<h2><SPAN name="Page_259"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVII.</h2>
<h2>LYCEUMS AND LECTURERS.</h2>
<br/>
<p>The Lyceum Bureau was, at one time, a great
feature in American life. The three leading bureaus
were in Boston, New York, and Chicago. The managers,
map in hand, would lay out trips, more or less
extensive according to the capacity or will of the
speakers, and then, with a dozen or more victims in
hand, make arrangements with the committees in various
towns and cities to set them all in motion. As the
managers of the bureaus had ten per cent. of what the
speakers made, it was to their interest to keep the time
well filled. Hence the engagements were made without
the slightest reference to the comfort of the travelers.
With our immense distances, it was often necessary
to travel night and day, sometimes changing cars
at midnight, and perhaps arriving at the destination
half an hour or less before going on the platform, and
starting again on the journey immediately upon leaving
it. The route was always carefully written out,
giving the time the trains started from and arrived at
various points; but as cross trains often failed to connect,
one traveled, guidebook in hand, in a constant
fever of anxiety. As, in the early days, the fees were
from one to two hundred dollars a night, the speakers
themselves were desirous of accomplishing as much as
possible.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_260"></SPAN>In 1869 I gave my name, for the first time,
to the
New York Bureau, and on November 14 began the
long, weary pilgrimages, from Maine to Texas, that
lasted twelve years; speaking steadily for eight
months—from October to June—every season. That
was the heyday of the lecturing period, when a long
list of bright men and women were constantly on the
wing. Anna Dickinson, Olive Logan, Kate Field,—later,
Mrs. Livermore and Mrs. Howe, Alcott, Phillips,
Douglass, Tilton, Curtis, Beecher, and, several years
later, General Kilpatrick, with Henry Vincent, Bradlaugh,
and Matthew Arnold from England; these and
many others were stars of the lecture platform.</p>
<p>Some of us occasionally managed to spend Sunday
together, at a good hotel in some city, to rest and feast
and talk over our joys and sorrows, the long journeys,
the hard fare in the country hotels, the rainy nights
when committees felt blue and tried to cut down our
fees; the being compelled by inconsiderate people to
talk on the train; the overheated, badly ventilated cars;
the halls, sometimes too warm, sometimes too cold;
babies crying in our audiences; the rain pattering on
the roof overhead or leaking on the platform—these
were common experiences. In the West, women with
babies uniformly occupied the front seats so that the
little ones, not understanding what you said, might be
amused with your gestures and changing facial expression.
All these things, so trying, at the time, to concentrated
and enthusiastic speaking, afterward served
as subjects of amusing conversation. We unanimously
complained of the tea and coffee. Mrs. Livermore had
the wisdom to carry a spirit lamp with her own tea and
coffee, and thus supplied herself with the needed stimu<SPAN name="Page_261"></SPAN>lants
for her oratorical efforts. The hardships of these
lyceum trips can never be appreciated except by those
who have endured them. With accidents to cars and
bridges, with floods and snow blockades, the pitfalls in
one of these campaigns were without number.</p>
<div style="text-align: center;"><SPAN name="img008"></SPAN><img
style="width: 400px; height: 287px;" alt="ELIZABETH SMITH MILLER."
title="ELIZABETH SMITH MILLER." src="image/008.jpg"><br/>
<br/>
<br/></div>
<p style="text-align: center;"><SPAN name="img009"></SPAN><img
title="The Stanton" style="width: 400px; height: 522px;" alt="The Stanton" src="image/009.jpg"></p>
<p>On one occasion, when engaged to speak at Maquoketa,
Iowa, I arrived at Lyons about noon, to find the
road was blocked with snow, and no chance of the cars
running for days. "Well," said I to the landlord, "I
must be at Maquoketa at eight o'clock to-night; have
you a sleigh, a span of fleet horses, and a skillful driver?
If so, I will go across the country." "Oh, yes,
madam!" he replied, "I have all you ask; but you could
not stand a six-hours' drive in this piercing wind."
Having lived in a region of snow, with the thermometer
down to twenty degrees below zero, I had no fears of
winds and drifts, so I said, "Get the sleigh ready and I
will try it." Accordingly I telegraphed the committee
that I would be there, and started. I was well bundled
up in a fur cloak and hood, a hot oak plank at my feet,
and a thick veil over my head and face. As the landlord
gave the finishing touch, by throwing a large buffalo
robe over all and tying the two tails together at
the back of my head and thus effectually preventing me
putting my hand to my nose, he said, "There, if you
can only sit perfectly still, you will come out all right
at Maquoketa; that is, if you get there, which I very
much doubt." It was a long, hard drive against the
wind and through drifts, but I scarcely moved a finger,
and, as the clock struck eight, we drove into the town.
