<h2><SPAN name="Page_283"></SPAN>CHAPTER XVIII.</h2>
<h2>WESTWARD HO!</h2>
<br/>
<p>In the month of June, 1871, Miss Anthony and I
went to California, holding suffrage meetings in many
of the chief cities from New York to San Francisco,
where we arrived about the middle of July, in time to
experience the dry, dusty season.</p>
<p>We tarried, on the way, one week in Salt Lake City.
It was at the time of the Godby secession, when several
hundred Mormons abjured that portion of the faith of
their fathers which authorized polygamy. A decision
had just been rendered by the United States Supreme
Court declaring the first wife and her children the only
legal heirs. Whether this decision hastened the secession
I do not know; however, it gave us the advantage
of hearing all the arguments for and against the system.
Those who were opposed to it said it made slaves
of men. To support four wives and twenty children
was a severe strain on any husband. The women who
believed in polygamy had much to say in its favor, especially
in regard to the sacredness of motherhood during
the period of pregnancy and lactation; a lesson of
respect for that period being religiously taught all
Mormons.</p>
<p>We were very thankful for the privilege granted
us of speaking to the women alone in the smaller
Tabernacle. Our meeting opened at two o'clock
and lasted until seven, giving us five hours of un<SPAN name="Page_284"></SPAN>interrupted
conversation. Judge McKeon had informed
me of the recent decisions and the legal aspects
of the questions, which he urged me to present to them
fully and frankly, as no one had had such an opportunity
before to speak to Mormon women alone. So I made
the most of my privilege. I gave a brief history of the
marriage institution in all times and countries, of
the matriarchate, when the mother was the head
of the family and owned the property and children;
of the patriarchate, when man reigned supreme
and woman was enslaved; of polyandry, polygamy,
monogamy, and prostitution. We had a full
and free discussion of every phase of the question,
and we all agreed that we were still far from having
reached the ideal position for woman in marriage,
however satisfied man might be with his various experiments.
Though the Mormon women, like all
others, stoutly defend their own religion, yet they are no
more satisfied than any other sect. All women are
dissatisfied with their position as inferiors, and their
dissatisfaction increases in exact ratio with their
intelligence and development.</p>
<p>After this convocation the doors of the Tabernacle
were closed to our ministrations, as we thought they
would be, but we had crowded an immense amount of
science, philosophy, history, and general reflections into
the five hours of such free talk as those women had
never heard before. As the seceders had just built a
new hall, we held meetings there every day, discussing
all the vital issues of the hour; the Mormon men and
women taking an active part.</p>
<p>We attended the Fourth of July celebration, and saw
the immense Tabernacle filled to its utmost capacity.
<SPAN name="Page_285"></SPAN>The various States of the Union were represented
by
young girls, gayly dressed, carrying beautiful flags and
banners. When that immense multitude joined in our
national songs, and the deep-toned organ filled the vast
dome the music was very impressive, and the spirit of
patriotism manifested throughout was deep and sincere.</p>
<p>As I stood among these simple people, so earnest in
making their experiment in religion and social life, and
remembered all the persecutions they had suffered and
all they had accomplished in that desolate, far-off region,
where they had, indeed, made "the wilderness
blossom like the rose," I appreciated, as never before,
the danger of intermeddling with the religious ideas of
any people. Their faith finds abundant authority in the
Bible, in the example of God's chosen people. When
learned ecclesiastics teach the people that they can
safely take that book as the guide of their lives, they
must expect them to follow the letter and the specific
teachings that lie on the surface. The ordinary mind
does not generalize nor see that the same principles of
conduct will not do for all periods and latitudes. When
women understand that governments and religions are
human inventions; that Bibles, prayerbooks, catechisms,
and encyclical letters are all emanations from
the brain of man, they will no longer be oppressed by
the injunctions that come to them with the divine
authority of "Thus saith the Lord."</p>
<p>That thoroughly democratic gathering in the Tabernacle
impressed me more than any other Fourth of July
celebration I ever attended. As most of the Mormon
families keep no servants, mothers must take their children
wherever they go—to churches, theatres, concerts,
and military reviews—everywhere and anywhere.
