<h2><SPAN name="Page_155"></SPAN>CHAPTER X.</h2>
<h2>SUSAN B. ANTHONY.</h2>
<br/>
<p style="text-align: center;"><SPAN name="img007"></SPAN><img
style="width: 400px; height: 619px;" alt="Susan B. Anthony 1820-Feb. 15, 1858—"
title="Susan B. Anthony 1820-Feb. 15, 1858—" src="image/007.jpg"><br/></p>
<p style="text-align: left;">The reports of the conventions held in
Seneca Falls
and Rochester, N.Y., in 1848, attracted the attention
of one destined to take a most important part
in the new movement—Susan B. Anthony, who, for her
courage and executive ability, was facetiously called
by William Henry Channing, the Napoleon of our
struggle. At this time she was teaching in the academy
at Canajoharie, a little village in the beautiful valley
of the Mohawk.</p>
<p>"The Woman's Declaration of Independence" issued
from those conventions startled and amused her, and
she laughed heartily at the novelty and presumption of
the demand. But, on returning home to spend her vacation,
she was surprised to find that her sober Quaker
parents and sister, having attended the Rochester
meetings, regarded them as very profitable and interesting,
and the demands made as proper and reasonable.
She was already interested in the anti-slavery
and temperance reforms, was an active member of an
organization called "The Daughters of Temperance,"
and had spoken a few times in their public meetings.
But the new gospel of "Woman's Rights," found a
ready response in her mind, and, from that time, her
best efforts have been given to the enfranchisement of
women.</p>
<p>As, from this time, my friend is closely connected
<SPAN name="Page_156"></SPAN>with my narrative and will frequently appear
therein,
a sketch of her seems appropriate.</p>
<p>Lord Bacon has well said: "He that hath wife and
children hath given hostages to fortune; for they are
impediments to great enterprises either of virtue or
mischief. Certainly the best works, and of greatest
merit for the public, have proceeded from the unmarried
or childless men; which, both in affection and
means, have married and endowed the public."</p>
<p>This bit of Baconian philosophy, as alike applicable
to women, was the subject, not long since, of a conversation
with a remarkably gifted Englishwoman. She
was absorbed in many public interests and had conscientiously
resolved never to marry, lest the cares necessarily
involved in matrimony should make inroads
upon her time and thought, to the detriment of the
public good. "Unless," said she, "some women dedicate
themselves to the public service, society is robbed
of needed guardians for the special wants of the weak
and unfortunate. There should be, in the secular
world, certain orders corresponding in a measure to the
grand sisterhoods of the Catholic Church, to the members
of which, as freely as to men, all offices, civic and
ecclesiastical, should be open." That this ideal will be
realized may be inferred from the fact that exceptional
women have, in all ages, been leaders in great projects
of charity and reform, and that now many stand waiting
only the sanction of their century, ready for wide
altruistic labors.</p>
<p>The world has ever had its vestal virgins, its holy
women, mothers of ideas rather than of men; its Marys,
as well as its Marthas, who, rather than be busy
housewives, preferred to sit at the feet of divine wis<SPAN name="Page_157"></SPAN>dom,
and ponder the mysteries of the unknown. All
hail to Maria Mitchell, Harriet Hosmer, Charlotte
Cushman, Alice and Phoebe Gary, Louisa Alcott, Dr.
Elizabeth Blackwell, Frances Willard, and Clara Barton!
