<h2><SPAN name="Page_322"></SPAN>CHAPTER XX.</h2>
<h2>WRITING "THE HISTORY OF WOMAN SUFFRAGE."</h2>
<br/>
<p>The four years following the Centennial were busy,
happy ones, of varied interests and employments, public
and private. Sons and daughters graduating from
college, bringing troops of young friends to visit us; the
usual matrimonial entanglements, with all their promises
of celestial bliss intertwined with earthly doubts and
fears; weddings, voyages to Europe, business ventures—in
this whirl of plans and projects our heads, hearts,
and hands were fully occupied. Seven boys and girls
dancing round the fireside, buoyant with all life's joys
opening before them, are enough to keep the most apathetic
parents on the watch-towers by day and anxious
even in dreamland by night. My spare time, if it can
be said that I ever had any, was given during these days
to social festivities. The inevitable dinners, teas, picnics,
and dances with country neighbors, all came round
in quick succession. We lived, at this time, at Tenafly,
New Jersey, not far from the publisher of the <i>Sun</i>,
Isaac W. England, who also had seven boys and girls
as full of frolic as our own. Mrs. England and I
entered into all their games with equal zest. The
youngest thought half the fun was to see our enthusiasm
in "blindman's buff," "fox and geese," and
"bean bags." It thrills me with delight, even now, to
see these games!</p>
<p>Mr. England was the soul of hospitality. He was
<SPAN name="Page_323"></SPAN>never more happy than when his house was crowded
with guests, and his larder with all the delicacies of the
season. Though he and Mr. Stanton were both connected
with that dignified journal, the New York <i>Sun</i>,
yet they often joined in the general hilarity. I laugh,
as I write, at the memory of all the frolics we had on the
blue hills of Jersey.</p>
<p>In addition to the domestic cares which a large family
involved, Mrs. Gage, Miss Anthony, and I were
already busy collecting material for "The History of
Woman Suffrage." This required no end of correspondence.
Then my lecturing trips were still a part of the
annual programme. Washington conventions, too,
with calls, appeals, resolutions, speeches and hearings
before the Committees of Congress and State legislatures,
all these came round in the year's proceedings
as regularly as pumpkin pies for Thanksgiving,
plum pudding for Christmas, and patriotism for Washington's
birthday. Those who speak for glory or
philanthropy are always in demand for college commencements
and Fourth of July orations, hence much
of Miss Anthony's eloquence, as well as my own, was
utilized in this way.</p>
<p>On October 18, 1880, I had an impromptu dinner
party. Elizabeth Boynton Harbert, May Wright
Thompson (now Sewall), Phoebe W. Couzins, and
Arethusa Forbes, returning from a Boston convention,
all by chance met under my roof. We had a very
merry time talking over the incidents of the convention,
Boston proprieties, and the general situation. As I
gave them many early reminiscences, they asked if I
had kept a diary. "No," I said, "not a pen scratch
of the past have I except what might be gathered from
<SPAN name="Page_324"></SPAN>many family letters." They urged me to begin a
diary
at once; so I promised I would on my coming birthday.</p>
<p>My great grief that day was that we were putting
in a new range, and had made no preparations
for dinner. This completely upset the presiding
genius of my culinary department, as she could
not give us the bounteous feast she knew was expected
on such occasions. I, as usual, when there was
any lack in the viands, tried to be as brilliant as possible
in conversation; discussing Nirvana, Karma, reincarnation,
and thus turning attention from the evanescent
things of earth to the joys of a life to come,—not an
easy feat to perform with strong-minded women,—but,
in parting, they seemed happy and refreshed, and all
promised to come again.</p>
<p>But we shall never meet there again, as the old,
familiar oaks and the majestic chestnut trees have passed
into other hands. Strange lovers now whisper their
vows of faith and trust under the tree where a most
charming wedding ceremony—that of my daughter
Margaret—was solemnized one bright October day.
All Nature seemed to do her utmost to heighten the
beauty of the occasion. The verdure was brilliant with
autumnal tints, the hazy noonday sun lent a peculiar
softness to every shadow—even the birds and insects
were hushed to silence. As the wedding march rose
soft and clear, two stately ushers led the way; then a
group of Vassar classmates, gayly decked in silks of different
colors, followed by the bride and groom. An immense
Saint Bernard dog, on his own account brought
up the rear, keeping time with measured tread. He
took his seat in full view, watching, alternately, the officiating
clergyman, the bride and groom, and guests, as
<SPAN name="Page_325"></SPAN>if to say: "What does all this mean?" No one
behaved
with more propriety and no one looked more
radiant than he, with a ray of sunlight on his beautiful
coat of long hair, his bright brass collar, and his wonderful
head. Bruno did not live to see the old home
broken up, but sleeps peacefully there, under the chestnut
trees, and fills a large place in many of our pleasant
memories.</p>
<p>On November 12, 1880, I was sixty-five years old,
and, pursuant to my promise, I then began my diary.