<SPAN name="Page_286"></SPAN>Hence the low, pensive wail of the individual
baby,
combining in large numbers, becomes a deep monotone,
like the waves of the sea, a sort of violoncello accompaniment
to all their holiday performances. It was
rather trying to me at first to have my glowing periods
punctuated with a rhythmic wail from all sides of the
hall; but as soon as I saw that it did not distract my
hearers, I simply raised my voice, and, with a little
added vehemence, fairly rivaled the babies. Commenting
on this trial, to one of the theatrical performers, he
replied: "It is bad enough for you, but alas! imagine me
in a tender death scene, when the most profound stillness
is indispensable, having my last gasp, my farewell
message to loved ones, accentuated with the joyful
crowings or impatient complainings of fifty babies." I
noticed in the Tabernacle that the miseries of the infantile
host were in a measure mitigated by constant
draughts of cold water, borne around in buckets by
four old men.</p>
<p>The question of the most profound interest to us
at that time, in the Mormon experiment, was the exercise
of the suffrage by women. Emeline B. Wells,
wife of the Mayor of the city, writing to a Washington
convention, in 1894, said of the many complications
growing out of various bills before Congress to rob
women of this right:</p>
<div class="blkquot">
<p>"Women have voted in Utah fourteen years, but, because
of the little word 'male' that still stands upon
the statutes, no woman is eligible to any office of
emolument or trust. In three successive legislatures,
bills have been passed, providing that the word
'male' be erased; but, each time, the Governor of
the Territory, who has absolute veto power, has
<SPAN name="Page_287"></SPAN>refused his signature. Yet women attend primary
meetings in the various precincts and are chosen
as delegates. They are also members of county and
territorial central committees, and are thus gaining
practical political experience, and preparing themselves
for positions of trust.</p>
<p>"In 1882 a convention was held to frame a constitution
to be submitted to the people and presented to
the Congress of the United States. Women were delegates
to this convention, and took part in all its deliberations,
and were appointed to act on committees
with equal privileges. It is the first instance on record,
I think, where women have been members and taken
an active part in a constitutional convention.</p>
<p>"Much has been said and written, and justly, too, of
suffrage for women in Wyoming; but, in my humble
opinion, had Utah stood on the same ground as Wyoming,
and women been eligible to office, as they are in
that Territory, they would, ere this, have been elected
to the legislative Assembly of Utah.</p>
<p>"It is currently reported that Mormon women vote
as they are told by their husbands. I most emphatically
deny the assertion. All Mormon women vote
who are privileged to register. Every girl born here,
as soon as she is twenty-one years old, registers, and
considers it as much a duty as to say her prayers. Our
women vote with the same freedom that characterizes
any class of people in the most conscientious acts of
their lives."</p>
</div>
<p>These various questions were happily solved in 1895,
when Utah became a State. Its Constitution gives
women the right to vote on all questions, and makes
them eligible to any office.</p>
<p><SPAN name="Page_288"></SPAN>The journey over the Rocky Mountains was more
interesting and wonderful than I had imagined. A
heavy shower the morning we reached the alkali plains
made the trip through that region, where travelers suffer
so much, quite endurable. Although we reached
California in its hot, dry season, we found the atmosphere
in San Francisco delightful, fanned with the
gentle breezes of the Pacific, cooled with the waters of
its magnificent harbor. The Golden Gate does indeed
open to the eye of the traveler one of the most beautiful
harbors in the world.</p>
<p>Friends had engaged for us a suite of apartments
at the Grand Hotel, then just opened. Our rooms
were constantly decked with fresh flowers, which
our "suffrage children," as they called themselves,
brought us from day to day. So many brought
tokens of their good will—in fact, all our visitors
came with offerings of fruits and flowers—that not
only our apartments, but the public tables were
crowded with rare and beautiful specimens of all
varieties. We spoke every night, to crowded houses,
on all phases of the woman question, and had a succession
of visitors during the day. In fact, for one
week, we had a perfect ovation. As Senator Stanford
and his wife were at the same hotel, we had many pleasant
interviews with them.</p>
<p>While in San Francisco we had many delightful sails
in the harbor and drives to the seashore and for miles
along the beach. We spent several hours at the little
Ocean House, watching the gambols of the celebrated
seals. These, like the big trees, were named
after distinguished statesmen. One very black fellow
was named Charles Sumner, in honor of his love of the
<SPAN name="Page_289"></SPAN>black race; another, with a little squint in his
eye, was
called Ben Butler; a stout, rotund specimen that
seemed to take life philosophically, was named Senator
Davis of Illinois; a very belligerent one, who appeared
determined to crowd his confrères into the sea, was
called Secretary Stanton. Grant and Lincoln, on a
higher ledge of the rocks, were complacently observing
the gambols of the rest.</p>
<p>California was on the eve of an important election,
and John A. Bingham of Ohio and Senator Cole were
stumping the State for the Republican party. At several
points we had the use of their great tents for our
audiences, and of such of their able arguments as applied
to woman. As Mr. Bingham's great speech was on the
Thirteenth, Fourteenth, and Fifteenth Amendments,
every principle he laid down literally enfranchised the
women of the nation. I met the Ohio statesman one
morning at breakfast, after hearing him the night before.
