottled when she walked. + +Sez Josiah: "Does that _thing_ know enough to vote?" + +"No," sez I, reasonably, "she don't. But most probable if she had bigger +things to think about she'd loosen the puckerin' strings 'round her ankles, +push her hat back out of her eyes, an' get down on her feet again." + +"Why, Samantha," says he, "if you had on one of them skirts tied 'round +your ankles, if I wuz a-dyin' on the upper shelf in the buttery, you +couldn't step up on a chair to get to me to save your life, an' I'd have +to die there alone." + +"Why should you be dyin' on the buttery shelf, Josiah?" sez I. + +"Oh, that wuz jest a figger of speech, Samantha." + +"But folks ort to be mejum in figgers of speech, Josiah, and not go too +fur." + +"Do you think, Samantha, that anybody can go too fur in describin' them +fool skirts, and them slit skirts, and the immodesty and indecensy of some +of them dresses?" + +[Illustration: "Sez Josiah, 'Does that thing know enough to vote?'"] + +"I don't know as they can," sez I, sadly. + +"Jest look at that thing," sez he again. + +And as I looked, the hot blush of shame mantillied my cheeks, for I felt +that my sect was disgraced by the sight. She wuz real pretty, but she +didn't have much of any clothes on, and what she did wear wuzn't in the +right place; not at all. + +Sez Josiah, "That girl would look much more modest and decent if she wuz +naked, for then she might be took for a statute." + +And I sez, "I don't blame the good Priest for sendin' them away from the +Lord's table, sayin', 'I will give no communion to a Jezabel.' And the pity +of it is," sez I, "lots of them girls are innocent and don't realize what +construction will be put on the dress they blindly copy from some furrin +fashion plate." + +Then quite an old woman passed by, also robed or disrobed in the prevailin' +fashion, and Josiah sez, soty vosy, "I should think she wuz old enough to +know sunthin'. Who wants to see her old bones?" And he sez to me, real +uppish, "Do you think them things know enough to vote?" + +But jest then a young man went by dressed fashionably, but if he hadn't had +the arm of a companion, he couldn't have walked a step; his face wuz red +and swollen, and dissipated, and what expression wuz left in his face wuz a +fool expression, and both had cigarettes in their mouths, and I sez, "Does +_that_ thing know enough to vote?" And jest behind them come a lot +of furrin laborers, rough and rowdy-lookin', with no more expression in +their faces than a mule or any other animal. "Do _they_ know enough +to vote?" sez I. "As for the fitness for votin' it is pretty even on both +sides. Good intelligent men ortn't to lose the right of suffrage for the +vice and ignorance of some of their sect, and that argument is jest as +strong for the other sect." + +But before Josiah could reply, we hearn the sound of gay music, and the +Parade began to march on before us. First a beautiful stately figure seated +fearlessly on a dancin' horse, that tossted his head as if proud of the +burden he wuz carryin'. She managed the prancin' steed with one hand, +and with the other held aloft the flag of our country. Jest as women ort +to, and have to. They have got to manage wayward pardners, children and +domestics who, no matter how good they are, will take their bits in their +mouths, and go sideways some of the time, but can be managed by a sensible, +affectionate hand, and with her other hand at the same time she can carry +her principles aloft, wavin' in every domestic breeze, frigid or torrid, +plain to be seen by everybody. + +Then come the wives and relations of Senators and Congressmen, showin' that +bein' right on the spot they knowed what wimmen needed. Then the wimmen +voters from free Suffrage states, showin' by their noble looks that votin' +hadn't hurt 'em any. They carried the most gorgeous banner in the whole +Parade. Then the Wimmen's Political Union, showin' plain in their faces +that understandin' the laws that govern her ain't goin' to keep woman from +looking beautiful and attractive. + +On and on they come, gray-headed women and curly-headed children from +every station in life: the millionairess by the working woman, and the +fashionable society woman by the business one. Two women on horseback, +and one blowin' a bugle, led the way for the carriage of Madam Antoinette +Blackwell. I wonder if she ever dreamed when she wuz tryin' to climb the +hill of knowledge through the thorny path of sex persecution, that she +would ever have a bugle blowed in front of her, to honor her for her +efforts, and form a part of