All honor to the noble women who have devoted earnest
lives to the intellectual and moral needs of mankind!</p>
<p>Susan B. Anthony was of sturdy New England
stock, and it was at the foot of Old Greylock, South
Adams, Mass., that she gave forth her first rebellious
cry. There the baby steps were taken, and
at the village school the first stitches were learned,
and the A B C duly mastered. When five winters
had passed over Susan's head, there came a time
of great domestic commotion, and, in her small
way, the child seized the idea that permanence is not
the rule of life. The family moved to Battenville, N.Y.,
where Mr. Anthony became one of the wealthiest
men in Washington County. Susan can still recall the
stately coldness of the great house—how large the bare
rooms, with their yellow-painted floors, seemed, in contrast
with her own diminutiveness, and the outlook of
the schoolroom where for so many years, with her
brothers and sisters, she pursued her studies under
private tutors.</p>
<p>Mr. Anthony was a stern Hicksite Quaker. In
Susan's early life he objected on principle to all forms
of frivolous amusement, such as music, dancing, or novel
reading, while games and even pictures were regarded
as meaningless luxuries. Such puritanical convictions
might have easily degenerated into mere cant; but
underlying all was a broad and firm basis of wholesome
respect for individual freedom and a brave
adherence to truth. He was a man of good busi<SPAN name="Page_158"></SPAN>ness
capacity, and a thorough manager of his wide
and lucrative interests. He saw that compensation
and not chance ruled in the commercial world,
and he believed in the same just, though often
severe, law in the sphere of morals. Such a man
was not apt to walk humbly in the path mapped out
by his religious sect. He early offended by choosing a
Baptist for a wife. For this first offense he was "disowned,"
and, according to Quaker usage, could only be
received into fellowship again by declaring himself
"sorry" for his crime in full meeting. He was full
of devout thankfulness for the good woman by
his side, and destined to be thankful to the very
end for this companion, so calm, so just, so far-seeing.
He rose in meeting, and said he was
"sorry" that the rules of the society were such
that, in marrying the woman he loved, he had committed
offense! He admitted that he was "sorry" for
something, so was taken back into the body of the faithful!
But his faith had begun to weaken in many minor
points of discipline. His coat soon became a cause of
offense and called forth another reproof from those
buttoned up in conforming garments. The petty forms
of Quakerism began to lose their weight with him altogether,
and he was finally disowned for allowing the
village youth to be taught dancing in an upper room
of his dwelling. He was applied to for this favor
on the ground that young men were under great temptation
to drink if the lessons were given in the hotel;
and, being a rigid temperance man, he readily consented,
though his principles, in regard to dancing,
would not allow his own sons and daughters to join in
the amusement. But the society could accept no such
<SPAN name="Page_159"></SPAN>discrimination in what it deemed sin, nor such
compromise
with worldly frivolity, and so Mr. Anthony was
seen no more in meeting. But, in later years, in Rochester
he was an attentive listener to Rev. William Henry
Channing.</p>
<p>The effect of all this on Susan is the question of interest.
No doubt she early weighed the comparative
moral effects of coats cut with capes and those cut
without, of purely Quaker conjugal love and that deteriorated
with Baptist affection. Susan had an
earnest soul and a conscience tending to morbidity; but
a strong, well-balanced body and simple family life
soothed her too active moral nature and gave the
world, instead of a religious fanatic, a sincere, concentrated
worker. Every household art was taught her
by her mother, and so great was her ability that the
duty demanding especial care was always given into her
hands. But ever, amid school and household tasks,
her day-dream was that, in time, she might be a "high-seat"
Quaker. Each Sunday, up to the time of the
third disobedience, Mr. Anthony went to the Quaker
meeting house, some thirteen miles from home, his
wife and children usually accompanying him, though,
as non-members, they were rigidly excluded from all
business discussions. Exclusion was very pleasant in
the bright days of summer; but, on one occasion in
December, decidedly unpleasant for the seven-year-old
Susan. When the blinds were drawn, at the close of the
religious meeting, and non-members retired, Susan sat
still. Soon she saw a thin old lady with blue goggles
come down from the "high seat." Approaching her,
the Quakeress said softly, "Thee is not a member—thee
must go out." "No; my mother told me not to go
<SPAN name="Page_160"></SPAN>out in the cold," was the child's firm response.