I told him his logic must compel him to advocate
woman suffrage. With a most cynical smile he
said "he was not the puppet of logic, but the slave of
practical politics."</p>
<p>We met most of our suffrage coadjutors in different
parts of California. I spent a few days with
Mrs. Elizabeth B. Schenck, one of the earliest
pioneers in the suffrage movement. She was a cultivated,
noble woman, and her little cottage was a
gem of beauty and comfort, surrounded with beautiful
gardens and a hedge of fish-geraniums over ten feet
high, covered with scarlet flowers. It seemed altogether
more like a fairy bower than a human habitation.
The windmills all over California, for pumping water,
make a very pretty feature in the landscape, as well as an
<SPAN name="Page_290"></SPAN>important one, as people are obliged to irrigate
their
gardens during the dry season. In August the hills are
as brown as ours in December.</p>
<p>Here, too, I first met Senator Sargent's family, and
visited them in Sacramento City, where we had a suffrage
meeting in the evening and one for women alone
next day. At a similar meeting in San Francisco six
hundred women were present in Platt's Hall. We discussed
marriage, maternity, and social life in general.
Supposing none but women were present, as all
were dressed in feminine costume, the audience were
quite free in their questions, and I equally so in my
answers. To our astonishment, the next morning, a
verbatim report of all that was said appeared in one of
the leading papers, with most respectful comments.
As I always wrote and read carefully what I had to say
on such delicate subjects, the language was well chosen
and the presentation of facts and philosophy quite unobjectionable;
hence, the information being as important
for men as for women, I did not regret the publication.
During the day a committee of three gentlemen
called to know if I would give a lecture to men
alone. As I had no lecture prepared, I declined, with
the promise to do so the next time I visited California.
The idea was novel, but I think women could do much
good in that way.</p>
<p>My readers may be sure that such enterprising
travelers as Miss Anthony and myself visited all the
wonders, saw the geysers, big trees, the Yosemite
Valley, and the immense mountain ranges, piled
one above another, until they seemed to make a
giant pathway from earth to heaven. We drove down
the mountain sides with Fox, the celebrated whip; six<SPAN name="Page_291"></SPAN>teen
people in an open carriage drawn by six horses,
down, down, down, as fast as we could go. I expected
to be dashed to pieces, but we safely descended in one
hour, heights we had taken three to climb. Fox held a
steady rein, and seemed as calm as if we were trotting
on a level, though any accident, such as a hot axle, a
stumbling horse, or a break in the harness would have
sent us down the mountain side, two thousand feet, to
inevitable destruction. He had many amusing anecdotes
to tell of Horace Greeley's trip to the Geysers.
The distinguished journalist was wholly unprepared for
the race down the mountains and begged Fox to hold
up. Sitting in front he made several efforts to seize the
lines. But Fox assured him that was the only possible
way they could descend in safety, as the horses could
guide the stage, but they could not hold it.</p>
<p>At Stockton we met a party of friends just returning
from the Yosemite, who gave us much valuable information
for the journey. Among other things, I was advised
to write to Mr. Hutchins, the chief authority
there, to have a good, strong horse in readiness to take
me down the steep and narrow path into the valley.
We took the same driver and carriage which our
friends had found trustworthy, and started early in the
morning. The dust and heat made the day's journey
very wearisome, but the prospect of seeing the wonderful
valley made all hardships of little consequence.
Quite a large party were waiting to mount their donkeys
and mules when we arrived. One of the attendants,
a man about as thin as a stair rod, asked me if I
was the lady who had ordered a strong horse; I being
the stoutest of the party, he readily arrived at that conclusion,
so my steed was promptly produced. But I
<SPAN name="Page_292"></SPAN>knew enough of horses and riding to see at a
glance
that he was a failure, with his low withers and high
haunches, for descending steep mountains. In addition
to his forward pitch, his back was immensely broad.
Miss Anthony and I decided to ride astride and had suits
made for that purpose; but alas! my steed was so broad
that I could not reach the stirrups, and the moment we
began to descend, I felt as if I were going over his head.