The hall was warm, and the church bell having announced
my arrival, a large audience was assembled.
As I learned that all the roads in Northern Iowa were
<SPAN name="Page_262"></SPAN>blocked, I made the entire circuit, from point
to point,
in a sleigh, traveling forty and fifty miles a day.</p>
<p>At the Sherman House, in Chicago, three weeks
later, I met Mr. Bradlaugh and General Kilpatrick, who
were advertised on the same route ahead of me.
"Well," said I, "where have you gentlemen been?"
"Waiting here for the roads to be opened. We have
lost three weeks' engagements," they replied. As the
General was lecturing on his experiences in Sherman's
march to the sea, I chaffed him on not being able, in
an emergency, to march across the State of Iowa.
They were much astonished and somewhat ashamed,
when I told them of my long, solitary drives over the
prairies from day to day. It was the testimony of all
the bureaus that the women could endure more fatigue
and were more conscientious than the men in filling
their appointments.</p>
<p>The pleasant feature of these trips was the great educational
work accomplished for the people through
their listening to lectures on all the vital questions of
the hour. Wherever any of us chanced to be on Sunday,
we preached in some church; and wherever I had a
spare afternoon, I talked to women alone, on marriage,
maternity, and the laws of life and health. We made
many most charming acquaintances, too, scattered all
over our Western World, and saw how comfortable and
happy sensible people could be, living in most straitened
circumstances, with none of the luxuries of life. If
most housekeepers could get rid of one-half their
clothes and furniture and put their bric-a-brac in the
town museum, life would be simplified and they would
begin to know what leisure means. When I see so
many of our American women struggling to be artists,
<SPAN name="Page_263"></SPAN>who cannot make a good loaf of bread nor a
palatable
cup of coffee, I think of what Theodore Parker said
when art was a craze in Boston. "The fine arts do
not interest me so much as the coarse arts which feed,
clothe, house, and comfort a people. I would rather
be a great man like Franklin than a Michael Angelo—nay,
if I had a son, I should rather see him a mechanic,
like the late George Stephenson, in England, than a
great painter like Rubens, who only copied beauty."</p>
<p>One day I found at the office of the <i>Revolution</i> an
invitation to meet Mrs. Moulton in the Academy of
Music, where she was to try her voice for the coming
concert for the benefit of the Woman's Medical College.
And what a voice for power, pathos, pliability! I never
heard the like. Seated beside her mother, Mrs. W.H.
Greenough, I enjoyed alike the mother's anxious pride
and the daughter's triumph. I felt, as I listened, the
truth of what Vieuxtemps said the first time he heard
her, "That is the traditional voice for which the ages
have waited and longed." When, on one occasion,
Mrs. Moulton sang a song of Mozart's to Auber's accompaniment,
someone present asked, "What could be
added to make this more complete?" Auber looked up
to heaven, and, with a sweet smile, said, "Nothing but
that Mozart should have been here to listen." Looking
and listening, "Here," thought I, "is another jewel in
the crown of womanhood, to radiate and glorify the
lives of all." I have such an intense pride of sex that
the triumphs of woman in art, literature, oratory,
science, or song rouse my enthusiasm as nothing
else can.</p>
<p>Hungering, that day, for gifted women, I called on
Alice and Phebe Cary and Mary Clemmer Ames, and
<SPAN name="Page_264"></SPAN>together we gave the proud white male such a
serving
up as did our souls good and could not hurt him, intrenched,
as he is, behind creeds, codes, customs, and
constitutions, with vizor and breastplate of self-complacency
and conceit. In criticising Jessie Boucherett's
essay on "Superfluous Women," in which she
advises men in England to emigrate in order to leave
room and occupation for women, the <i>Tribune</i> said:
"The idea of a home without a man in it!" In visiting
the Carys one always felt that there was a home—a
very charming one, too—without a man in it.</p>
<p>Once when Harriet Beecher Stowe was at Dr.
Taylor's, I had the opportunity to make her acquaintance.
