<h2><SPAN name="Page_351"></SPAN>CHAPTER XXII.</h2>
<h2>REFORMS AND REFORMERS IN GREAT BRITAIN.</h2>
<br/>
<p>Reaching London in the fogs and mists of November,
1882, the first person I met, after a separation of
many years, was our revered and beloved friend William
Henry Channing. The tall, graceful form was somewhat
bent; the sweet, thoughtful face somewhat sadder; the
crimes and miseries of the world seemed heavy
on his heart. With his refined, nervous organization,
the gloomy moral and physical atmosphere of London
was the last place on earth where that beautiful
life should have ended. I found him in earnest
conversation with my daughter and the young Englishman
she was soon to marry, advising them not
only as to the importance of the step they were about
to take, but as to the minor points to be observed in
the ceremony. At the appointed time a few friends
gathered in Portland Street Chapel, and as we approached
the altar our friend appeared in surplice and
gown, his pale, spiritual face more tender and beautiful
than ever. This was the last marriage service he ever
performed, and it was as pathetic as original. His
whole appearance was so in harmony with the exquisite
sentiments he uttered, that we who listened felt as if,
for the time being, we had entered with him into the
Holy of Holies.</p>
<p>Some time after, Miss Anthony and I called on him
to return our thanks for the very complimentary review
he had written of "The History of Woman Suf<SPAN name="Page_352"></SPAN>frage."
He thanked us in turn for the many pleasant
memories we had revived in those pages, "but," said
he, "they have filled me with indignation, too, at the
repeated insults offered to women so earnestly engaged
in honest endeavors for the uplifting of mankind. I
blushed for my sex more than once in reading these
volumes." We lingered long, talking over the events
connected with our great struggle for freedom. He
dwelt with tenderness on our disappointments, and
entered more fully into the humiliations suffered by
women, than any man we ever met. His views were
as appreciative of the humiliation of woman, through the
degradation of sex, as those expressed by John Stuart
Mill in his wonderful work on "The Subjection of
Women." He was intensely interested in Frances
Power Cobbe's efforts to suppress vivisection, and the
last time I saw him he was presiding at a parlor meeting
where Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell gave an admirable
address on the cause and cure of the social evil. Mr.
Channing spoke beautifully in closing, paying a warm
and merited compliment to Dr. Blackwell's clear and
concise review of all the difficulties involved in the
question.</p>
<p>Reading so much of English reformers in our journals,
of the Brights, McLarens, the Taylors; of Lydia Becker,
Josephine Butler, and Octavia Hill, and of their great
demonstrations with lords and members of Parliament
in the chair,—we had longed to compare the
actors in those scenes with our speakers on this
side of the water. At last we met them one and all in
great public meetings and parlor reunions, at dinners
and receptions. We listened to their public men in
Parliament, the courts, and the pulpit; to the women
<SPAN name="Page_353"></SPAN>in their various assemblies; and came to the
conclusion
that Americans surpass them in oratory and the conduct
of their meetings. A hesitating, apologetic manner
seems to be the national custom for an exordium
on all questions. Even their ablest men who have
visited this country, such as Kingsley, Stanley, Arnold,
Tyndall, and Coleridge, have all been criticised by the
American public for their elocutionary defects. They
have no speakers to compare with Wendell Phillips,
George William Curtis, or Anna Dickinson, although
John Bright is without peer among his countrymen, as
is Mrs. Besant among the women. The women, as a
general rule, are more fluent than the men.</p>
<p>I reached England in time to attend the great demonstration
in Glasgow, to celebrate the extension of the
municipal franchise to the women of Scotland. It was
a remarkable occasion. St. Andrew's immense hall
was packed with women; a few men were admitted to
the gallery at half a crown apiece. Over five thousand
people were present. When a Scotch audience is thoroughly
roused, nothing can equal the enthusiasm. The
arrival of the speakers on the platform was announced
with the wildest applause; the entire audience rising,
waving their handkerchiefs, and clapping their hands,
and every compliment paid the people of Scotland was
received with similar outbursts. Mrs. McLaren, a
sister of John Bright, presided, and made the opening
speech. I had the honor, on this occasion, of addressing
an audience for the first time in the Old World.
Many others spoke briefly. There were too many
speakers; no one had time to warm up to the point of
eloquence.</p>
<p>Our system of conventions, of two or three days'
<SPAN name="Page_354"></SPAN>duration, with long speeches discussing pointed
and
radical resolutions, is quite unknown in England.
Their meetings consist of one session of a few hours,
into which they crowd all the speakers they can summon.
They have a few tame, printed resolutions, on
which there can be no possible difference of opinion,
with the names of those who are to speak appended.