such a glorious Parade of the sect she give her +youth and strength to free. + +How they swept on, borne by the waves of music, heralded by wavin' banners +of purple and white and gold, bearin' upliftin' and noble mottoes. +Physicians, lawyers, nurses, authors, journalists, artists, social workers, +dressmakers, milliners, women from furrin countries dressed in their quaint +costumes, laundresses, clerks, shop girls, college girls, all bearin' the +pennants and banners of their different colleges: Vassar, Wellesley, Smith, +etc., etc. High-school pupils, Woman's Suffrage League, Woman's Social +League, and all along the brilliant line each division dressed in beautiful +costumes and carryin' their own gorgeous banners. And anon or oftener all +along the long, long procession bands of music pealin' out high and sweet, +as if the Spirit of Music, who is always depictered as a woman, was glad +and proud to do honor to her own sect. And all through the Parade you could +see every little while men on foot and on horseback, not a great many, but +jest enough to show that the really noble men wuz on their side. For, as +I've said more formally, that is one of the most convincin' arguments for +Woman's Suffrage. In fact, it don't need any other. That bad men fight +against Women's Suffrage with all their might. + +Down by the big marble library, the grand-stand wuz filled with men seated +to see their wives march by on their road to Victory. I hearn and believe, +they wuz a noble-lookin' set of men. They had seen their wives in the past +chasin' Fashion and Amusement, and why shouldn't they enjoy seein' them +follow Principle and Justice? Well, I might talk all day and not begin +to tell of the beauty and splendor of the Woman's Parade. And the most +impressive sight to me wuz to see how the leaven of individual right and +justice had entered into all these different classes of society, and how +their enthusiasm and earnestness must affect every beholder. + +And in my mind I drawed pictures of the different modes of our American +women and our English sisters, each workin' for the same cause, but in what +a different manner. Of course, our English sisters may have more reason for +their militant doin's; more unjust laws regarding marriage--divorce, and +care of children, and I can't blame them married females for wantin' to +control their own money, specially if they earnt it by scrubbin' floors +and washin'. I can't blame 'em for not wantin' their husbands to take +that money from them and their children, specially if they're loafers and +drunkards. And, of course, there are no men so noble and generous as our +American men. But jest lookin' at the matter from the outside and comparin' +the two, I wuz proud indeed of our Suffragists. + +While our English sisters feel it their duty to rip and tear, burn and +pillage, to draw attention to their cause, and reach the gole (which +I believe they have sot back for years) through the smoke and fire of +carnage, our American Suffragettes employ the gentle, convincin' arts of +beauty and reason. Some as the quiet golden sunshine draws out the flowers +and fruit from the cold bosom of the earth. Mindin' their own business, +antagonizin' and troublin' no one, they march along and show to every +beholder jest how earnest they be. They quietly and efficiently answer that +argument of the She Auntys, that women don't want to vote, by a parade two +hours in length, of twenty thousand. They answer the argument that the +ballot would render women careless in dress and reckless, by organizin' +and carryin' on a parade so beautiful, so harmonious in color and design +that it drew out enthusiastic praise from even the enemies of Suffrage. +They quietly and without argument answered the old story that women was +onbusiness-like and never on time, by startin' the Parade the very minute +it was announced, which you can't always say of men's parades. + +It wuz a burnin' hot day, and many who'd always argued that women hadn't +strength enough to lift a paper ballot, had prophesied that woman wuz too +delicately organized, too "fraguile," as Betsy Bobbet would say, to endure +the strain of the long march in the torrid atmosphere. + +But I told Josiah that women had walked daily over the burning plow shares +of duty and domestic tribulation, till their feet had got calloused, and +could stand more'n you'd think for. + +And he said he didn't know as females had any more burnin' plow shares to +tread on than men had. + +And I sez, "I didn't say they had, Josiah. I never wanted women to get more +praise or justice