It was a bright, sunny day, but the frost king was at
work; all my grand old trees, that stood like sentinels,
to mark the boundary of my domain, were stripped of
their foliage, and their brilliant colors had faded into
a uniform brown; but the evergreens and the tall, prim
cedars held their own, and, when covered with snow,
their exquisite beauty brought tears to my eyes. One
need never be lonely mid beautiful trees.</p>
<p>My thoughts were with my absent children—Harriot
in France, Theodore in Germany, Margaret with her
husband and brother Gerrit, halfway across the continent,
and Bob still in college. I spent the day writing
letters and walking up and down the piazza, and enjoyed,
from my windows, a glorious sunset. Alone, on birthdays
or holidays, one is very apt to indulge in sad retrospections.
The thought of how much more I might
have done for the perfect development of my children
than I had accomplished, depressed me. I thought of
all the blunders in my own life and in their education.
Little has been said of the responsibilities of parental
life; accordingly little or nothing has been done. I had
such visions of parental duties that day that I came to
the conclusion that parents never could pay the debt
<SPAN name="Page_326"></SPAN>they owe their children for bringing them into
this
world of suffering, unless they can insure them sound
minds in sound bodies, and enough of the good things
of this life to enable them to live without a continual
struggle for the necessaries of existence. I have no sympathy
with the old idea that children owe parents a
debt of gratitude for the simple fact of existence, generally
conferred without thought and merely for their
own pleasure. How seldom we hear of any high or
holy preparation for the office of parenthood! Here,
in the most momentous act of life, all is left to chance.
Men and women, intelligent and prudent in all other
directions, seem to exercise no forethought here, but
hand down their individual and family idiosyncrasies in
the most reckless mariner.</p>
<p>On November 13 the New York <i>Tribune</i> announced
the death of Lucretia Mott, eighty-eight years old.
Having known her in the flush of life, when all her faculties
were at their zenith, and in the repose of age,
when her powers began to wane, her withdrawal from
among us seemed as beautiful and natural as the changing
foliage, from summer to autumn, of some grand old
oak I have watched and loved.</p>
<p>The arrival of Miss Anthony and Mrs. Gage, on November
20, banished all family matters from my mind.
What planning, now, for volumes, chapters, footnotes,
margins, appendices, paper, and type; of engravings,
title, preface, and introduction! I had never
thought that the publication of a book required
the consideration of such endless details. We stood
appalled before the mass of material, growing higher
and higher with every mail, and the thought of all
the reading involved made us feel as if our life<SPAN name="Page_327"></SPAN>work
lay before us. Six weeks of steady labor
all day, and often until midnight, made no visible decrease
in the pile of documents. However, before the
end of the month we had our arrangements all made
with publishers and engravers, and six chapters in print.
When we began to correct proof we felt as if something
was accomplished. Thus we worked through the winter
and far into the spring, with no change except
the Washington Convention and an occasional evening
meeting in New York city. We had frequent visits
from friends whom we were glad to see. Hither came
Edward M. Davis, Sarah Pugh, Adeline Thompson,
Frederick Cabot of Boston, Dr. William F. Channing,
and sweet little Clara Spence, who recited for us some
of the most beautiful selections in her repertoire.</p>
<p>In addition we had numberless letters from friends
and foes, some praising and some condemning our proposed
undertaking, and, though much alone, we were
kept in touch with the outside world. But so conflicting
was the tone of the letters that, if we had not
taken a very fair gauge of ourselves and our advisers,
we should have abandoned our project and buried all
the valuable material collected, to sleep in pine boxes
forever.</p>
<p>At this time I received a very amusing letter from the
Rev. Robert Collyer, on "literary righteousness," quizzing
me for using one of his anecdotes in my sketch of
Lucretia Mott, without giving him credit. I laughed
him to scorn, that he should have thought it was
my duty to have done so. I told him plainly that
he belonged to a class of "white male citizens,"
who had robbed me of all civil and political rights; of
property, children, and personal freedom; and now it
<SPAN name="Page_328"></SPAN>ill became him to call me to account for using
one of
his little anecdotes that, ten to one, he had cribbed
from some woman. I told him that I considered his
whole class as fair game for literary pilfering. That
women had been taxed to build colleges to educate
men, and if we could pick up a literary crumb that had
fallen from their feasts, we surely had a right to it.