Each of these is read and a few short speeches are made,
that may or may not have the slightest reference to the
resolutions, which are then passed. The last is usually
one of thanks to some lord or member of the
House of Commons, who may have condescended to
preside at the meeting or do something for the measure
in Parliament. The Queen is referred to tenderly in
most of the speeches, although she has never done anything
to merit the approbation of the advocates of suffrage
for women.</p>
<p>From Glasgow quite a large party of the Brights and
McLarens went to Edinburgh, where the Hon. Duncan
McLaren gave us a warm welcome to Newington
House, under the very shadow of the Salisbury crags.
These and the Pentland Hills are remarkable features
in the landscape as you approach this beautiful city with
its mountains and castles. We passed a few charming
days driving about, visiting old friends, and discussing
the status of woman on both sides of the Atlantic.
Here we met Elizabeth Pease Nichol and Jane and Eliza
Wigham, whom I had not seen since we sat together in
the World's Anti-slavery Convention, in London, in
1840. Yet I knew Mrs. Nichol at once; her strongly
marked face was not readily forgotten.</p>
<p>I went with the family on Sunday to the Friends'
meeting, where a most unusual manifestation for that
<SPAN name="Page_355"></SPAN>decorous sect occurred. I had been told that, if
I felt
inclined, it would be considered quite proper for me to
make some remarks, and just as I was revolving an
opening sentence to a few thoughts I desired to present,
a man arose in a remote part of the house and began, in
a low voice, to give his testimony as to the truth that
was in him. All eyes were turned toward him, when
suddenly a Friend leaned over the back of the seat, seized
his coat tails and jerked him down in a most emphatic
manner. The poor man buried his face in his hands,
and maintained a profound silence. I learned afterward
that he was a bore, and the Friend in the rear thought it
wise to nip him in the bud. This scene put to flight
all intentions of speaking on my part lest I, too, might
get outside the prescribed limits and be suppressed by
force. I dined, that day, with Mrs. Nichol, at Huntly
Lodge, where she has entertained in turn many of our
American reformers. Her walls have echoed to the
voices of Garrison, Rogers, Samuel J. May, Parker
Pillsbury, Henry C. Wright, Douglass, Remond, and
hosts of English philanthropists. Though over eighty
years of age, she was still awake to all questions of the
hour, and generous in her hospitalities as of yore.</p>
<p>Mrs. Margaret Lucas, whose whole soul was in the
temperance movement, escorted me from Edinburgh to
Manchester, to be present at another great demonstration
in the Town Hall, the finest building in that
district. It had just been completed, and, with its ante-room,
dining hall, and various apartments for social
entertainments, was by far the most perfect hall I
had seen in England. There I was entertained by
Mrs. Matilda Roby, who, with her husband, gave me
a most hospitable reception. She invited several
<SPAN name="Page_356"></SPAN>friends to luncheon one day, among others Miss
Lydia
Becker, editor of the <i>Suffrage Journal</i> in that city, and
the Rev. Mr. Steinthal, who had visited this country
and spoken on our platform. The chief topic at the
table was John Stuart Mill, his life, character, writings,
and his position with reference to the political rights
of women. In the evening we went to see Ristori in
'"Queen Elizabeth." Having seen her, many years before,
in America, I was surprised to find her still so
vigorous. And thus, week after week, suffrage meetings,
receptions, dinners, luncheons, and theaters pleasantly
alternated.</p>
<p>The following Sunday we heard in London a grand
sermon from Moncure D. Conway, and had a pleasant
interview with him and Mrs. Conway at the close of
the session. Later we spent a few days at their artistic
home, filled with books, pictures, and mementos
from loving friends. A billiard room, with well-worn
cues, balls, and table—quite a novel adjunct to a
parsonage—may, in a measure, account for his vigorous
sermons. A garden reception to Mr. and Mrs.
Howells gave us an opportunity to see the American
novelist surrounded by his English friends.</p>
<p>Soon after this Mr. Conway asked me to fill his
pulpit. I retired Saturday night, very nervous over my
sermon for the next day, and the feeling steadily increased
until I reached the platform; but once there
my fears were all dissipated, and I never enjoyed speaking
more than on that occasion, for I had been so long
oppressed with the degradation of woman under canon
law and church discipline, that I had a sense of relief
in pouring out my indignation. My theme was, "What
has Christianity done for Woman?" and by the
<SPAN name="Page_357"></SPAN>facts of history I showed clearly that to no
form of religion
was woman indebted for one impulse of freedom,
as all alike have taught her inferiority and subjection.
No lofty virtues can emanate from such a
condition. Whatever heights of dignity and purity
women have individually attained can in no way be attributed
to the dogmas of their religion.</p>
<p>With my son Theodore, always deeply interested in
my friends and public work, I called, during my stay in
London, on Mrs. Grey, Miss Jessie Boucherett, and
Dr. Hoggan, who had written essays for "The Woman
Question in Europe"; on our American minister (Mr.