In her sanctum, surrounded by books and
papers, she was just finishing her second paper on
the Byron family, and her sister Catherine was
preparing papers on her educational work, preparatory
to a coming meeting of the ladies of the
school board. The women of the Beecher family,
though most of them wives and mothers, all had
a definite life-work outside the family circle, and other
objects of intense interest beside husbands, babies, cook
stoves, and social conversations. Catherine said she was
opposed to woman suffrage, and if she thought there
was the least danger of our getting it, she would write
and talk against it vehemently. But, as the nation was
safe against such a calamity, she was willing to let the
talk go on, because the agitation helped her work. "It
is rather paradoxical," I said to her, "that the pressing
of a false principle can help a true one; but when you
get the women all thoroughly educated, they will step
off to the polls and vote in spite of you."</p>
<p>One night on the train from New York to Williams<SPAN name="Page_265"></SPAN>port,
Pennsylvania, I found abundant time to think over
the personal peculiarities of the many noble women who
adorn this nineteenth century, and, as I recalled them,
one by one, in America, England, France, and Germany,
and all that they are doing and saying, I wandered that
any man could be so blind as not to see that woman
has already taken her place as the peer of man. While
the lords of creation have been debating her sphere and
drawing their chalk marks here and there, woman has
quietly stepped outside the barren fields where she was
compelled to graze for centuries, and is now in green
pastures and beside still waters, a power in the world of
thought.</p>
<p>These pleasant cogitations were cut short by my
learning that I had taken the wrong train, and must
change at Harrisburg at two o'clock in the morning.
How soon the reflection that I must leave my comfortable
berth at such an unchristian hour changed the whole
hue of glorious womanhood and every other earthly
blessing! However, I lived through the trial and arrived
at Williamsport as the day dawned. I had a good
audience at the opera house that evening, and was
introduced to many agreeable people, who declared
themselves converted to woman suffrage by my ministrations.
Among the many new jewels in my crown, I
added, that night, Judge Bently.</p>
<p>In November, 1869, I passed one night in Philadelphia,
with Miss Anthony, at Anna Dickinson's home—a
neat, three-story brick house in Locust Street. This
haven of rest, where the world-famous little woman
came, ever and anon, to recruit her overtaxed energies,
was very tastefully furnished, adorned with engravings,
books, and statuary. Her mother, sister, and brother
<SPAN name="Page_266"></SPAN>made up the household—a pleasing, cultivated
trio.
The brother was a handsome youth of good judgment,
and given to sage remarks; the sister, witty, intuitive,
and incisive in speech; the mother, dressed in rich
Quaker costume, and though nearly seventy, still possessed
of great personal beauty. She was intelligent,
dignified, refined, and, in manner and appearance, reminded
one of Angelina Grimké as she looked in her
younger days. Everything about the house and its
appointments indicated that it was the abode of genius
and cultivation, and, although Anna was absent, the
hospitalities were gracefully dispensed by her family.
Napoleon and Shakespeare seemed to be Anna's patron
saints, looking down, on all sides, from the wall. The
mother amused us with the sore trials her little orator
had inflicted on the members of the household by her
vagaries in the world of fame.</p>
<p>On the way to Kennett Square, a young gentleman
pointed out to us the home of Benjamin West,
who distinguished himself, to the disgust of broadbrims
generally, as a landscape painter. In commencing
his career, it is said he made use of the
tail of a cat in lieu of a brush. Of course Benjamin's
first attempts were on the sly, and he could
not ask paterfamilias for money to buy a brush
without encountering the good man's scorn. Whether,
in the hour of his need and fresh enthusiasm,
poor puss was led to the sacrificial altar, or whether
he found her reposing by the roadside, having paid the
debt of Nature, our informant could not say; enough
that, in time, he owned a brush and immortalized himself
by his skill in its use. Such erratic ones as Whittier,
West, and Anna Dickinson go to prove that even
<SPAN name="Page_267"></SPAN>the prim, proper, perfect Quakers are subject to
like infirmities
with the rest of the human family.</p>
<p>I had long heard of the "Progressive Friends" in
the region round Longwood; had read the many bulls
they issued from their "yearly meetings" on every
question, on war, capital punishment, temperance,
slavery, woman's rights; had learned that they were
turning the cold shoulder on the dress, habits, and
opinions of their Fathers; listening to the ministrations
of such worldlings as William Lloyd Garrison, Theodore
Tilton, and Oliver Johnson, in a new meeting house, all
painted and varnished, with cushions, easy seats, carpets,
stoves, a musical instrument—shade of George
Fox, forgive—and three brackets with vases on the
"high seat," and, more than all that, men and women
were indiscriminately seated throughout the house.</p>
<p>All this Miss Anthony and I beheld with our own
eyes, and, in company with Sarah Pugh and Chandler
Darlington, did sit together in the high seat and talk
in the congregation of the people. There, too, we met
Hannah Darlington and Dinah Mendenhall,—names
long known in every good work,—and, for the space
of one day, did enjoy the blissful serenity of that earthly
paradise. The women of Kennett Square were celebrated
not only for their model housekeeping but also
for their rare cultivation on all subjects of general
interest.</p>
<p>In November I again started on one of my Western
trips, but, alas! on the very day the trains were changed,
and so I could not make connections to meet my engagements
at Saginaw and Marshall, and just saved myself
at Toledo by going directly from the cars before the
audience, with the dust of twenty-four hours' travel on
<SPAN name="Page_268"></SPAN>my garments. Not being able to reach Saginaw, I
went straight to Ann Arbor, and spent three days
most pleasantly in visiting old friends, making new
ones, and surveying the town, with its grand University.