than men. I simply want 'em to get as much--just an even +amount; for," sez I, solemnly, "'male and female created He them.'" + +Josiah is a deacon, and when I quote Scripture, he has to listen +respectful, and I went on: "I guess it wuz a surprise even to the marchers +that of all the ambulances that kept alongside the Parade to pick up faint +and swoonin' females, the only one occupied wuz by a man." + +Josiah denied it, but I sez, "I see his boots stickin' out of the ambulance +myself." Josiah couldn't dispute that, for he knows I am truthful. But he +sez, sunthin' in the sperit of two little children I hearn disputin'. Sez +one: "It wuzn't so; you've told a lie." + +"Well," sez the other, "You broke a piece of china and laid it to me." + +Sez Josiah, "You may have seen a pair of men's boots a-stickin' out of the +ambulance, but I'll bet they didn't have heels on 'em a inch broad, and +five or six inches high." + +"No, Josiah," sez I, "you're right. Men think too much of their comfort and +health to hist themselves up on such little high tottlin' things, and you +didn't see many on 'em in the Parade." + +But he went on drivin' the arrow of higher criticism still deeper into +my onwillin' breast. "I'll bet you didn't see his legs tied together at +the ankles, or his trouses slit up the sides to show gauze stockin's and +anklets and diamond buckles. And you didn't see my sect who honored the +Parade by marchin' in it, have a goose quill half a yard long, standin' +up straight in the air from a coal-scuttle hat, or out sideways, a hejus +sight, and threatenin' the eyes of friend and foe." + +"And you didn't see many on 'em in the Parade," sez I agin. "Women, as they +march along to Victory, have got to drop some of these senseless things. +In fact, they are droppin' em. You don't see waists now the size of a hour +glass. It is gettin' fashionable to breathe now, and women on their way to +their gole will drop by the way their high heels; it will git fashionable +to walk comfortable, and as they've got to take some pretty long steps to +reach the ballot in 1916, it stands to reason they've got to have a skirt +wide enough at the bottom to step up on the gole of Victory. It is a high +step, Josiah, but women are goin' to take it. They've always tended to +cleanin' their own house, and makin' it comfortable and hygenic for its +members, big and little. And when they turn their minds onto the best way +to clean the National house both sects have to live in to make it clean +and comfortable and safe for the weak and helpless as well as for the +strong--it stands to reason they won't have time or inclination to stand up +on stilts with tied-in ankles, quilled out like savages." + +"Well," said Josiah, with a dark, forebodin' look on his linement, "_we +shall see_." + +"Yes," sez I, with a real radiant look into the future. "_We shall +see_, Josiah." + +But he didn't have no idea of the beautiful prophetic vision I beheld +with the eyes of my sperit. Good men and good women, each fillin' their +different spears in life, but banded together for the overthrow of evil, +the uplift of the race. + + + + +X + +"THE CREATION SEARCHIN' SOCIETY" + + +It was only a few days after we got home from New York that Josiah come +into the house dretful excited. He'd had a invitation to attend a meetin' +of the Creation Searchin' Society. + +"Why," sez I, "did they invite you? You are not a member?" + +"No," sez he, "but they want me to help 'em be indignant. It is a +indignation meetin'." + +"Indignant about what?" I sez. + +"Fur be it from me, Samantha, to muddle up your head and hurt your feelin's +by tellin' you what it's fur." And he went out quick and shet the door. But +I got a splendid dinner and afterwards he told me of his own accord. + +I am not a member, of course, for the president, Philander Daggett, said it +would lower the prestige of the society in the eyes of the world to have +even one female member. This meetin' wuz called last week for the purpose +of bein' indignant over the militant doin's of the English Suffragettes. +Josiah and several others in Jonesville wuz invited to be present at this +meetin' as sort of honorary members, as they wuz competent to be jest as +indignant as any other male men over the tribulations of their sect. + +Josiah said so much about the meetin', and his Honorary Indignation, that +he got me curious, and wantin' to go myself, to see how it wuz carried on. +But I didn't have no hopes on't till Philander Daggett's new young wife +come to visit me and I told her how much I wanted to go, and she bein' real +good-natered said she would make Philander let me in. + +He objected, of course, but she is pretty and young, and his nater bein' +kinder softened and sweetened by the honey of the honeymoon, she got round +him. And he said that if we would set up in a corner of the gallery behind +the melodeon, and keep our veils on, he would let her and me in. But we +must keep it secret as the grave, for he would lose all the influence he +had with the other members and be turned out of the Presidential chair if +it wuz knowed that he had lifted wimmen up to such a hite, and gin 'em such +a opportunity to feel as if they wuz equal to men. + +Well, we went early and Josiah left me to Philander's and went on to do +some errents. He thought I wuz to spend the evenin' with her in becomin' +seclusion, a-knittin' on his blue and white socks, as a woman should. But +after visitin' a spell, jest after it got duskish, we went out the back +door and went cross lots, and got there ensconced in the dark corner +without anybody seein' us and before the meetin' begun. + +Philander opened the meetin' by readin' the moments of the last meetin', +which wuz one of sympathy with the police of Washington for their noble +efforts to break up the Woman's Parade, and after their almost Herculaneum +labor to teach wimmen her proper place, and all the help they got from the +hoodlum and slum elements, they had failed in a measure, and the wimmen, +though stunned, insulted, spit on, struck, broken boneded, maimed, and tore +to pieces, had succeeded in their disgustin' onwomanly undertakin'. + +But it wuz motioned and carried that a vote of thanks be sent 'em and +recorded in the moments that the Creation Searchers had no blame but only +sympathy and admiration for the hard worked Policemen for they had done all +they could to protect wimmen's delicacy and retirin' modesty, and put her +in her place, and no man in Washington or Jonesville could do more. He read +these moments, in a real tender sympathizin' voice, and I spoze the members +sympathized with him, or I judged so from their linements as I went +forward, still as a mouse, and peeked down on 'em. + +He then stopped a minute and took a drink of water; I spoze his sympathetic +emotions had het him up, and kinder dried his mouth, some. And then he went +on to state that this meetin' wuz called to show to the world, abroad and +nigh by, the burnin' indignation this body felt, as a society, at the +turrible sufferin's and insults bein' heaped onto their male brethren +in England by the indecent and disgraceful doin's of the militant +Suffragettes, and to devise, if possible, some way to help their male +brethren acrost the sea. "For," sez he, "pizen will spread. How do we know +how soon them very wimmen who had to be spit on and struck and tore to +pieces in Washington to try to make 'em keep their place, the sacred and +tender place they have always held enthroned as angels in a man's heart--" + +Here he stopped and took out his bandanna handkerchief, and wiped his eyes, +and kinder choked. But I knew it wuz all a orator's art, and it didn't +affect me, though I see a number of the members wipe their eyes, for this +talk appealed to the inheriant chivalry of men, and their desire to protect +wimmen, we have always hearn so much about. + +"How do we know," he continued, "how soon they may turn aginst their best +friends, them who actuated by the loftiest and tenderest emotions, and +determination to protect the weaker sect at any cost, took their valuable +time to try to keep wimmen down where they ort to be, _angels of the +home_, who knows but they may turn and throw stuns at the Capitol an' +badger an' torment our noble lawmakers, a-tryin' to make 'em listen to +their silly petitions for justice?" + +In conclusion, he entreated 'em to remember that the eye of the world wuz +on 'em, expectin' 'em to be loyal to the badgered and woman endangered sect +abroad, and try to suggest some way to stop them woman's disgraceful +doin's. + +Cyrenus Presly always loves to talk, and he always looks on the dark side +of things, and he riz up and said "he didn't believe nothin' could be done, +for by all he'd read about 'em, the men had tried everything possible to +keep wimmen down where they ort to be, they had turned deaf ears to their +complaints, wouldn't hear one word they said, they had tried drivin' +and draggin' and insults of all kinds, and breakin' their bones, and +imprisonment, and stuffin' 'em with rubber tubes, thrust through their nose +down into their throats. And he couldn't think of a thing more that