Lowell), Mr. and Mrs. George W. Smalley, and many
other notable men and women. By appointment we
had an hour with the Hon. John Bright, at his residence
on Piccadilly. As his photograph, with his fame, had
reached America, his fine face and head, as well as his
political opinions, were quite familiar to us. He received
us with great cordiality, and manifested a clear
knowledge and deep interest in regard to all American
affairs. Free trade and woman suffrage formed the
basis of our conversation; the literature of our respective
countries and our great men and women were the
lighter topics of the occasion. He was not sound in
regard to the political rights of women, but it is not
given to any one man to be equally clear on all questions.
He voted for John Stuart Mill's amendment to
the Household Suffrage Bill in 1867, but he said,
"that was a personal favor to a friend, without any
strong convictions as to the merits of what I considered
a purely sentimental measure."</p>
<p>We attended the meeting called to rejoice over the
passage of the Married Women's Property Bill, which
<SPAN name="Page_358"></SPAN>gave to the women of England, in 1882, what we
had
enjoyed in many States in this country since 1848.
Mrs. Jacob Bright, Mrs. Scatcherd, Mrs. Elmy, and
several members of Parliament made short speeches of
congratulation to those who had been instrumental in
carrying the measure. It was generally conceded that
to the tact and persistence of Mrs. Jacob Bright, more
than to any other person, belonged the credit of that
achievement. Jacob Bright was at the time a member
of Parliament, and fully in sympathy with the bill; and,
while Mrs. Bright exerted all her social influence to
make it popular with the members, her husband, thoroughly
versed in Parliamentary tactics, availed himself
of every technicality to push the bill through the
House of Commons. Mrs. Bright's chief object in
securing this bill, aside from establishing the right that
every human being has to his own property, was to
place married women on an even plane with widows and
spinsters, thereby making them qualified voters.</p>
<p>The next day we went out to Barn Elms to visit Mr.
and Mrs. Charles McLaren. He was a member of Parliament,
a Quaker by birth and education, and had
sustained, to his uttermost ability, the suffrage movement.
His charming wife, the daughter of Mrs.
Pochin, is worthy of the noble mother who was
among the earliest leaders on that question—speaking
and writing with ability, on all phases of the
subject. Barn Elms is a grand old estate, a few
miles out of London. It was the dairy farm of
Queen Elizabeth, and was presented by her to Sir
Francis Walsingham. Since then it has been inhabited
by many persons of note. It has existed as an
estate since the time of the early Saxon kings, and the
<SPAN name="Page_359"></SPAN>record of the sale of Barn Elms in the time of
King
Athelstane is still extant. What with its well-kept
lawns, fine old trees, glimpses here and there of the
Thames winding round its borders, and its wealth of
old associations, it is, indeed, a charming spot. Our
memory of those days will not go back to Saxon kings,
but remain with the liberal host and hostess, the beautiful
children, and the many charming acquaintances
we met at that fireside. I doubt whether any of the
ancient lords and ladies who dispensed their hospitalities
under that roof did in any way surpass the present
occupants. Mrs. McLaren, interested in all the reforms
of the day, is radical in her ideas, a brilliant talker, and,
for one so young, remarkably well informed on all political
questions.</p>
<p>It was at Barn Elms I met, for the first time, Mrs.
Fannie Hertz, to whom I was indebted for many pleasant
acquaintances afterward. She is said to know more
distinguished literary people than any other woman in
London. I saw her, too, several times in her home;
meeting, at her Sunday-afternoon receptions, many persons
I was desirous to know. On one occasion I found
George Jacob Holyoake there, surrounded by several
young ladies, all stoutly defending the Nihilists in
Russia, and their right to plot their way to freedom.
They counted a dynasty of Czars as nothing in the balance
with the liberties of a whole people. As I joined
the circle, Mr. Holyoake called my attention to the fact
that he was the only one in favor of peaceful measures.
"Now," said he, "I have often heard it said on your
platform that the feminine element in politics would
bring about perpetual peace in government, and here
all these ladies are advocating: the worst forms of vio<SPAN name="Page_360"></SPAN>lence
in the name of liberty." "Ah!" said I, "lay on
their shoulders the responsibility of governing, and they
would soon become as mild and conservative as you
seem to be." He then gave us his views on co-operation,
the only remedy for many existing evils, which he
thought would be the next step toward a higher
civilization.</p>
<p>There, too, I met some Positivists, who, though
liberal on religious questions, were very narrow as
to the sphere of woman. The difference in sex,
which is the very reason why men and women should
be associated in all forms of activity, is to them
the strongest reason why they should be separated.
Mrs. Hertz belongs to the Harrison school of Positivists.
I went with her to one of Mrs. Orr's receptions,
where we met Robert Browning, a fine-looking
man of seventy years, with white hair and mustache.
He was frank, easy, playful, and brilliant in
conversation. Mrs. Orr seemed to be taking a very
pessimistic view of our present sphere of action, which
Mr. Browning, with poetic coloring, was trying to paint
more hopefully.</p>
<p>The next day I dined with Margaret Bright Lucas,
in company with John P. Thomasson, member of
Parliament, and his wife, and, afterward, we went
to the House of Commons and had the good fortune
to hear Gladstone, Parnell, and Sir Charles Dilke.