I was invited to Thanksgiving dinner at
the home of Mr. Seaman, a highly cultivated Democratic
editor, author of "Progress of Nations."
A choice number of guests gathered round his
hospitable board on that occasion, over which his
wife presided with dignity and grace. Woman suffrage
was the target for the combined wit and satire of
the company, and, after four hours of uninterrupted
sharpshooting, pyrotechnics, and laughter, we dispersed
to our several abodes, fairly exhausted with the excess
of enjoyment.</p>
<p>One gentleman had the moral hardihood to assert
that men had more endurance than women, whereupon
a lady remarked that she would like to see the thirteen
hundred young men in the University laced up in steel-ribbed
corsets, with hoops, heavy skirts, trains, high
heels, panniers, chignons, and dozens of hairpins sticking
in their scalps, cooped up in the house year after year,
with no exhilarating exercise, no hopes, aims, nor ambitions
in life, and know if they could stand it as well as
the girls. "Nothing," said she, "but the fact that
women, like cats, have nine lives, enables them to survive
the present <i>régime</i> to which custom dooms the
sex."</p>
<p>While in Ann Arbor I gave my lecture on "Our
Girls" in the new Methodist church—a large building,
well lighted, and filled with a brilliant audience. The
students, in large numbers, were there, and strengthened
the threads of my discourse with frequent and
<SPAN name="Page_269"></SPAN>generous applause; especially when I urged on
the
Regents of the University the duty of opening its
doors to the daughters of the State. There were several
splendid girls in Michigan, at that time, preparing
themselves for admission to the law department. As
Judge Cooley, one of the professors, was a very liberal
man, as well as a sound lawyer, and strongly in favor
of opening the college to girls, I had no doubt the
women of Michigan would soon distinguish themselves
at the bar. Some said the chief difficulty in the way of
the girls of that day being admitted to the University
was the want of room. That could have been easily
obviated by telling the young men from abroad to betake
themselves to the colleges in their respective
States, that Michigan might educate her daughters.
As the women owned a good share of the property of
the State, and had been heavily taxed to build and endow
that institution, it was but fair that they should
share in its advantages.</p>
<p>The Michigan University, with its extensive grounds,
commodious buildings, medical and law schools, professors'
residences, and the finest laboratory in the
country, was an institution of which the State was justly
proud, and, as the tuition was free, it was worth the
trouble of a long, hard siege by the girls of Michigan to
gain admittance there. I advised them to organize
their forces at once, get their minute guns, battering
rams, monitors, projectiles, bombshells, cannon, torpedoes,
and crackers ready, and keep up a brisk cannonading
until the grave and reverend seigniors opened
the door, and shouted, "Hold, enough!"</p>
<p>The ladies of Ann Arbor had a fine library of their
own, where their clubs met once a week. They had
<SPAN name="Page_270"></SPAN>just formed a suffrage association. My visit
ended with
a pleasant reception, at which I was introduced to the
chaplain, several professors, and many ladies and gentlemen
ready to accept the situation. Judge Cooley
gave me a glowing account of the laws of Michigan—how
easy it was for wives to get possession of all the
property, and then sunder the marriage tie and leave
the poor husband to the charity of the cold world, with
their helpless children about him. I heard of a rich
lady, there, who made a will, giving her husband a handsome
annuity as long as he remained her widower. It
was evident that the poor "white male," sooner or
later, was doomed to try for himself the virtue of the
laws he had made for women. I hope, for the sake of
the race, he will not bear oppression with the stupid
fortitude we have for six thousand years.</p>
<p>At Flint I was entertained by Mr. and Mrs. Jenny.
Mr. Jenny was a Democratic editor who believed in
progress, and in making smooth paths for women in
this great wilderness of life. His wife was a remarkable
woman. She inaugurated the Ladies' Libraries in
Michigan. In Flint they had a fine brick building and
nearly two thousand volumes of choice books, owned by
the association, and money always in the treasury.