Moreover, I told him that man's duty in the world was
to work, to dig and delve for jewels, real and ideal, and
lay them at woman's feet, for her to use as she might
see fit; that he should feel highly complimented, instead
of complaining, that he had written something I
thought worth using. He answered like the nobleman
he is; susceptible of taking in a new idea. He admitted
that, in view of the shortcomings of his entire sex, he
had not one word to say in the way of accusation, but
lay prostrate at my feet in sackcloth and ashes, wondering
that he had not taken my view of the case in
starting.</p>
<p>Only twice in my life have I been accused of quoting
without giving due credit. The other case was
that of Matilda Joslyn Gage. I had, on two or three
occasions, used a motto of hers in autograph books,
just as I had sentiments from Longfellow, Lowell,
Shakespeare, Moses, or Paul. In long lyceum trips innumerable
autograph books met one at every turn, in
the cars, depots, on the platform, at the hotel and in
the omnibus. "A sentiment, please," cry half a dozen
voices. One writes hastily different sentiments for
each. In this way I unfortunately used a pet sentiment
of Matilda's. So, here and now, I say to my autograph
admirers, from New York to San Francisco, whenever
you see "There is a word sweeter than Mother, Home,
<SPAN name="Page_329"></SPAN>or Heaven—that word is Liberty," remember it
belongs
to Matilda Joslyn Gage. I hope, now, that Robert and
Matilda will say, in their posthumous works, that I made
the <i>amende honorable</i>, as I always strive to do when
friends feel they have not been fairly treated.</p>
<p>In May, 1881, the first volume of our History appeared;
it was an octavo, containing 871 pages, with
good paper, good print, handsome engravings, and
nicely bound. I welcomed it with the same feeling of
love and tenderness as I did my firstborn. I took the
same pleasure in hearing it praised and felt the same
mortification in hearing it criticised. The most hearty
welcome it received was from Rev. William Henry
Channing. He wrote us that it was as interesting and
fascinating as a novel. He gave it a most flattering
notice in one of the London papers. John W. Forney,
too, wrote a good review and sent a friendly letter.
Mayo W. Hazeltine, one of the ablest critics in this country,
in the New York <i>Sun</i>, also gave it a very careful
and complimentary review. In fact, we received far
more praise and less blame than we anticipated. We
began the second volume in June. In reading over
the material concerning woman's work in the War, I
felt how little our labors are appreciated. Who can
sum up all the ills the women of a nation suffer from
war? They have all of the misery and none of the
glory; nothing to mitigate their weary waiting and
watching for the loved ones who will return no more.</p>
<p>In the spring of 1881, to vary the monotony of
the work on the history, we decided to hold a series
of conventions through the New England States.
We began during the Anniversary week in Boston,
and had several crowded, enthusiastic meetings in
<SPAN name="Page_330"></SPAN>Tremont Temple. In addition to our suffrage
meetings,
I spoke before the Free Religious, Moral
Education, and Heredity associations. All our speakers
stayed at the Parker House, and we had a very
pleasant time visiting together in our leisure hours.
We were received by Governor Long, at the State
House. He made a short speech, in favor of woman
suffrage, in reply to Mrs. Hooker. We also called on
the Mayor, at the City Hall, and went through Jordan
& Marsh's great mercantile establishment, where the
clerks are chiefly young girls, who are well fed and
housed, and have pleasant rooms, with a good library,
where they sit and read in the evening. We went
through the Sherborn Reformatory Prison for Women,
managed entirely by women. We found it clean and
comfortable, more like a pleasant home than a place of
punishment.</p>
<p>Mrs. Robinson, Miss Anthony, and I were invited
to dine with the Bird Club. No woman, other
than I, had ever had that honor before. I dined
with them in 1870, escorted by "Warrington" of
the Springfield <i>Republican</i> and Edwin Morton. There
I met Frank Sanborn for the first time. Frank Bird held
about the same place in political life in Massachusetts,
that Thurlow Weed did in the State of New York for
forty years. In the evening we had a crowded reception
at the home of Mrs. Fenno Tudor, who occupied
a fine old residence facing the Common, where we met
a large gathering of Boston reformers. On Decoration
Day, May 30, we went to Providence, where I was
the guest of Dr. William F. Channing. We had a very
successful convention there. Senator Anthony and ex-Governor
Sprague were in the audience and expressed
<SPAN name="Page_331"></SPAN>great pleasure, afterward, in all they had
heard. I
preached in Rev. Frederick Hinckley's church the previous
Sunday afternoon.</p>
<p>From Providence I hurried home, to meet my son
Theodore and his bride, who had just landed from
France. We decorated our house and grounds with
Chinese lanterns and national flags for their reception.