Seeing Bradlaugh seated outside of the charmed circle,
I sent my card to him, and, in the corridor, we had a
few moments' conversation. I asked him if he thought
he would eventually get his seat. He replied, "Most
assuredly I will. I shall open the next campaign with
such an agitation as will rouse our politicians to some
<SPAN name="Page_361"></SPAN>consideration of the changes gradually coming
over the
face of things in this country."</p>
<p>The place assigned ladies in the House of Commons
is really a disgrace to a country ruled by a queen. This
dark perch is the highest gallery, immediately over the
speaker's desk and government seats, behind a fine wire
netting, so that it is quite impossible to see or hear
anything. The sixteen persons who can crowd into the
front row, by standing with their noses partly through
the open network, can have the satisfaction of seeing
the cranial arch of their rulers and hearing an occasional
paean to liberty, or an Irish growl at the lack of it. I
was told that this network was to prevent the members
on the floor from being disturbed by the beauty of the
women. On hearing this I remarked that I was devoutly
thankful that our American men were not so
easily disturbed, and that the beauty of our women was
not of so dangerous a type. I could but contrast
our spacious galleries in that magnificent Capitol at
Washington, as well as in our grand State Capitols,
where hundreds of women can sit at their ease and see
and hear their rulers, with these dark, dingy buildings.
My son, who had a seat on the floor just opposite the
ladies' gallery, said he could compare our appearance
to nothing but birds in a cage. He could not distinguish
an outline of anybody. All he could see was the
moving of feathers and furs or some bright ribbon or
flower.</p>
<p>In the libraries, the courts, and the House of Lords,
I found many suggestive subjects of thought. It was
interesting to find, on the frescoed walls, many historical
scenes in which women had taken a prominent part.
Among others there was Jane Lane assisting Charles
<SPAN name="Page_362"></SPAN>II. to escape, and Alice Lisle concealing the
fugitives
after the battle of Sedgemoor. Six wives of Henry
VIII. stood forth, a solemn pageant when one recalled
their sad fate. Alas! whether for good or ill, women
must ever fill a large space in the tragedies of the
world.</p>
<p>I passed a few pleasant hours in the house where
Macaulay spent his last years. The once spacious
library and the large bow-window, looking out on a
beautiful lawn, where he sat, from day to day, writing
his glowing periods, possessed a peculiar charm for me,
as the surroundings of genius always do. I thought,
as I stood there, how often he had unconsciously gazed
on each object in searching for words rich enough to
gild his ideas. The house was owned and occupied by
Mr. and Mrs. Stephen Winckworth. It was at one of
their sociable Sunday teas that many pleasant memories
of the great historian were revived.</p>
<p>One of the most remarkable and genial women I met
was Miss Frances Power Cobbe. She called one afternoon,
and sipped with me the five o'clock tea, a uniform
practice in England. She was of medium height, stout,
rosy, and vigorous-looking, with a large, well-shaped
head, a strong, happy face, and gifted with rare powers
of conversation. I felt very strongly attracted to her.
She was frank and cordial, and pronounced in all her
views. She gave us an account of her efforts to rescue
unhappy cats and dogs from the hands of the vivisectionists.
We saw her, too, in her home, and in her
office in Victoria Street. The perfect order in which
her books and papers were arranged, and the exquisite
neatness of the apartments, were refreshing to behold.</p>
<p>My daughter, having decided opinions of her own,
<SPAN name="Page_363"></SPAN>was soon at loggerheads with Miss Cobbe on the
question
of vivisection. After we had examined several
German and French books, with illustrations showing
the horrible cruelty inflicted on cats and dogs, she enlarged
on the hypocrisy and wickedness of these scientists,
and, turning to my daughter, said: "Would you
shake hands with one of these vivisectionists? Yes,"
said Harriot, "I should be proud to shake hands with
Virchow, the great German scientist, for his kindness
to a young American girl. She applied to several professors
to be admitted to their classes, but all refused
except Virchow; he readily assented, and requested his
students to treat her with becoming courtesy. 'If any
of you behave otherwise,' said he, 'I shall feel myself
personally insulted.' She entered his classes and pursued
her studies, unmolested and with great success.
Now, would you, Miss Cobbe, refuse to shake hands
with any of your statesmen, scientists, clergymen, lawyers,
or physicians who treat women with constant indignities
and insult?" "Oh, no!" said Miss Cobbe.