"Yes,
but thee must go out—thee is not a member." "But
my father is a member." "Thee is not a member," and
Susan felt as if the spirit was moving her and soon found
herself in outer coldness. Fingers and toes becoming
numb, and a bright fire in a cottage over the way
beckoning warmly to her, the exile from the chapel
resolved to seek secular shelter. But alas! she was confronted
by a huge dog, and just escaped with whole
skin though capeless jacket. We may be sure there
was much talk, that night, at the home fireside, and the
good Baptist wife declared that no child of hers should
attend meeting again till made a member. Thereafter,
by request of her father, Susan became a member of
the Quaker church.</p>
<p>Later, definite convictions took root in Miss Anthony's
heart. Hers is, indeed, a sincerely religious
nature. To be a simple, earnest Quaker was the
aspiration of her girlhood; but she shrank from adopting
the formal language and plain dress. Dark hours
of conflict were spent over all this, and she interpreted
her disinclination as evidence of unworthiness. Poor
little Susan! As we look back with the knowledge of
our later life, we translate the heart-burnings as unconscious
protests against labeling your free soul,
against testing your reasoning conviction of to-morrow
by any shibboleth of to-day's belief. We
hail this child-intuition as a prophecy of the uncompromising
truthfulness of the mature woman.
Susan Anthony was taught simply that she must
enter into the holy of holies of her own self, meet
herself, and be true to the revelation. She first
found words to express her convictions in listen<SPAN name="Page_161"></SPAN>ing
to Rev. William Henry Channing, whose teaching
had a lasting spiritual influence upon her. To-day
Miss Anthony is an agnostic. As to the nature of the
Godhead and of the life beyond her horizon she does
not profess to know anything. Every energy of her
soul is centered upon the needs of this world. To her,
work is worship. She has not stood aside, shivering in
the cold shadows of uncertainty, but has moved on with
the whirling world, has done the good given her to do,
and thus, in darkest hours, has been sustained by
an unfaltering faith in the final perfection of all things.
Her belief is not orthodox, but it is religious. In
ancient Greece she would have been a Stoic; in the era
of the Reformation, a Calvinist; in King Charles' time,
a Puritan; but in this nineteenth century, by the very
laws of her being, she is a Reformer.</p>
<p>For the arduous work that awaited Miss Anthony her
years of young womanhood had given preparation.
Her father, though a man of wealth, made it a matter of
conscience to train his girls, as well as his boys, to
self-support. Accordingly Susan chose the profession
of teacher, and made her first essay during a summer
vacation in a school her father had established for
the children of his employés. Her success was so
marked, not only in imparting knowledge, but also as
a disciplinarian, that she followed this career steadily for
fifteen years, with the exception of some months given
in Philadelphia to her own training. Of the many
school rebellions which she overcame, one rises before
me, prominent in its ludicrous aspect. This was in the
district school at Center Falls, in the year 1839. Bad
reports were current there of male teachers driven out
by a certain strapping lad. Rumor next told of a
<SPAN name="Page_162"></SPAN>Quaker maiden coming to teach—a Quaker maiden of
peace principles. The anticipated day and Susan arrived.
She looked very meek to the barbarian of
fifteen, so he soon began his antics. He was called to
the platform, told to lay aside his jacket, and, thereupon,
with much astonishment received from the mild
Quaker maiden, with a birch rod applied calmly but
with precision, an exposition of the <i>argumentum ad
hominem</i> based on the <i>a posteriori</i> method of reasoning.
Thus Susan departed from her principles, but not from
the school.</p>
<p>But, before long, conflicts in the outside world disturbed
our young teacher. The multiplication table
and spelling book no longer enchained her thoughts;
larger questions began to fill her mind. About the
year 1850 Susan B. Anthony hid her ferule away.
Temperance, anti-slavery, woman suffrage,—three pregnant
questions,—presented themselves, demanding her
consideration. Higher, ever higher, rose their appeals,
until she resolved to dedicate her energy and thought
to the burning needs of the hour. Owing to early experience
of the disabilities of her sex, the first demand
for equal rights for women found echo in Susan's heart.