As we had not time to send to New York for
bunting, our flags—French and American—were all
made of bright red and blue cambric. The effect was
fine when they arrived; but, unfortunately, there came
up a heavy thunderstorm in the night and so drenched
our beautiful flags that they became colorless rags.
My little maid announced to me early in the morning
that "the French and Americans had had a great battle
during the night and that the piazza was covered with
blood." This was startling news to one just awakening
from a sound sleep. "Why, Emma!" I said, "what
do you mean?" "Why," she replied, "the rain has
washed all the color out of our flags, and the piazza is
covered with red and blue streams of water." As the
morning sun appeared in all its glory, chasing the dark
clouds away, our decorations did indeed look pale and
limp, and were promptly removed.</p>
<p>I was happily surprised with my tall, stately daughter,
Marguerite Berry. A fine-looking girl of twenty,
straight, strong, and sound, modest and pleasing.
She can walk miles, sketches from nature with great
skill and rapidity, and speaks three languages. I had
always said to my sons: "When you marry, choose a
woman with a spine and sound teeth; remember the
teeth show the condition of the bones in the rest of the
body." So, when Theodore introduced his wife to me,
<SPAN name="Page_332"></SPAN>he said, "You see I have followed your advice;
her spine
is as straight as it should be, and every tooth in her head
as sound as ivory." This reminds me of a young man
who used to put my stoves up for the winter. He told
me one day that he thought of getting married.
"Well," I said, "above all things get a wife with a
spine and sound teeth." Stove pipe in hand he turned
to me with a look of surprise, and said: "Do they ever
come without spines?"</p>
<p>In July, 1881, sitting under the trees, Miss Anthony
and I read and discussed Wendell Phillips'
magnificent speech before the Phi Beta Kappa
Society at Harvard College. This society had often
talked of inviting him, but was afraid of his
radical utterances. At last, hoping that years might
have modified his opinions and somewhat softened
his speech, an invitation was given. The élite of
Boston, the presidents and college professors from far
and near, were there. A great audience of the wise, the
learned, the distinguished in State and Church assembled.
Such a conservative audience, it was supposed,
would surely hold this radical in check. Alas! they
were all doomed, for once, to hear the naked truth, on
every vital question of the day. Thinking this might
be his only opportunity to rouse some liberal thought
in conservative minds, he struck the keynote of every
reform; defended labor strikes, the Nihilists of Russia,
prohibition, woman suffrage, and demanded reformation
in our prisons, courts of justice, and halls of legislation.
On the woman question, he said:</p>
<div class="blkquot">
<p>"Social science affirms that woman's place in society
marks the level of civilization. From its twilight in
Greece, through the Italian worship of the Virgin, the
<SPAN name="Page_333"></SPAN>dreams of chivalry, the justice of the civil
law, and the
equality of French society, we trace her gradual recognition,
while our common law, as Lord Brougham confessed,
was, with relation to women, the opprobrium of
the age of Christianity. For forty years earnest men
and women, working noiselessly, have washed away the
opprobrium, the statute books of thirty States have
been remodeled, and woman stands, to-day, almost face
to face with her last claim—the ballot. It has been a
weary and thankless, though successful struggle. But
if there be any refuge from that ghastly curse, the vice
of great cities, before which social science stands palsied
and dumb, it is in this more equal recognition of women.</p>
<p>"If, in this critical battle for universal suffrage, our
fathers' noblest legacy to us and the greatest trust God
leaves in our hands, there be any weapon, which, once
taken from the armory, will make victory certain, it will
be as it has been in art, literature, and society, summoning
woman into the political arena. The literary class,
until within half a dozen years, has taken no note of this
great uprising; only to fling every obstacle in its way.</p>
<p>"The first glimpse we get of Saxon blood in history
is that line of Tacitus in his 'Germany,' which reads,
'In all grave matters they consult their women.'