"Then," said Harriot, "you estimate the physical suffering
of cats and dogs as of more consequence than the
humiliation of human beings. The man who tortures
a cat for a scientific purpose is not as low in the scale
of beings, in my judgment, as one who sacrifices his own
daughter to some cruel custom."</p>
<p>As we were, just then, reading Froude's "Life of
Carlyle," we drove by the house where Carlyle had lived,
and paused a moment at the door where poor Jennie
went in and out so often with a heavy heart. The book
gives a painful record of a great soul struggling with
poverty and disappointment; the hope of success, as
an author, so long deferred and never realized. His
<SPAN name="Page_364"></SPAN>foolish pride of independence and headship, and
his utter
indifference to his domestic duties and the comfort of
his wife made the picture still darker. Poor Jennie!
fitted to shine in any circle, yet doomed, all her married
life, to domestic drudgery, instead of associations
with the great man for whose literary companionship
she had sacrificed everything.</p>
<p>At one of Miss Biggs' receptions Miss Anthony and
I met Mr. Stansfeld, M.P., who had labored faithfully
for the repeal of the Contagious Diseases Act, and had
in a measure been successful. We had the honor of an
interview with Lord Shaftesbury, at one of his crowded
"at homes," and found him a little uncertain as to the
wisdom of allowing married women to vote, for fear of
disturbing the peace of the family. I have often wondered
if men see, in this objection, what a fatal admission
they make as to their love of domination.</p>
<p>Miss Anthony was present at the great Liberal Conference,
at Leeds, on October 17, 1882, to which Mrs.
Helen Bright Clark, Miss Jane Cobden, Mrs. Tanner,
Mrs. Scatcherd, and several other ladies were duly
elected delegates from their respective Liberal Leagues.
Mrs. Clark and Miss Cobden, daughters of the
great corn-law reformers, spoke eloquently in favor
of the resolution to extend Parliamentary suffrage
to women, which was presented by Walter McLaren
of Bradford. As Mrs. Clark made her impassioned
appeal for the recognition of woman's political
equality in the next bill for extension of suffrage,
that immense gathering of sixteen hundred delegates
was hushed into profound silence. For a
daughter to speak thus in that great representative convention,
in opposition to her loved and honored father,
<SPAN name="Page_365"></SPAN>the acknowledged leader of that party, was an
act of
heroism and fidelity to her own highest convictions
almost without a parallel in English history, and the
effect on the audience was as thrilling as it was surprising.
The resolution was passed by a large majority.
At the reception given to John Bright that evening,
as Mrs. Clark approached the dais on which her
noble father stood shaking the hands of passing friends,
she remarked to her husband, "I wonder if father has
heard of my speech this morning, and if he will forgive
me for thus publicly differing with him?" The query
was soon answered. As he caught the first glimpse of
his daughter he stepped down, and, pressing her hand
affectionately, kissed her on either cheek.</p>
<p>The next evening the great Quaker statesman was
heard by the admiring thousands who could crowd into
Victoria Hall, while thousands, equally desirous to hear,
failed to get tickets of admission. It was a magnificent
sight, and altogether a most impressive gathering of
the people. Miss Anthony, with her friends, sat in the
gallery opposite the great platform, where they had a
fine view of the whole audience. When John Bright,
escorted by Sir Wilfrid Lawson, took his seat, the immense
crowd rose, waving hats and handkerchiefs, and,
with the wildest enthusiasm, gave cheer after cheer in
honor of the great leader. Sir Wilfrid Lawson, in his
introductory remarks, facetiously alluded to the resolution
adopted by the Conference as somewhat in advance
of the ideas of the speaker of the evening. The
house broke into roars of laughter, while the Father of
Liberalism, perfectly convulsed, joined in the general
merriment.</p>
<p>But when at length his time to speak had come, and
<SPAN name="Page_366"></SPAN>Mr. Bright went over the many steps of progress
that
had been taken by the Liberal party, he cunningly
dodged the question of the emancipation of the
women of England. He skipped round the agitation
of 1867, and John Stuart Mill's amendment presented
at that time in the House of Commons; the extension
of the municipal suffrage in 1869; the participation of
women in the establishment of national schools under
the law of 1870, both as voters and members of school
boards; the Married Women's Property Bill of 1882;
the large and increasing vote for the extension of Parliamentary
suffrage in the House of Commons, and the
adoption of the resolution by that great Conference the
day before. All these successive steps toward woman's
emancipation he carefully remembered to forget.</p>
<p>While in London Miss Anthony and I attended several
enthusiastic reform meetings. We heard Bradlaugh
address his constituency on that memorable day
at Trafalgar Square, at the opening of Parliament, when
violence was anticipated and the Parliament Houses
were surrounded by immense crowds, with the military
and police in large numbers, to maintain order. We
heard Michael Davitt and Miss Helen Taylor at a great
meeting in Exeter Hall; the former on home rule for
Ireland, and the latter on the nationalization of land.