And, though she was in the beginning startled to hear
that women had actually met in convention, and by
speeches and resolutions had declared themselves man's
peer in political rights, and had urged radical changes
in State constitutions and the whole system of American
jurisprudence; yet the most casual review convinced
her that these claims were but the logical outgrowth
of the fundamental theories of our republic.</p>
<p>At this stage of her development I met my future
friend and coadjutor for the first time. How well I
<SPAN name="Page_163"></SPAN>remember the day! George Thompson and William
Lloyd Garrison having announced an anti-slavery meeting
in Seneca Falls, Miss Anthony came to attend it.
These gentlemen were my guests. Walking home,
after the adjournment, we met Mrs. Bloomer and Miss
Anthony on the corner of the street, waiting to greet
us. There she stood, with her good, earnest face and
genial smile, dressed in gray delaine, hat and all the
same color, relieved with pale blue ribbons, the perfection
of neatness and sobriety. I liked her thoroughly,
and why I did not at once invite her home with
me to dinner, I do not know. She accuses me of that
neglect, and has never forgiven me, as she wished to see
and hear all she could of our noble friends. I suppose
my mind was full of what I had heard, or my coming
dinner, or the probable behavior of three mischievous
boys who had been busily exploring the premises while
I was at the meeting.</p>
<p>That I had abundant cause for anxiety in regard
to the philosophical experiments these young savages
might try the reader will admit, when informed
of some of their performances. Henry imagined
himself possessed of rare powers of invention (an ancestral
weakness for generations), and so made a life
preserver of corks, and tested its virtues on his brother,
who was about eighteen months old. Accompanied
by a troop of expectant boys, the baby was drawn
in his carriage to the banks of the Seneca, stripped, the
string of corks tied under his arms, and set afloat in the
river, the philosopher and his satellites, in a rowboat,
watching the experiment. The baby, accustomed to a
morning bath in a large tub, splashed about joyfully,
keeping his head above water. He was as blue as
<SPAN name="Page_164"></SPAN>indigo and as cold as a frog when rescued by his
anxious
mother. The next day the same victimized infant was
seen, by a passing friend, seated on the chimney, on the
highest peak of the house. Without alarming anyone,
the friend hurried up to the housetop and rescued the
child. Another time the three elder brothers entered
into a conspiracy, and locked up the fourth, Theodore,
in the smoke-house. Fortunately, he sounded the
alarm loud and clear, and was set free in safety, whereupon
the three were imprisoned in a garret with two
barred windows. They summarily kicked out the bars,
and, sliding down on the lightning rod, betook themselves
to the barn for liberty. The youngest boy, Gerrit,
then only five years old, skinned his hands in the
descent. This is a fair sample of the quiet happiness I
enjoyed in the first years of motherhood.</p>
<p>It was 'mid such exhilarating scenes that Miss
Anthony and I wrote addresses for temperance,
anti-slavery, educational, and woman's rights conventions.
Here we forged resolutions, protests,
appeals, petitions, agricultural reports, and constitutional
arguments; for we made it a matter
of conscience to accept every invitation to speak on
every question, in order to maintain woman's right to
do so. To this end we took turns on the domestic
watchtowers, directing amusements, settling disputes,
protecting the weak against the strong, and trying to
secure equal rights to all in the home as well as the
nation. I can recall many a stern encounter between
my friend and the young experimenter. It is pleasant
to remember that he never seriously injured any of his
victims, and only once came near fatally shooting himself
with a pistol. The ball went through his hand;
<SPAN name="Page_165"></SPAN>happily a brass button prevented it from
penetrating his
heart.</p>
<p>It is often said, by those who know Miss Anthony
best, that she has been my good angel, always pushing
and goading me to work, and that but for her pertinacity
I should never have accomplished the little I
have. On the other hand it has been said that I forged
the thunderbolts and she fired them. Perhaps all this
is, in a measure, true. With the cares of a large family
I might, in time, like too many women, have become
wholly absorbed in a narrow family selfishness, had not
my friend been continually exploring new fields for
missionary labors. Her description of a body of men
on any platform, complacently deciding questions in
which woman had an equal interest, without an equal
voice, readily roused me to a determination to throw
a firebrand into the midst of their assembly.</p>
<p>Thus, whenever I saw that stately Quaker girl coming
across my lawn, I knew that some happy convocation
of the sons of Adam was to be set by the ears, by
one of our appeals or resolutions. The little portmanteau,
stuffed with facts, was opened, and there we had
what the Rev. John Smith and Hon. Richard Roe had
said: false interpretations of Bible texts, the statistics
of women robbed of their property, shut out of some
college, half paid for their work, the reports of some disgraceful
trial; injustice enough to turn any woman's
thoughts from stockings and puddings. Then we
would get out our pens and write articles for papers, or
a petition to the legislature; indite letters to the faithful,
here and there; stir up the women in Ohio, Pennsylvania,
or Massachusetts; call on <i>The Lily, The Una,
The Liberator, The Standard</i> to remember our wrongs as
<SPAN name="Page_166"></SPAN>well as those of the slave. We never met without
issuing
a pronunciamento on some question. In thought
and sympathy we were one, and in the division of labor
we exactly complemented each other. In writing we
did better work than either could alone. While she is
slow and analytical in composition, I am rapid and synthetic.