Here, too, I had a fine audience and gave my lecture
entitled "Open the Door."</p>
<p>At Coldwater, in spite of its name, I found a warm,
appreciative audience. The president of the lyceum
was a sensible young man who, after graduating at Ann
Arbor, decided, instead of starving at the law, to work
with his hands and brains at the same time. When all
men go to their legitimate business of creating wealth,
developing the resources of the country, and leave its
<SPAN name="Page_271"></SPAN>mere exchange to the weaker sex, we shall not
have so
many superfluous women in the world with nothing to
do. It is evident the time has come to hunt man into
his appropriate sphere. Coming from Chicago, I met
Governor Fairchild and Senator Williams of Wisconsin.
It was delightful to find them thoroughly
grounded in the faith of woman suffrage. They had
been devout readers of the <i>Revolution</i> ever since Miss
Anthony induced them to subscribe, the winter before,
at Madison. Of course a new glow of intelligence irradiated
their fine faces (for they were remarkably handsome
men) and there was a new point to all their words.
Senator Williams, like myself, was on a lecturing tour.
"Man" was his theme, for which I was devoutly thankful;
for, if there are any of God's creatures that need
lecturing, it is this one that is forever advising us. I
thought of all men, from Father Gregory down to
Horace Bushnell, who had wearied their brains to
describe woman's sphere, and how signally they had
failed.</p>
<p>Throughout my lyceum journeys I was of great use
to the traveling public, in keeping the ventilators in
the cars open, and the dampers in fiery stoves shut up,
especially in sleeping cars at night. How many times a
day I thought what the sainted Horace Mann tried to
impress on his stupid countrymen, that, inasmuch as the
air is forty miles deep around the globe, it is a useless
piece of economy to breathe any number of cubic feet
over more than seven times! The babies, too, need to
be thankful that I was in a position to witness their
wrongs. Many, through my intercessions, received
their first drink of water, and were emancipated from
woolen hoods, veils, tight strings under their chins, and
<SPAN name="Page_272"></SPAN>endless swaddling bands. It is a startling
assertion, but
true, that I have met few women who know how to
take care of a baby. And this fact led me, on one trip,
to lecture to my fair countrywomen on "Marriage and
Maternity," hoping to aid in the inauguration of a new
era of happy, healthy babies.</p>
<p>After twenty-four hours in the express I found myself
in a pleasant room in the International Hotel at La
Crosse, looking out on the Great Mother of Waters, on
whose cold bosom the ice and the steamers were
struggling for mastery. Beyond stretched the snow-clad
bluffs, sternly looking down on the Mississippi,
as if to say, "'Thus far shalt thou come and no
farther'—though sluggish, you are aggressive, ever
pushing where you should not; but all attempts
in this direction are alike vain; since creation's
dawn, we have defied you, and here we stand, to-day,
calm, majestic, immovable. Coquette as you will
in other latitudes, with flowery banks and youthful
piers in the busy marts of trade, and undermine them,
one and all, with your deceitful wooings, but bow in
reverence as you gaze on us. We have no eyes for your
beauty; no ears for your endless song; our heads are in
the clouds, our hearts commune with gods; you have
no part in the eternal problems of the ages that fill our
thoughts, yours the humble duty to wash our feet, and
then pass on, remembering to keep in your appropriate
sphere, within the barks that wise geographers have
seen fit to mark."</p>
<p>As I listened to these complacent hills and watched
the poor Mississippi weeping as she swept along, to lose
her sorrows in ocean's depths, I thought how like the
attitude of man to woman. Let these proud hills re<SPAN name="Page_273"></SPAN>member
that they, too, slumbered for centuries in deep
valleys down, down, when, perchance, the sparkling
Mississippi rolled above their heads, and but for some
generous outburst, some upheaval of old Mother
Earth, wishing that her rock-ribbed sons, as well as
graceful daughters, might enjoy the light, the sunshine
and the shower—but for this soul of love in matter as
well as mind—these bluffs and the sons of Adam, too,
might not boast the altitude they glory in to-day.