The facts and figures given in these two lectures, as to
the abject poverty of the people and the cruel system
by which every inch of land had been grabbed by their
oppressors, were indeed appalling. A few days before
sailing we made our last visit to Ernestine L. Rose, and
found our noble coadjutor, though in delicate health,
pleasantly situated in the heart of London, as deeply
interested as ever in the struggles of the hour.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_367"></SPAN>A great discomfort, in all English homes, is
the inadequate
system of heating. A moderate fire in the grate
is the only mode of heating, and they seem quite oblivious
to the danger of throwing a door open into a cold
hall at one's back, while the servants pass in and out
with the various courses at dinner. As we Americans
were sorely tried, under such circumstances, it was decided,
in the home of my son-in-law, Mr. Blatch, to
have a hall-stove, which, after a prolonged search, was
found in London and duly installed as a presiding deity
to defy the dampness that pervades all those ivy-covered
habitations, as well as the neuralgia that
wrings their possessors. What a blessing it proved,
more than any one thing making the old English house
seem like an American home! The delightful summer
heat we, in America, enjoy in the coldest seasons, is
quite unknown to our Saxon cousins. Although many
came to see our stove in full working order, yet we
could not persuade them to adopt the American system
of heating the whole house at an even temperature.
They cling to the customs of their fathers with an obstinacy
that is incomprehensible to us, who are always
ready to try experiments. Americans complain bitterly
of the same freezing experiences in France and
Germany, and, in turn, foreigners all criticise our overheated
houses and places of amusement.</p>
<p>While attending a meeting in Birmingham I stayed
with a relative of Joseph Sturge, whose home I had
visited forty years before. The meeting was called to
discuss the degradation of women under the Contagious
Diseases Act. Led by Josephine Butler, the
women of England were deeply stirred on the question
of its repeal and have since secured it. I heard Mrs.
<SPAN name="Page_368"></SPAN>Butler speak in many of her society meetings as
well
as on other occasions. Her style was not unlike that
one hears in Methodist camp meetings from the best
cultivated of that sect; her power lies in her deeply religious
enthusiasm. In London we met Emily Faithful,
who had just returned from a lecturing tour in the
United States, and were much amused with her experiences.
Having taken prolonged trips over the whole
country, from Maine to Texas, for many successive
years, Miss Anthony and I could easily add the superlative
to all her narrations.</p>
<p>It was a pleasant surprise to meet the large number
of Americans usually at the receptions of Mrs. Peter
Taylor. Graceful and beautiful, in full dress, standing
beside her husband, who evidently idolized her, Mrs.
Taylor appeared quite as refined in her drawing room as
if she had never been exposed to the public gaze while
presiding over a suffrage convention. Mrs. Taylor is
called the mother of the suffrage movement. The reform
has not been carried on in all respects to her taste,
nor on what she considers the basis of high principle.
Neither she nor Mrs. Jacob Bright has ever been satisfied
with the bill asking the rights of suffrage for
"widows and spinsters" only. To have asked this
right "for all women duly qualified," as but few married
women are qualified through possessing property in
their own right, would have been substantially the
same, without making any invidious distinctions. Mrs.
Taylor and Mrs. Bright felt that, as married women
were the greatest sufferers under the law, they should
be the first rather than the last to be enfranchised. The
others, led by Miss Becker, claimed that it was good
policy to make the demand for "spinsters and widows,"
<SPAN name="Page_369"></SPAN>and thus exclude the "family unit" and "man's
headship"
from the discussion; and yet these were the very
points on which the objections were invariably based.
They claimed that, if "spinsters and widows" were enfranchised,
they would be an added power to secure to
married women their rights. But the history of the
past gives us no such assurance. It is not certain that
women would be more just than men, and a small privileged
class of aristocrats have long governed their fellow-countrymen.
The fact that the spinsters in the
movement advocated such a bill, shows that they were
not to be trusted in extending it. John Stuart Mill,
too, was always opposed to the exclusion of married
women in the demand for suffrage.</p>
<p>My sense of justice was severely tried by all I heard
of the persecutions of Mrs. Besant and Mr. Bradlaugh
for their publications on the right and duty of parents
to limit population. Who can contemplate the sad
condition of multitudes of young children in the Old
World whose fate is to be brought up in ignorance and
vice—a swarming, seething mass which nobody owns—without
seeing the need of free discussion of the philosophical
principles that underlie these tangled social
problems? The trials of Foote and Ramsey, too, for
blasphemy, seemed unworthy a great nation in the
nineteenth century. Think of well-educated men of
good moral standing thrown into prison in solitary confinement,
for speaking lightly of the Hebrew idea of
Jehovah and the New Testament account of the birth
of Jesus! Our Protestant clergy never hesitate to
make the dogmas and superstitions of the Catholic
Church seem as absurd as possible, and why should not
those who imagine they have outgrown Protestant
<SPAN name="Page_370"></SPAN>superstitions make them equally ridiculous?
Whatever
is true can stand investigation and ridicule.</p>
<p>In the last of April, when the wildflowers were in their
glory, Mrs. Mellen and her lovely daughter, Daisy, came
down to our home at Basingstoke to enjoy its beauty.
As Mrs. Mellen had known Charles Kingsley and entertained
him at her residence in Colorado, she felt a
desire to see his former home. Accordingly, one bright
morning, Mr. Blatch drove us to Eversley, through
Strathfieldsaye, the park of the Duke of Wellington.