So I fell behind, and, when the party had all gone forward,
I dismounted, though my slender guide assured
me there was no danger, he "had been up and down a
thousand times." But, as I had never been at all, his
repeated experiences did not inspire me with courage.
I decided to walk. That, the guide said, was impossible.
"Well," said I, by way of compromise, "I will walk as
far as I can, and when I reach the impossible, I will try
that ill-constructed beast. I cannot see what you men
were thinking of when you selected such an animal for
this journey." And so we went slowly down, arguing
the point whether it were better to ride or walk; to trust
one's own legs, or, by chance, be precipitated thousands
of feet down the mountain side.</p>
<p>It was a hot August day; the sun, in the zenith, shining
with full power. My blood was at boiling heat with
exercise and vexation. Alternately sliding and walking,
catching hold of rocks and twigs, drinking at every
rivulet, covered with dust, dripping with perspiration,
skirts, gloves, and shoes in tatters, for four long
hours I struggled down to the end, when I laid myself
out on the grass, and fell asleep, perfectly exhausted,
having sent the guide to tell Mr. Hutchins that I had
reached the valley, and, as I could neither ride nor walk,
to send a wheelbarrow, or four men with a blanket to
<SPAN name="Page_293"></SPAN>transport me to the hotel. That very day the
Mariposa
Company had brought the first carriage into the valley,
which, in due time, was sent to my relief. Miss Anthony,
who, with a nice little Mexican pony and narrow
saddle, had made her descent with grace and dignity,
welcomed me on the steps of the hotel, and laughed immoderately
at my helpless plight.</p>
<p>As hour after hour had passed, she said, there had
been a general wonderment as to what had become of
me; "but did you ever see such magnificent scenery?"
"Alas!" I replied, "I have been in no mood for scenery.
I have been constantly watching my hands and feet
lest I should come to grief." The next day I was too
stiff and sore to move a finger. However, in due time
I awoke to the glory and grandeur of that wonderful
valley, of which no descriptions nor paintings can give
the least idea. With Sunset Cox, the leading Democratic
statesman, and his wife, we had many pleasant
excursions through the valley, and chats, during the
evening, on the piazza. There was a constant succession
of people going and coming, even in that far-off
region, and all had their adventures to relate. But none
quite equaled my experiences.</p>
<p>We spent a day in the Calaveras Grove, rested beneath
the "big trees," and rode on horseback through
the fallen trunk of one of them. Some vandals sawed
off one of the most magnificent specimens twenty feet
above the ground, and, on this the owners of the hotel
built a little octagonal chapel. The polished wood,
with bark for a border, made a very pretty floor. Here
they often had Sunday services, as it held about one
hundred people. Here, too, we discussed the suffrage
question, amid these majestic trees that had battled
<SPAN name="Page_294"></SPAN>with the winds two thousand years, and had
probably
never before listened to such rebellion as we preached
to the daughters of earth that day.</p>
<p>Here, again, we found our distinguished statesmen
immortalized, each with his namesake among these
stately trees. We asked our guide if there were
any not yet appropriated, might we name them
after women. As he readily consented, we wrote on
cards the names of a dozen leading women, and tacked
them on their respective trees. Whether Lucretia
Mott, Lucy Stone, Phoebe Couzins, and Anna Dickinson
still retain their identity, and answer when called
by the goddess Sylvia in that majestic grove, I know
not. Twenty-five years have rolled by since then, and
a new generation of visitors and guides may have left
no trace of our work behind them. But we whispered
our hopes and aspirations to the trees, to be wafted to
the powers above, and we left them indelibly pictured
on the walls of the little chapel, and for more mortal
eyes we scattered leaflets wherever we went, and made
all our pleasure trips so many propaganda for woman's
enfranchisement.</p>
<p>Returning from California I made the journey
straight through from San Francisco to New York.
Though a long trip to make without a break, yet I enjoyed
every moment, as I found most charming companions
in Bishop Janes and his daughter. The Bishop
being very liberal in his ideas, we discussed the various
theologies, and all phases of the woman question. I
shall never forget those pleasant conversations as we
sat outside on the platform, day after day, and in the soft
moonlight late at night. We took up the thread of
our debate each morning where we had dropped it the
<SPAN name="Page_295"></SPAN>night before. The Bishop told me about the
resolution
to take the word "obey" from the marriage ceremony
which he introduced, two years before, into the Methodist
General Conference and carried with but little opposition.