could +be done by men, and keep the position men always had held as wimmen's +gardeens and protectors, and he said he thought men might jest as well keep +still and let 'em go on and bring the world to ruin, for that was what they +wuz bound to do, and they couldn't be stopped unless they wuz killed off." + +Phileman Huffstater is a old bachelder, and hates wimmen. He had been on a +drunk and looked dretful, tobacco juice runnin' down his face, his red hair +all towsled up, and his clothes stiff with dirt. He wuzn't invited, but had +come of his own accord. He had to hang onto the seat in front of him as he +riz up and said: + +"He believed that wuz the best and only way out on't, for men to rise up +and kill off the weaker sect, for their wuzn't never no trouble of any name +or nater, but what wimmen wuz to the bottom on't, and the world would be +better off without 'em." But Philander scorfed at him and reminded him that +such hullsale doin's would put an end to the world's bein' populated at +all. + +But Phileman said in a hicuppin', maudlin way that "the world had better +stop, if there had got to be such doin's, wimmen risin' up on every side, +and pretendin' to be equal with men." + +Here his knee jints kinder gin out under him, and he slid down onto the +seat and went to sleep. + +I guess the members wuz kinder shamed of Phileman, for Lime Peedick jumped +up quick as scat and said, "It seemed the Englishmen had tried most +everything else, and he wondered how it would work if them militant wimmen +could be ketched and a dose of sunthin' bitter and sickenin' poured down +'em. Every time they broached that loathsome doctrine of equal rights, and +tried to make lawmakers listen to their petitions, jest ketch 'em and pour +down 'em a big dose of wormwood or sunthin' else bitter and sickenin', and +he guessed they would git tired on't." + +But here Josiah jumped up quick and said, "he objected," he said, "that +would endanger the right wimmen always had, and ort to have of cookin' good +vittles for men and doin' their housework, and bearin' and bringin' up +their children, and makin' and mendin' and waitin' on 'em. He said nothin' +short of a Gatlin gun could keep Samantha from speakin' her mind about such +things, and he wuzn't willin' to have her made sick to the stomach, and +incapacitated from cookin' by any such proceedin's." + +The members argued quite awhile on this pint, but finally come round to +Josiah's idees, and the meetin' for a few minutes seemed to come to a +standstill, till old Cornelius Snyder got up slowly and feebly. He has +spazzums and can't hardly wobble. His wife has to support him, wash and +dress him, and take care on him like a baby. But he has the use of his +tongue, and he got some man to bring him there, and he leaned heavy on his +cane, and kinder stiddied himself on it and offered this suggestion: + +"How would it do to tie females up when they got to thinkin' they wuz equal +to men, halter 'em, rope 'em, and let 'em see if they wuz?" + +But this idee wuz objected to for the same reason Josiah had advanced, as +Philander well said, "wimmen had got to go foot loose in order to do the +housework and cookin'." + +Uncle Sime Bentley, who wuz awful indignant, said, "I motion that men shall +take away all the rights that wimmen have now, turn 'em out of the meetin' +house, and grange." + +But before he'd hardly got the words out of his mouth, seven of the members +riz up and as many as five spoke out to once with different exclamations: + +"That won't do! we can't do that! Who'll do all the work! Who'll git up +grange banquets and rummage sales, and paper and paint and put down carpets +in the meetin' house, and git up socials and entertainments to help pay the +minister's salary, and carry on the Sunday School? and tend to its picnics +and suppers, and take care of the children? We can't do this, much as we'd +love to." + +One horsey, sporty member, also under the influence of liquor, riz up, and +made a feeble motion, "Spozin' we give wimmen liberty enough to work, leave +'em hand and foot loose, and sort o' muzzle 'em so they can't talk." + +This seemed to be very favorably received, 'specially by the married +members, and the secretary wuz jest about to record it in the moments as +a scheme worth tryin', when old Doctor Nugent got up, and sez in a firm, +decided way: + +"Wimmen cannot be kept from talking without endangerin' her life; as a +medical expert I object to this motion." + +"How would you put the objection?" sez the secretary. + +"On the ground of cruelty to animals," sez the doctor. + +A