I am the better writer, she the better critic.
She supplied the facts and statistics, I the philosophy
and rhetoric, and, together, we have made arguments
that have stood unshaken through the storms of long
years; arguments that no one has answered. Our
speeches may be considered the united product of our
two brains.</p>
<p>So entirely one are we that, in all our associations,
ever side by side on the same platform, not one feeling
of envy or jealousy has ever shadowed our lives. We
have indulged freely in criticism of each other when
alone, and hotly contended whenever we have differed,
but in our friendship of years there has never been the
break of one hour. To the world we always seem to
agree and uniformly reflect each other. Like husband
and wife, each has the feeling that we must have no differences
in public. Thus united, at an early day we began
to survey the state and nation, the future field of
our labors. We read, with critical eyes, the proceedings
of Congress and legislatures, of general assemblies and
synods, of conferences and conventions, and discovered
that, in all alike, the existence of woman was entirely
ignored.</p>
<p>Night after night, by an old-fashioned fireplace, we
plotted and planned the coming agitation; how, when,
and where each entering wedge could be driven, by
which women might be recognized and their rights se<SPAN name="Page_167"></SPAN>cured.
Speedily the State was aflame with disturbances
in temperance and teachers' conventions, and the press
heralded the news far and near that women delegates
had suddenly appeared, demanding admission in men's
conventions; that their rights had been hotly contested
session after session, by liberal men on the one side, the
clergy and learned professors on the other; an overwhelming
majority rejecting the women with terrible anathemas
and denunciations. Such battles were fought
over and over in the chief cities of many of the Northern
States, until the bigotry of men in all the reforms and
professions was thoroughly exposed. Every right
achieved, to enter a college, to study a profession, to
labor in some new industry, or to advocate a reform
measure was contended for inch by inch.</p>
<p>Many of those enjoying all these blessings now complacently
say, "If these pioneers in reform had only
pressed their measures more judiciously, in a more ladylike
manner, in more choice language, with a more
deferential attitude, the gentlemen could not have behaved
so rudely." I give, in these pages, enough of the
characteristics of these women, of the sentiments they
expressed, of their education, ancestry, and position to
show that no power could have met the prejudice and
bigotry of that period more successfully than they did
who so bravely and persistently fought and conquered
them.</p>
<p>Miss Anthony first carried her flag of rebellion
into the State conventions of teachers, and there
fought, almost single-handed, the battle for equality.
At the close of the first decade she had compelled conservatism
to yield its ground so far as to permit women
to participate in all debates, deliver essays, vote, and
<SPAN name="Page_168"></SPAN>hold honored positions as officers. She labored
as sincerely
in the temperance movement, until convinced
that woman's moral power amounted to little as a
civil agent, until backed by ballot and coined into State
law. She still never loses an occasion to defend co-education
and prohibition, and solves every difficulty
with the refrain, "woman suffrage," as persistent as
the "never more" of Poe's raven.</p>
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