All praise to the Methodist Church! When
our girls are educated into a proper self-respect and
laudable pride of sex, they will scout all these old barbarisms
of the past that point in any way to the subject
condition of women in either the State, the Church, or
the home. Until the other sects follow her example,
I hope our girls will insist on having their conjugal
knots all tied by Methodist bishops.</p>
<p>The Episcopal marriage service not only still clings
to the word "obey," but it has a most humiliating
ceremony in giving the bride away. I was never
more struck with its odious and ludicrous features
than on once seeing a tall, queenly-looking woman,
magnificently arrayed, married by one of the tiniest
priests that ever donned a surplice and gown,
given away by the smallest guardian that ever
watched a woman's fortunes, to the feeblest, bluest-looking
little groom that ever placed a wedding ring
on bridal finger. Seeing these Lilliputians around
her, I thought, when the little priest said, "Who gives
this woman to this man," that she would take the responsibility
and say, "I do," but no! there she stood,
calm, serene, as if it were no affair of hers, while the
little guardian, placing her hand in that of the little
groom, said, "I do." Thus was this stately woman
bandied about by these three puny men, all of whom she
might have gathered up in her arms and borne off to
their respective places of abode.</p>
<p>But women are gradually waking up to the degrada<SPAN name="Page_296"></SPAN>tion
of these ceremonies. Not long since, at a wedding
in high life, a beautiful girl of eighteen was struck
dumb at the word "obey." Three times the priest pronounced
it with emphasis and holy unction, each
time slower, louder, than before. Though the magnificent
parlors were crowded, a breathless silence reigned.
Father, mother, and groom were in agony. The bride,
with downcast eyes, stood speechless. At length the
priest slowly closed his book and said, "The ceremony
is at an end." One imploring word from the groom,
and a faint "obey" was heard in the solemn stillness.
The priest unclasped his book and the knot was tied.
The congratulations, feast, and all, went on as though
there had been no break in the proceedings, but the lesson
was remembered, and many a rebel made by that
short pause.</p>
<p>I think all these reverend gentlemen who insist on
the word "obey" in the marriage service should be removed
for a clear violation of the Thirteenth Amendment
to the Federal Constitution, which says there shall
be neither slavery nor involuntary servitude within the
United States. As I gave these experiences to Bishop
Janes he laughed heartily, and asked me to repeat
them to each newcomer. Our little debating society
was the center of attraction. One gentleman asked me
if our woman suffrage conventions were as entertaining.
I told him yes; that there were no meetings in
Washington so interesting and so well attended as
ours.</p>
<p>As I had some woman-suffrage literature in my valise,
I distributed leaflets to all earnest souls who plied me
with questions. Like all other things, it requires great
discretion in sowing leaflets, lest you expose yourself to
<SPAN name="Page_297"></SPAN>a rebuff. I never offer one to a man with a
small head
and high heels on his boots, with his chin in the air,
because I know, in the nature of things, that he will
be jealous of superior women; nor to a woman whose
mouth has the "prunes and prisms" expression, for
I know she will say, "I have all the rights I want."
Going up to London one day, a few years later, I noticed
a saintly sister, belonging to the Salvation Army,
timidly offering some leaflets to several persons on
board; all coolly declined to receive them. Having had
much experience in the joys and sorrows of propagandism,
I put out my hand and asked her to give them to
me. I thanked her and read them before reaching London.
It did me no harm and her much good in thinking
that she might have planted a new idea in my
mind. Whatever is given to us freely, I think, in common
politeness, we should accept graciously.</p>
<p>While I was enjoying once more the comforts of
home, on the blue hills of Jersey, Miss Anthony was
lighting the fires of liberty on the mountain tops of
Oregon and Washington Territory. All through the
months of October, November, and December, 1871,
she was jolting about in stages, over rough roads, speaking
in every hamlet where a schoolhouse was to be
found, and scattering our breezy leaflets to the four
winds of heaven.</p>
<p>From 1869 to 1873 Miss Anthony and I made several
trips through Iowa, Missouri, Illinois, and Nebraska,
holding meetings at most of the chief towns; I speaking
in the afternoons to women alone on "Marriage and
Maternity." As Miss Anthony had other pressing engagements
in Kansas and Nebraska, I went alone to
Texas, speaking in Dallas, Sherman, and Houston,
<SPAN name="Page_298"></SPAN>where I was delayed two weeks by floods and thus
prevented
from going to Austin, Galveston, and some
points in Louisiana, where I was advertised to lecture.