This magnificent place was given to him by the English
government after the battle of Waterloo. A lofty
statue of the duke, that can be seen for miles around,
stands at one entrance. A drive of a few miles further
brought us to the parish church of Canon Kingsley,
where he preached many years, and where all that is
mortal of him now lies buried. We wandered through
the old church, among the moss-covered tombstones,
and into the once happy home, now silent and deserted—his
loved ones being scattered in different quarters of
the globe. Standing near the last resting place of the
author of "Hypatia," his warning words for women, in
a letter to John Stuart Mill, seemed like a voice from
heaven saying, with new inspiration and power, "This
will never be a good world for women until the last remnant
of the canon law is civilized off the face of the
earth."</p>
<p>We heard Mr. Fawcett speak to his Hackney constituents
at one of his campaign meetings. In the
course of his remarks he mentioned with evident favor,
as one of the coming measures, the disestablishment of
the Church, and was greeted with loud applause. Soon
after he spoke of woman suffrage as another question
<SPAN name="Page_371"></SPAN>demanding consideration, but this was received
with
laughter and jeers, although the platform was crowded
with advocates of the measure, among whom were the
wife of the speaker and her sister, Dr. Garrett Anderson.
The audience were evidently in favor of releasing themselves
from being taxed to support the Church, forgetting
that women were taxed not only to support a
Church but also a State in the management of neither
of which they had a voice. Mr. Fawcett was not an
orator, but a simple, straightforward speaker. He
made one gesture, striking his right clenched fist
into the palm of his left hand at the close of all his
strongest assertions, and, although more liberal
than his party, he was a great favorite with his constituents.</p>
<p>One pleasant trip I made in England was to Bristol,
to visit the Misses Priestman and Mrs. Tanner, sisters-in-law
of John Bright. I had stayed at their father's
house forty years before, so we felt like old friends. I
found them all liberal women, and we enjoyed a few
days together, talking over our mutual struggles, and
admiring the beautiful scenery for which that part of the
country is celebrated. The women of England were
just then organizing political clubs, and I was invited
to speak before many of them. There is an
earnestness of purpose among English women that
is very encouraging under the prolonged disappointments
reformers inevitably suffer. And the order
of English homes, too, among the wealthy classes,
is very enjoyable. All go on from year to year with the
same servants, the same surroundings, no changes, no
moving, no building even; in delightful contrast with
our periodical upheavals, always uncertain where we
<SPAN name="Page_372"></SPAN>shall go next, or how long our main dependents
will
stand by us.</p>
<p>From Bristol I went to Greenbank to visit Mrs.
Helen Bright Clark. One evening her parlors were
crowded and I was asked to give an account of the
suffrage movement in America. Some clergymen
questioned me in regard to the Bible position of
woman, whereupon I gave quite an exposition of its
general principles in favor of liberty and equality. As
two distinct lines of argument can be woven out of
those pages on any subject, on this occasion I selected
all the most favorable texts for justice to woman, and
closed by stating the limits of its authority. Mrs.
Clark, though thoroughly in sympathy with the views
I had expressed, feared lest my very liberal utterances
might have shocked some of the strictest of the laymen
and clergy. "Well," said I, "if we who do see
the absurdities of the old superstitions never unveil
them to others, how is the world to make any progress
in the theologies? I am in the sunset of life, and I feel
it to be my special mission to tell people what they are
not prepared to hear, instead of echoing worn-out opinions."
The result showed the wisdom of my speaking
out of my own soul. To the surprise of Mrs. Clark, the
Primitive Methodist clergyman called on Sunday morning
to invite me to occupy his pulpit in the afternoon
and present the same line of thought I had the previous
evening. I accepted his invitation. He led the services,
and I took my text from Genesis i. 27, 28, showing
that man and woman were a simultaneous creation, endowed,
in the beginning, with equal power.</p>
<p>Returning to London, I accepted an invitation to take
tea one afternoon with Mrs. Jacob Bright, who, in
<SPAN name="Page_373"></SPAN>earnest conversation, had helped us each to a
cup
of tea, and was turning to help us to something more,
when over went table and all—tea, bread and butter,
cake, strawberries and cream, silver, china, in one conglomerate
mass. Silence reigned. No one started; no
one said "Oh!" Mrs. Bright went on with what she
was saying as if nothing unusual had occurred, rang the
bell, and, when the servant appeared, pointing to the
débris, she said, "Charles, remove this." I was filled
with admiration at her coolness, and devoutly thankful
that we Americans maintained an equally dignified
silence.</p>
<p>At a grand reception, given in our honor by the
National Central Committee, in Princess' Hall, Jacob
Bright, M.P., presided and made an admirable opening
speech, followed by his sister, Mrs. McLaren,
with a highly complimentary address of welcome. By
particular request Miss Anthony explained the industrial,
legal, and political status of American women,
while I set forth their educational, social, and religious
condition. John P. Thomasson, M.P., made the closing
address, expressing his satisfaction with our addresses
and the progress made in both countries.</p>
<p>Mrs. Thomasson, daughter of Mrs. Lucas, gave several
parties, receptions, and dinners,—some for ladies
only,—where an abundant opportunity was offered for
a critical analysis of the idiosyncrasies of the superior
sex, especially in their dealings with women. The patience
of even such heroic souls as Lydia Becker and
Caroline Biggs was almost exhausted with the tergiversations
of Members of the House of Commons.