fat Englishman who had took the widder Shelmadine's farm on shares, says, +"I 'old with Brother Josiah Hallen's hargument. As the father of nine young +children and thirty cows to milk with my wife's 'elp, I 'old she musn't be +kep' from work, but h'I propose if we can't do anything else that a card +of sympathy be sent to hold Hengland from the Creation Searchin' Society +of America, tellin' 'em 'ow our 'earts bleeds for the men's sufferin' and +'ardships in 'avin' to leave their hoccupations to beat and 'aul round and +drive females to jails, and feed 'em with rubber hose through their noses +to keep 'em from starvin' to death for what they call their principles." + +This motion wuz carried unanimously. + +But here an old man, who had jest dropped in and who wuz kinder deef and +slow-witted, asked, "What it is about anyway? what do the wimmen ask for +when they are pounded and jailed and starved?" + +Hank Yerden, whose wife is a Suffragist, and who is mistrusted to have a +leanin' that way himself, answered him, "Oh, they wanted the lawmakers to +read their petitions asking for the rights of ordinary citizens. They said +as long as their property wuz taxed they had the right of representation. +And as long as the law punished wimmen equally with men, they had a right +to help make that law, and as long as men claimed wimmen's place wuz home, +they wanted the right to guard that home. And as long as they brought +children into the world they wanted the right to protect 'em. And when the +lawmakers wouldn't hear a word they said, and beat 'em and drove 'em round +and jailed 'em, they got mad as hens, and are actin' like furiation and +wild cats. But claim that civil rights wuz never give to any class without +warfare." + +"Heavens! what doin's!" sez old Zephaniah Beezum, "what is the world comin' +to!" "Angle worms will be risin' up next and demandin' to not be trod on." +Sez he, "I have studied the subject on every side, and I claim the best +way to deal with them militant females is to banish 'em to some barren +wilderness, some foreign desert where they can meditate on their crimes, +and not bother men." + +This idee wuz received favorably by most of the members, but others +differed and showed the weak p'ints in it, and it wuz gin up. + +Well, at ten P.M., the Creation Searchers gin up after arguin' pro and con, +con and pro, that they could not see any way out of the matter, they could +not tell what to do with the wimmen without danger and trouble to the male +sect. + +They looked dretful dejected and onhappy as they come to this conclusion, +my pardner looked as if he wuz most ready to bust out cryin'. And as I +looked on his beloved linement I forgot everything else and onbeknown to me +I leaned over the railin' and sez: + +"Here is sunthin' that no one has seemed to think on at home or abroad. How +would it work to stop the trouble by givin' the wimmen the rights they ask +for, the rights of any other citizen?" + +I don't spoze there will ever be such another commotion and upheaval in +Jonesville till Michael blows his last trump as follered my speech. Knowin' +wimmen wuz kep' from the meetin', some on 'em thought it wuz a voice from +another spear. Them wuz the skairt and horrow struck ones, and them that +thought it wuz a earthly woman's voice wuz so mad that they wuz by the side +of themselves and carried on fearful. But when they searched the gallery +for wimmen or ghosts, nothin' wuz found, for Philander's wife and I had +scooted acrost lots and wuz to home a-knittin' before the men got there. + +And I d'no as anybody but Philander to this day knows what, or who it wuz. + +And I d'no as my idee will be follered, but I believe it is the best way +out on't for men and wimmen both, and would stop the mad doin's of the +English Suffragettes, which I don't approve of, no indeed! much as I +sympathize with the justice of their cause. + + + + + +End of Project Gutenberg's Samantha on the Woman Question, by Marietta Holley + +*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK SAMANTHA ON THE WOMAN QUESTION *** + +This file should be named samwq10.txt or samwq10.zip +Corrected EDITIONS of our eBooks get a new NUMBER, samwq11.txt +VERSIONS based on separate sources get new LETTER, samwq10a.txt + +Produced by Eric Eldred, William Flis +and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team. + +Project Gutenberg eBooks are often created from several printed +editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the US +unless a copyright notice is included. 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