In fact I lost all my appointments for a month. However,
there was a fine hotel in Houston and many
pleasant people, among whom I made some valuable
acquaintances. Beside several public meetings, I had
parlor talks and scattered leaflets, so that my time was
not lost.</p>
<p>As the floods had upset my plans for the winter, I
went straight from Houston to New York over the Iron
Mountain Railroad. I anticipated a rather solitary trip;
but, fortunately, I met General Baird, whom I knew,
and some other army officers, who had been down on the
Mexican border to settle some troubles in the "free
zone." We amused ourselves on the long journey with
whist and woman suffrage discussions. We noticed
a dyspeptic-looking clergyman, evidently of a bilious
temperament, eying us very steadily and disapprovingly
the first day, and in a quiet way we warned
each other that, in due time, he would give us a sermon
on the sin of card playing.</p>
<p>Sitting alone, early next morning, he seated himself
by my side, and asked me if I would allow
him to express his opinion on card playing. I
said "Oh, yes! I fully believe in free speech."
"Well," said he, "I never touch cards. I think they
are an invention of the devil to lead unwary souls from
all serious thought of the stern duties of life and the
realities of eternity! I was sorry to see you, with your
white hair, probably near the end of your earthly career,
playing cards and talking with those reckless army officers,
who delight in killing their fellow-beings. No! I
<SPAN name="Page_299"></SPAN>do not believe in war or card playing; such
things do
not prepare the soul for heaven." "Well," said I, "you
are quite right, with your views, to abjure the society
of army officers and all games of cards. You, no doubt,
enjoy your own thoughts and the book you are reading,
more than you would the conversation of those gentlemen
and a game of whist. We must regulate our conduct
by our own highest ideal. While I deplore the
necessity of war, yet I know in our Army many of the
noblest types of manhood, whose acquaintance I prize
most highly. I enjoy all games, too, from chess down
to dominoes. There is so much that is sad and stern
in life that we need sometimes to lay down its burdens
and indulge in innocent amusements. Thus, you see,
what is wise from my standpoint is unwise from yours.
I am sorry that you repudiate all amusements, as they
contribute to the health of body and soul. You are
sorry that I do not think as you do and regulate my
life accordingly. You are sure that you are right. I am
equally sure that I am. Hence there is nothing to be
done in either case but to let each other alone, and wait
for the slow process of evolution to give to each of us a
higher standard." Just then one of the officers asked
me if I was ready for a game of whist, and I excused
myself from further discussion. I met many of those
dolorous saints in my travels, who spent so much
thought on eternity and saving their souls that they
lost all the joys of time, as well as those sweet virtues
of courtesy and charity that might best fit them for
good works on earth and happiness in heaven.</p>
<p>In the spring I went to Nebraska, and Miss Anthony
and I again made a Western tour, sometimes together
and sometimes by different routes. A constitutional
<SPAN name="Page_300"></SPAN>convention was in session in Lincoln, and it was
proposed
to submit an amendment to strike the word
"male" from the Constitution. Nebraska became a
State in March, 1867, and took "Equality before the
law" as her motto. Her Territorial legislature had
discussed, many times, proposed liberal legislation for
women, and her State legislature had twice considered
propositions for woman's enfranchisement. I had a
valise with me containing Hon. Benjamin F. Butler's
minority reports as a member of the Judiciary Committee
of the United States House of Representatives, in
favor of woman's right to vote under the Fourteenth
Amendment. As we were crossing the Platte River,
in transferring the baggage to the boat, my valise fell
into the river. My heart stood still at the thought of
such a fate for all those able arguments. After the
great General had been in hot water all his life, it was
grievous to think of any of his lucubrations perishing in
cold water at last. Fortunately they were rescued.