Alas for the many fair promises broken, the hopes deferred,
the votes fully relied on and counted, all missing
<SPAN name="Page_374"></SPAN>in the hour of action! One crack of Mr.
Gladstone's
whip put a hundred Liberal members to flight—members
whom these noble women had spent years in educating.
I never visited the House of Commons that I
did not see Miss Becker and Miss Biggs trying to elucidate
the fundamental principles of just government
to some of the legislators. Verily their divine faith and
patience merited more worthy action on the part of
their alleged representatives!</p>
<p>Miss Henrietta Müller gave a farewell reception to
Miss Anthony and me on the eve of our departure for
America, when we had the opportunity of meeting once
more most of the pleasant acquaintances we had made
in London. Although it was announced for the afternoon,
we did, in fact, receive all day, as many could not
come at the hour appointed. Dr. Elizabeth Blackwell
took breakfast with us; Mrs. Fawcett, Mrs. Saville, and
Miss Lord were with us at luncheon; Harriet Hosmer
and Olive Logan soon after; Mrs. Peter Taylor later,
and from three to six o'clock the parlors were crowded.</p>
<p>Returning from London I passed my birthday, November
12, 1883, in Basingstoke. It was a sad day for
us all, knowing that it was the last day with my loved
ones before my departure for America. When I imprinted
the farewell kiss on the soft cheek of
my little granddaughter Nora in the cradle, she in the
dawn and I in the sunset of life, I realized how widely
the broad ocean would separate us. Miss Anthony,
met me at Alderly Edge, where we spent a few days
with Mr. and Mrs. Jacob Bright. There we found
their noble sisters, Mrs. McLaren and Mrs. Lucas,
young Walter McLaren and his lovely bride, Eva
Müller, whom we had heard several times on the
<SPAN name="Page_375"></SPAN>suffrage platform. We rallied her on the step
she
had lately taken, notwithstanding her sister's able paper
on the blessedness of a single life. While there, we
visited Dean Stanley's birthplace, but on his death the
light and joy went out. The old church whose walls had
once echoed to his voice, and the house where he had
spent so many useful years, seemed sad and deserted.
But the day was bright and warm, the scenery beautiful,
cows and sheep were still grazing in the meadows,
and the grass was as green as in June. This is England's
chief charm,—it is forever green,—perhaps in
compensation for the many cloudy days.</p>
<p>As our good friends Mrs. McLaren and Mrs. Lucas
had determined to see us safely on board the Servia,
they escorted us to Liverpool, where we met Mrs. Margaret
Parker and Mrs. Scatcherd. Another reception
was given us at the residence of Dr. Ewing Whittle.
Several short speeches were made, and all present cheered
the parting guests with words of hope and encouragement
for the good cause. Here the wisdom of forming
an international association was first considered. The
proposition met with such favor from those present that
a committee was appointed to correspond with the
friends in different nations. Miss Anthony and I
were placed on the committee, and while this project
has not yet been fully carried out, the idea of the
intellectual co-operation of women to secure equal
rights and opportunities for their sex was the basis of
the International Council of Women, which was held
under the auspices of the National Woman Suffrage
Association in Washington, D. C, in March, 1888.</p>
<p>On the Atlantic for ten days we had many opportunities
to review all we had seen and heard. Sitting on
<SPAN name="Page_376"></SPAN>deck, hour after hour, how often I queried with
myself
as to the significance of the boon for which we were so
earnestly struggling. In asking for a voice in the government
under which we live, have we been pursuing a
shadow for fifty years? In seeking political power, are
we abdicating that social throne where they tell us our
influence is unbounded? No, no! the right of suffrage
is no shadow, but a substantial entity that the citizen
can seize and hold for his own protection and his country's
welfare. A direct power over one's own person
and property, an individual opinion to be counted, on
all questions of public interest, are better than indirect
influence, be that ever so far reaching.</p>
<p>Though influence, like the pure white light, is all-pervading,
yet it is ofttimes obscured with passing clouds
and nights of darkness. Like the sun's rays, it may be
healthy, genial, inspiring, though sometimes too direct
for comfort, too oblique for warmth, too scattered for
any purpose. But as the prism divides the rays, revealing
the brilliant colors of the light, so does individual
sovereignty reveal the beauty of representative
government, and as the burning-glass shows the power
of concentrating the rays, so does the combined power
of the multitude reveal the beauty of united effort to
carry a grand measure.</p>
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