Those who have ears to hear discern low, rumbling
noises that foretell convulsions in our social world that
may, perchance, in the next upheaval, bring woman to
the surface; up, up, from gloomy ocean depths, dark
caverns, and damper valleys. The struggling daughters
of earth are soon to walk in the sunlight of a higher
civilization.</p>
<p>Escorted by Mr. Woodward, a member of the bar, I
devoted a day to the lions of La Crosse. First we explored
the courthouse, a large, new brick building, from
whose dome we had a grand view of the surrounding
country. The courtroom where justice is administered
was large, clean, airy—the bench carpeted and adorned
with a large, green, stuffed chair, in which I sat down,
and, in imagination, summoned up advocates, jurors,
prisoners, and people, and wondered how I should feel
pronouncing sentence of death on a fellow-being, or,
like Portia, wisely checkmating the Shylocks of our
times. Here I met Judge Hugh Cameron, formerly of
Johnstown. He invited us into his sanctum, where we
had a pleasant chat about our native hills, Scotch affiliations,
the bench and bar of New York, and the Wisconsin
laws for women. The Judge, having maintained a
happy bachelor state, looked placidly on the aggressive
<SPAN name="Page_274"></SPAN>movements of the sex, as his domestic felicity
would
be no way affected, whether woman was voted up or
down.</p>
<p>We next surveyed the Pomeroy building, which contained
a large, tastefully finished hall and printing establishment,
where the La Crosse <i>Democrat</i> was formerly
published. As I saw the perfection, order, and good
taste, in all arrangements throughout, and listened to
Mr. Huron's description of the life and leading characteristics
of its chief, it seemed impossible to reconcile
the tone of the <i>Democrat</i> with the moral status of its
editor. I never saw a more complete business establishment,
and the editorial sanctum looked as if it might
be the abiding place of the Muses. Mirrors, pictures,
statuary, books, music, rare curiosities, and fine specimens
of birds and minerals were everywhere. Over the
editor's table was a beautiful painting of his youthful
daughter, whose flaxen hair, blue eyes, and angelic face
should have inspired a father to nobler, purer, utterances
than he was wont, at that time, to give to the
world.</p>
<p>But Pomeroy's good deeds will live long after his
profane words are forgotten. Throughout the establishment
cards, set up in conspicuous places, said,
"Smoking here is positively forbidden." Drinking, too,
was forbidden to all his employés. The moment a man
was discovered using intoxicating drinks, he was dismissed.
In the upper story of the building was a large,
pleasant room, handsomely carpeted and furnished,
where the employés, in their leisure hours, could talk,
write, read, or amuse themselves in any rational way.</p>
<p>Mr. Pomeroy was humane and generous with his
employés, honorable in his business relations, and
<SPAN name="Page_275"></SPAN>boundless in his charities to the poor. His
charity,
business honor, and public spirit were highly spoken of
by those who knew him best. That a journal does not
always reflect the editor is as much the fault of society
as of the man. So long as the public will pay for gross
personalities, obscenity, and slang, decent journals will
be outbidden in the market. The fact that the La
Crosse <i>Democrat</i> found a ready sale in all parts of the
country showed that Mr. Pomeroy fairly reflected the
popular taste. While multitudes turned up the whites
of their eyes and denounced him in public, they bought
his paper and read it in private.</p>
<p>I left La Crosse in a steamer, just as the rising sun
lighted the hilltops and gilded the Mississippi. It was
a lovely morning, and, in company with a young girl of
sixteen, who had traveled alone from some remote part
of Canada, bound for a northern village in Wisconsin, I
promenaded the deck most of the way to Winona, a
pleased listener to the incidents of my young companion's
experiences. She said that, when crossing
Lake Huron, she was the only woman on board, but the
men were so kind and civil that she soon forgot she was
alone. I found many girls, traveling long distances,
who had never been five miles from home before, with a
self-reliance that was remarkable. They all spoke in the
most flattering manner of the civility of our American
men in looking after their baggage and advising them
as to the best routes.</p>
<p>As you approach St. Paul, at Fort Snelling, where
the Mississippi and Minnesota join forces, the country
grows bold and beautiful. The town itself, then boasting
about thirty thousand inhabitants, is finely situated,
with substantial stone residences. It was in one of
<SPAN name="Page_276"></SPAN>these charming homes I found a harbor of rest
during
my stay in the city. Mrs. Stuart, whose hospitalities I
enjoyed, was a woman of rare common sense and sound
health. Her husband, Dr. Jacob H. Stuart, was one
of the very first surgeons to volunteer in the late war.
In the panic at Bull Run, instead of running, as everybody
else did, he stayed with the wounded, and was
taken prisoner while taking a bullet from the head of a
rebel. When exchanged, Beauregard gave him his
sword for his devotion to the dying and wounded.</p>
<p>I had the pleasure of seeing several of the leading
gentlemen and ladies of St. Paul at the Orphans' Fair,
where we all adjourned, after my lecture, to discuss
woman's rights, over a bounteous supper. Here I met
William L. Banning, the originator of the Lake Superior
and Mississippi Railroad. He besieged Congress
and capitalists for a dozen years to build this road,
but was laughed at and put off with sneers and contempt,
until, at last, Jay Cooke became so weary of his
continual coming that he said: "I will build the road to
get rid of you."</p>
<p>Whittier seems to have had a prophetic vision of the
peopling of this region. When speaking of the
Yankee, he says:</p>
<div class="poem">
<div class="stanza">
<p>"He's whittling by St. Mary's Falls,</p>
<p>Upon his loaded wain;</p>
<p>He's measuring o'er the Pictured Rocks,</p>
<p>With eager eyes of gain.</p>
</div>
<div class="stanza">
<p>"I hear the mattock in the mine,</p>
<p>The ax-stroke in the dell,</p>
<p>The clamor from the Indian lodge,</p>
<p>The Jesuits' chapel bell!</p>
</div>
<div class="stanza"><SPAN name="Page_277"></SPAN>
<p>"I hear the tread of pioneers</p>
<p>Of nations yet to be;</p>
<p>The first low wash of waves, where soon</p>
<p>Shall roll a human sea."</p>
</div>
</div>
<p>The opening of these new outlets and mines of
wealth was wholly due to the forecast and perseverance
of Mr. Banning. The first engine that went
over a part of the road had been christened at St.