Years hence, when robust Saxon sense has flung away
Jewish superstition and Eastern prejudice, and put
under its foot fastidious scholarship and squeamish
fashion, some second Tacitus from the valley of the
Mississippi will answer to him of the Seven Hills: 'In
all grave questions, we consult our women.'</p>
<p>"If the Alps, piled in cold and silence, be the emblem
of despotism, we joyfully take the ever restless ocean for
ours, only pure because never still. To be as good as
<SPAN name="Page_334"></SPAN>our fathers, we must be better. They silenced
their
fears and subdued their prejudices, inaugurating free
speech and equality with no precedent on the file. Let
us rise to their level, crush appetite, and prohibit temptation
if it rots great cities; intrench labor in sufficient
bulwarks against that wealth which, without the tenfold
strength of modern incorporations, wrecked the
Grecian and Roman states; and, with a sterner effort
still, summon woman into civil life, as re-enforcement to
our laboring ranks, in the effort to make our civilization
a success. Sit not like the figure on our silver
coin, looking ever backward.</p>
</div>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"'New occasions teach new duties,</p>
<p>Time makes ancient good uncouth,</p>
<p>They must upward still and onward,</p>
<p>Who would keep abreast of truth.</p>
<p>Lo! before us gleam her watch fires—</p>
<p>We ourselves must pilgrims be,</p>
<p>Launch our <i>Mayflower</i>, and steer boldly</p>
<p>Through the desperate winter sea,</p>
<p>Nor attempt the future's portal</p>
<p>With the past's blood-rusted key.'"</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>That Harvard speech in the face of fashion, bigotry,
and conservatism—so liberal, so eloquent, so brave—is a
model for every young man, who, like the orator, would
devote his talents to the best interests of the race,
rather than to his personal ambition for mere worldly
success.</p>
<p>Toward the end of October, Miss Anthony returned,
after a rest of two months, and we commenced work
again on the second volume of the History. November
2 being election day, the Republican carriage, decorated
with flags and evergreens, came to the door for
<SPAN name="Page_335"></SPAN>voters. As I owned the house and paid the taxes,
and
as none of the white males was home, I suggested that
I might go down and do the voting, whereupon the
gentlemen who represented the Republican committee
urged me, most cordially, to do so. Accompanied by
my faithful friend, Miss Anthony, we stepped into the
carriage and went to the poll, held in the hotel
where I usually went to pay taxes. When we entered
the room it was crowded with men. I was introduced
to the inspectors by Charles Everett, one of our
leading citizens, who said: "Mrs. Stanton is here, gentlemen,
for the purpose of voting. As she is a taxpayer,
of sound mind, and of legal age, I see no reason why she
should not exercise this right of citizenship."</p>
<p>The inspectors were thunderstruck. I think they
were afraid that I was about to capture the ballot
box. One placed his arms round it, with one hand close
over the aperture where the ballots were slipped in, and
said, with mingled surprise and pity, "Oh, no, madam!
Men only are allowed to vote." I then explained to
him that, in accordance with the Constitution of New
Jersey, women had voted in New Jersey down to 1801,
when they were forbidden the further exercise of the
right by an arbitrary act of the legislature, and, by a
recent amendment to the national Constitution, Congress
had declared that "all persons born or naturalized
in the United States, and subject to the jurisdiction
thereof, are citizens of the United States and of the State
wherein they reside" and are entitled to vote. I told
them that I wished to cast my vote, as a citizen of the
United States, for the candidates for United States
offices. Two of the inspectors sat down and pulled
their hats over their eyes, whether from shame or igno<SPAN name="Page_336"></SPAN>rance
I do not know. The other held on to the box,
and said "I know nothing about the Constitutions,
State or national. I never read either; but I do
know that in New Jersey, women have not voted in my
day, and I cannot accept your ballot." So I laid my
ballot in his hand, saying that I had the same right to
vote that any man present had, and on him must rest
the responsibility of denying me my rights of citizenship.</p>
<p>All through the winter Miss Anthony and I worked
diligently on the History. My daughter Harriot came
from Europe in February, determined that I should return
with her, as she had not finished her studies. To
expedite my task on the History she seized the laboring
oar, prepared the last chapter and corrected the proof
as opportunity offered. As the children were scattered
to the four points of the compass and my husband spent
the winter in the city, we decided to lease our house and
all take a holiday. We spent a month in New York
city, busy on the History to the last hour, with occasional
intervals of receiving and visiting friends. As I
dreaded the voyage, the days flew by too fast for my
pleasure.</p>
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