On reaching Lincoln I was escorted to the home of the
Governor, where I spread the documents in the sunshine,
and they were soon ready to be distributed among
the members of the constitutional convention.</p>
<p>After I had addressed the convention, some of the
members called on me to discuss the points of my
speech. All the gentlemen were serious and respectful
with one exception. A man with an unusually small
head, diminutive form, and crooked legs tried, at my
expense, to be witty and facetious. During a brief
pause in the conversation he brought his chair directly
before me and said, in a mocking tone, "Don't you
think that the best thing a woman can do is to perform
well her part in the role of wife and mother? My wife
<SPAN name="Page_301"></SPAN>has presented me with eight beautiful children;
is not
this a better life-work than that of exercising the right
of suffrage?"</p>
<p>I had had my eye on this man during the whole interview,
and saw that the other members were annoyed
at his behavior. I decided, when the opportune moment
arrived, to give him an answer not soon to be forgotten;
so I promptly replied to his question, as I
slowly viewed him from head to foot, "I have met few
men, in my life, worth repeating eight times." The
members burst into a roar of laughter, and one of them,
clapping him on the shoulder, said: "There, sonny, you
have read and spelled; you better go." This scene was
heralded in all the Nebraska papers, and, wherever the
little man went, he was asked why Mrs. Stanton
thought he was not worth repeating eight times.</p>
<p>During my stay in Lincoln there was a celebration
of the opening of some railroad. An immense crowd
from miles about assembled on this occasion. The
collation was spread and speeches were made in the open
air. The men congratulated each other on the wonderful
progress the State had made since it became an
organized Territory in 1854. There was not the slightest
reference, at first, to the women. One speaker said:
"This State was settled by three brothers, John, James,
and Joseph, and from them have sprung the great concourse
of people that greet us here to-day." I turned,
and asked the Governor if all these people had sprung,
Minerva-like, from the brains of John, James, and
Joseph. He urged me to put that question to the
speaker; so, in one of his eloquent pauses, I propounded
the query, which was greeted with loud and prolonged
cheers, to the evident satisfaction of the women pres<SPAN name="Page_302"></SPAN>ent.
The next speaker took good care to give the due
meed of praise to Ann, Jane, and Mary, and to every
mention of the mothers of Nebraska the crowd heartily
responded.</p>
<p>In toasting "the women of Nebraska," at the
collation, I said: "Here's to the mothers, who came
hither by long, tedious journeys, closely packed
with restless children in emigrant wagons, cooking
the meals by day, and nursing the babies by night, while
the men slept. Leaving comfortable homes in the
East, they endured all the hardships of pioneer life,
suffered, with the men, the attacks of the Dakota Indians
and the constant apprehension of savage raids, of prairie
fires, and the devastating locusts. Man's trials, his
fears, his losses, all fell on woman with double force; yet
history is silent concerning the part woman performed
in the frontier life of the early settlers. Men make no
mention of her heroism and divine patience; they take
no thought of the mental or physical agonies women
endure in the perils of maternity, ofttimes without nurse
or physician in the supreme hour of their need, going,
as every mother does, to the very gates of death in giving
life to an immortal being!"</p>
<p>Traveling all over these Western States in the early
days, seeing the privations women suffered, and listening
to the tales of sorrow at the fireside, I wondered
that men could ever forget the debt of gratitude they
owed to their mothers, or fail to commemorate their
part in the growth of a great people. Yet the men of
Nebraska have twice defeated the woman suffrage
amendment.</p>
<p>In 1874 Michigan was the point of interest to all
those who had taken part in the woman-suffrage move<SPAN name="Page_303"></SPAN>ment.
The legislature, by a very large majority,
submitted to a vote of the electors an amendment of the
Constitution, in favor of striking out the word "male"
and thus securing civil and political rights to the women
of the State. It was a very active campaign. Crowded
meetings were held in all the chief towns and cities.
Professor Moses Coit Tyler, and a large number of
ministers preached, every Sunday, on the subject of
woman's position. The Methodist conference passed
a resolution in favor of the amendment by a unanimous
vote. I was in the State during the intense heat of
May and June, speaking every evening to large audiences;
in the afternoon to women alone, and preaching
every Sunday in some pulpit. The Methodists, Universalists,
Unitarians, and Quakers all threw open their
churches to the apostles of the new gospel of equality
for women. We spoke in jails, prisons, asylums,
depots, and the open air. Wherever there were ears
to hear, we lifted up our voices, and, on the wings of the
wind, the glad tidings were carried to the remote corners
of the State, and the votes of forty thousand men,
on election day, in favor of the amendment were so
many testimonials to the value of the educational work
accomplished.</p>
<p>I made many valuable acquaintances, on that trip,
with whom I have maintained lifelong friendships.
One pleasant day I passed in the home of Governor
Bagley and his wife, with a group of pretty children.