Paul, with becoming ceremonies; the officiating priestess
being a beautiful maiden. A cask of water from the
Pacific was sent by Mr. Banning's brother from California,
and a small keg was brought from Lake Superior
for the occasion. A glass was placed in the
hands of Miss Ella B. Banning, daughter of the president,
who then christened the engine, saying: "With
the waters of the Pacific Ocean in my right hand, and
the waters of Lake Superior in my left, invoking the
Genius of Progress to bring together, with iron band,
two great commercial systems of the globe, I dedicate
this engine to the use of the Lake Superior and Mississippi
Railroad, and name it William L. Banning."</p>
<p>From St. Paul to Dubuque, as the boats had ceased
running, a circuitous route and a night of discomfort
were inevitable. Leaving the main road to Chicago at
Clinton Junction, I had the pleasure of waiting at a small
country inn until midnight for a freight train. This
was indeed dreary, but, having Mrs. Child's sketches
of Mmes. De Staël and Roland at hand, I read of
Napoleon's persecutions of the one and Robespierre's
of the other, until, by comparison, my condition was
tolerable, and the little meagerly furnished room, with
its dull fire and dim lamp, seemed a paradise compared
with years of exile from one's native land or the prison
<SPAN name="Page_278"></SPAN>cell and guillotine. How small our ordinary,
petty
trials seem in contrast with the mountains of sorrow
that have been piled up on the great souls of the past!
Absorbed in communion with them twelve o'clock soon
came, and with it the train.</p>
<p>A burly son of Adam escorted me to the passenger
car filled with German immigrants, with tin cups, babies,
bags, and bundles innumerable. The ventilators were
all closed, the stoves hot, and the air was like that of the
Black Hole of Calcutta. So, after depositing my cloak
and bag in an empty seat, I quietly propped both doors
open with a stick of wood, shut up the stoves, and
opened all the ventilators with the poker. But the
celestial breeze, so grateful to me, had the most unhappy
effect on the slumbering exiles. Paterfamilias
swore outright; the companion of his earthly pilgrimage
said, "We must be going north," and, as the heavy
veil of carbonic acid gas was lifted from infant faces,
and the pure oxygen filled their lungs and roused them
to new life, they set up one simultaneous shout of joy
and gratitude, which their parents mistook for agony.
Altogether there was a general stir. As I had quietly
slipped into my seat and laid my head down to sleep, I
remained unobserved—the innocent cause of the general
purification and vexation.</p>
<p>We reached Freeport at three o'clock in the morning.
As the depot for Dubuque was nearly half a mile on the
other side of the town, I said to a solitary old man who
stood shivering there to receive us, "How can I get to
the other station?" "Walk, madam." "But I do
not know the way." "There is no one to go with you."
"How is my trunk going?" said I. "I have a donkey
and cart to take that." "Then," said I, "you, the
<SPAN name="Page_279"></SPAN>donkey, the trunk, and I will go together." So I
stepped into the cart, sat down on the trunk, and the
old man laughed heartily as we jogged along through
the mud of that solitary town in the pale morning
starlight. Just as the day was dawning, Dubuque, with
its rough hills and bold scenery, loomed up. Soon,
under the roof of Myron Beach, one of the distinguished
lawyers of the West, with a good breakfast and sound
nap, my night's sorrows were forgotten.</p>
<p>I was sorry to find that Mrs. Beach, though a native
of New York, and born on the very spot where the first
woman's rights convention was held in this country,
was not sound on the question of woman suffrage. She
seemed to have an idea that voting and housekeeping
could not be compounded; but I suggested that, if the
nation could only enjoy a little of the admirable system
with which she and other women administered their
domestic affairs, Uncle Sam's interests would be better
secured. This is just what the nation needs to-day,
and women must wake up to the consideration that
they, too, have duties as well as rights in the State. A
splendid audience greeted me in the Opera House, and
I gave "Our Girls," bringing many male sinners to repentance,
and stirring up some lethargic <i>femmes
coverts</i> to a state of rebellion against the existing order
of things.</p>
<p>From Dubuque I went to Dixon, a large town, where
I met a number of pleasant people, but I have one
cause of complaint against the telegraph operator,
whose negligence to send a dispatch to Mt. Vernon,
written and paid for, came near causing me a solitary
night on the prairie, unsheltered and unknown. Hearing
that the express train went out Sunday afternoon,
<SPAN name="Page_280"></SPAN>I decided to go, so as to have all day at Mt.
Vernon
before speaking; but on getting my trunk checked, the
baggageman said the train did not stop there. "Well,"
said I, "check the trunk to the nearest point at which
it does stop," resolving that I would persuade the conductor
to stop one minute, anyway. Accordingly,
when the conductor came round, I presented my case
as persuasively and eloquently as possible, telling him
that I had telegraphed friends to meet me, etc., etc.
He kindly consented to do so and had my trunk re-checked.
On arriving, as there was no light, no sound,
and the depot was half a mile from the town, the conductor
urged me to go to Cedar Rapids and come back
the next morning, as it was Sunday night and the depot
might not be opened, and I might be compelled to stay
there on the platform all night in the cold.</p>
<p>But, as I had telegraphed, I told him I thought someone
would be there, and I would take the risk. So
off went the train, leaving me solitary and alone. I
could see the lights in the distant town and the dark
outlines of two great mills near by, which suggested
dams and races. I heard, too, the distant barking of
dogs, and I thought there might be wolves, too; but no
human sound. The platform was high and I could see
no way down, and I should not have dared to go down
if I had. So I walked all round the house, knocked at
every door and window, called "John!" "James!"
"Patrick!" but no response. Dressed in all their best,
they had, no doubt, gone to visit Sally, and I knew they
would stay late. The night wind was cold. What
could I do? The prospect of spending the night there
filled me with dismay. At last I thought I would try
my vocal powers; so I hallooed as loud as I could, in
<SPAN name="Page_281"></SPAN>every note of the gamut, until I was hoarse. At
last
I heard a distant sound, a loud halloo, which I returned,
and so we kept it up until the voice grew near, and,
when I heard a man's heavy footsteps close at hand, I
was relieved. He proved to be the telegraph operator,
who had been a brave soldier in the late war. He said
that no message had come from Dixon. He escorted
me to the hotel, where some members of the Lyceum
Committee came in and had a hearty laugh at my adventure,
especially that, in my distress, I should have
called on James and John and Patrick, instead of Jane,
Ann, and Bridget. They seemed to argue that that
was an admission, on my part, of man's superiority, but
I suggested that, as my sex had not yet been exalted to
the dignity of presiding in depots and baggage rooms,
there would have been no propriety in calling Jane and
Ann.</p>
<p>Mt. Vernon was distinguished for a very flourishing
Methodist college, open to boys and girls alike. The
president and his wife were liberal and progressive people.
I dined with them in their home near the
college, and met some young ladies from Massachusetts,
who were teachers in the institution. All
who gathered round the social board on that occasion
were of one mind on the woman question.
Even the venerable mother of the president seemed
to light up with the discussion of the theme. I gave
"Our Girls" in the Methodist church, and took
the opportunity to compliment them for taking the
word "obey" out of their marriage ceremony. I
heard the most encouraging reports of the experiment
of educating the sexes together. It was
the rule in all the Methodist institutions in Iowa,
<SPAN name="Page_282"></SPAN>and I found that the young gentlemen fully
approved
of it.</p>
<p>At Mt. Vernon I also met Mr. Wright, former
Secretary of State, who gave me several interesting
facts in regard to the women of Iowa. The
State could boast one woman who was an able
lawyer, Mrs. Mansfield. Mrs. Berry and Mrs. Stebbins
were notaries public. Miss Addington was
superintendent of schools in Mitchell County. She
was nominated by a convention in opposition to a
Mr. Brown. When the vote was taken, lo! there was
a tie. Mr. Brown offered to yield through courtesy,
but she declined; so they drew lots and Miss Addington
was the victor. She once made an abstract of
titles of all the lands in the county where she
lived, and had received an appointment to office
from the Governor of the State, who requested the
paper to be made out "L." instead of Laura Addington.
He said it was enough for Iowa to appoint women
to such offices, without having it known the world over.
I was sorry to tell the Governor's secrets,—which I
did everywhere,—but the cause of womanhood made it
necessary.</p>
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