I found the Governor deeply interested in
prison reform. He had been instrumental in passing a
law giving prisoners lights in their cells and pleasant
reading matter until nine o'clock. His ideas of what
prisons should be, as unfolded that day, have since been
<SPAN name="Page_304"></SPAN>fully realized in the grand experiment now being
successfully tried at Elmira, New York.</p>
<p>I visited the State prison at Jackson, and addressed
seven hundred men and boys, ranging from seventy
down to seventeen years of age. Seated on the dais
with the chaplain, I saw them file in to dinner, and,
while they were eating, I had an opportunity to study
the sad, despairing faces before me. I shall never forget
the hopeless expression of one young man, who had
just been sentenced for twenty years, nor how ashamed
I felt that one of my own sex, trifling with two lovers,
had fanned the jealousy of one against the other, until
the tragedy ended in the death of one and the almost
lifelong imprisonment of the other. If girls should be
truthful and transparent in any relations in life, surely
it is in those of love, involving the strongest passions
of which human nature is capable. As the chaplain
told me the sad story, and I noticed the prisoner's refined
face and well-shaped head, I felt that the young
man was not under the right influences to learn the
lesson he needed. Fear, coercion, punishment, are the
masculine remedies for moral weakness, but statistics
show their failure for centuries. Why not change the
system and try the education of the moral and intellectual
faculties, cheerful surroundings, inspiring influences?
Everything in our present system tends to
lower the physical vitality, the self-respect, the moral
tone, and to harden instead of reforming the criminal.</p>
<p>My heart was so heavy I did not know what to say to
such an assembly of the miserable. I asked the chaplain
what I should say. "Just what you please," he replied.
Thinking they had probably heard enough of
their sins, their souls, and the plan of salvation, I
<SPAN name="Page_305"></SPAN>thought I would give them the news of the day.
So I
told them about the woman suffrage amendment, what
I was doing in the State, my amusing encounters with
opponents, their arguments, my answers. I told them
of the great changes that would be effected in prison
life when the mothers of the nation had a voice in the
buildings and discipline. I told them what Governor
Bagley said, and of the good time coming when prisons
would no longer be places of punishment but schools of
reformation. To show them what women would do to
realize this beautiful dream, I told them of Elizabeth
Fry and Dorothea L. Dix, of Mrs. Farnham's experiment
at Sing Sing, and Louise Michel's in New Caledonia,
and, in closing, I said: "Now I want all of you
who are in favor of the amendment to hold up your
right hands." They gave a unanimous vote, and
laughed heartily when I said, "I do wish you could all
go to the polls in November and that we could lock our
opponents up here until after the election." I felt satisfied
that they had had one happy hour, and that I had
said nothing to hurt the feelings of the most unfortunate.
As they filed off to their respective workshops
my faith and hope for brighter days went with them.
Then I went all through the prison. Everything
looked clean and comfortable on the surface, but I met
a few days after a man, just set free, who had been there
five years for forgery. He told me the true inwardness
of the system; of the wretched, dreary life they suffered,
and the brutality of the keepers. He said the prison
was infested with mice and vermin, and that, during the
five years he was there, he had never lain down one
night to undisturbed slumber. The sufferings endured
in summer for want of air, he said, were indescrib<SPAN name="Page_306"></SPAN>able.
In this prison the cells were in the center of the
building, the corridors running all around by the windows,
so the prisoners had no outlook and no direct
contact with the air. Hence, if a careless keeper
forgot to open the windows after a storm, the
poor prisoners panted for air in their cells, like fish
out of water. My informant worked in the mattress
department, over the room where prisoners
were punished. He said he could hear the lash
and the screams of the victims from morning till
night. "Hard as the work is all day," said he, "it is
a blessed relief to get out of our cells to march across
the yard and get one glimpse of the heavens above, and
one breath of pure air, and to be in contact with other
human souls in the workshops, for, although we could
never speak to each other, yet there was a hidden current
of sympathy conveyed by look that made us one
in our misery."</p>
<p>Though the press of the State was largely in our
favor, yet there were some editors who, having no arguments,
exercised the little wit they did possess in low
ridicule. It was in this campaign that an editor in a
Kalamazoo journal said: "That ancient daughter
of Methuselah, Susan B. Anthony, passed through our
city yesterday, on her way to the Plainwell meeting,
with a bonnet on her head looking as if it had recently
descended from Noah's ark." Miss Anthony often referred
to this description of herself, and said, "Had I
represented twenty thousand voters in Michigan, that
political editor would not have known nor cared
whether I was the oldest or the youngest daughter of
Methuselah, or whether my bonnet came from the ark
or from Worth's."</p>
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