<h1><SPAN name="chap_05"></SPAN>The Most Wonderful Woman</h1>
<p><b>And a Great Man who proves himself truly great</b></p>
<p>It was Old Home Week in the little village, and this
was to be the biggest day. From a distant city was
to come the town’s one really Great Man, to
speak in the huge tent erected on the Common for just
that purpose. From end to end the village was aflame
with bunting and astir with excitement, so that even
I, merely a weary sojourner in the place, felt the
thrill and tingled pleasantly.</p>
<p>When the Honorable Jonas Whitermore entered the tent
at two o’clock that afternoon I had a good view
of him, for my seat was next the broad aisle. Behind
him on the arm of an usher came a small, frightened-looking
little woman in a plain brown suit and a plainer brown
bonnet set askew above thin gray hair. The materials
of both suit and bonnet were manifestly good, but
all distinction of line and cut was hopelessly lost
in the wearing. Who she was I did not know; but I soon
learned, for one of the two young women in front of
me said a low something to which the other gave back
a swift retort, woefully audible: “<i>His wife</i>?
That little dowdy thing in brown? Oh, what a pity!
Such an ordinary woman!”</p>
<p>My cheeks grew hot in sympathy with the painful red
that swept to the roots of the thin gray hair under
the tip-tilted bonnet. Then I glanced at the man.</p>
<p>Had he heard? I was not quite sure. His chin, I fancied,
was a trifle higher. I could not see his eyes, but
I did see his right hand; and it was clenched so tightly
that the knuckles were white with the strain. I thought
I knew then. He had heard. The next minute he had passed
on up the aisle and the usher was seating the more-frightened-than-ever
little wife in the roped-off section reserved for
important guests.</p>
<p>It was then that I became aware that the man on my
right was saying something.</p>
<p>“I beg your pardon, but-did you speak--to me?”
I asked, turning to him hesitatingly.</p>
<p>The old man met my eyes with an abashed smile.</p>
<p>“I guess I’m the party what had ought
to be askin’ pardon, stranger,” he apologized.
“I talk to myself so much I kinder furgit sometimes,
and do it when folks is round. I was only sayin’
that I wondered why ’twas the good Lord give
folks tongues and forgot to give ’em brains to
run ’em with. But maybe you didn’t hear
what she said,” he hazarded, with a jerk of
his thumb toward the young woman in front.</p>
<p>“About Mrs. Whitermore? Yes, I heard.”</p>
<p>His face darkened.</p>
<p>“Then you know. And she heard, too! ‘Ordinary
woman,’ indeed! Humph! To think that Betty Tillington
should ever live to hear herself called an ‘ordinary
woman’! You see, I knew her when she <i>was</i>
Betty Tillington.”</p>
<p>“Did you?” I smiled encouragingly. I was
getting interested, and I hoped he would keep on talking.
On the platform the guest of honor was holding a miniature
reception. He was the picture of polite attention and
punctilious responsiveness; but I thought I detected
a quick glance now and then toward the roped-off section
where sat his wife and I wondered again--had he heard
that thoughtless comment?</p>
<p>From somewhere had come the rumor that the man who
was to introduce the Honorable Jonas Whitermore had
been delayed by a washout “down the road,”
but was now speeding toward us by automobile. For my
part, I fear I wished the absentee a punctured tire
so that I might hear more of the heart-history of
the faded little woman with the bonnet askew.</p>
<p>“Yes, I knew her,” nodded my neighbor,
“and she didn’t look much then like she
does now. She was as pretty as a picture and there
wa’n’t a chap within sight of her what
wa’n’t head over heels in love with her.
But there wa’n’t never a chance for but
two of us and we knew it: Joe Whitermore and a chap
named Fred Farrell. So, after a time, we just sort
of stood off and watched the race--as pretty a race
as ever you see. Farrell had the money and the good
looks, while Whitermore was poor as a church mouse,
and he was homely, too. But Whitermore must have had
somethin’--maybe somethin’ we didn’t
see, for she took <i>him</i>.</p>
<p>“Well, they married and settled down happy as
two twitterin’ birds, but poor as Job’s
turkey. For a year or so she was as pretty and gay
as ever she was and into every good time goin’;
then the babies came, one after another, some of ’em
livin’ and some dyin’ soon after they came.</p>
<p>“Of course, things was different then. What
with the babies and the housework, Betty couldn’t
get out much, and we didn’t see much of her.
When we did see her, though, she’d smile and
toss her head in the old way and say how happy she
was and didn’t we think her babies was the prettiest
things ever, and all that. And we did, of course, and
told her so.</p>
<p>“But we couldn’t help seein’ that
she was gettin’ thin and white and that no matter
how she tossed her head, there wa’n’t any
curls there to bob like they used to, ’cause
her hair was pulled straight back and twisted up into
a little hard knot just like as if she had done it
up when some one was callin’ her to come quick.”</p>
<p>“Yes, I can imagine it,” I nodded.</p>
<p>“Well, that’s the way things went at the
first, while he was gettin’ his start, and I
guess they was happy then. You see, they was pullin’
even them days and runnin’ neck and neck. Even
when Fred Farrell, her old beau, married a girl she
knew and built a fine house all piazzas and bow-winders
right in sight of their shabby little rented cottage,
I don’t think she minded it; even if Mis’
Farrell didn’t have anythin’ to do from
mornin’ till night only set in a white dress
on her piazza, and rock, and give parties, Betty didn’t
seem to mind. She had her Joe.</p>
<p>“But by and by she didn’t have her Joe.
Other folks had him and his business had him. I mean,
he’d got up where the big folks in town begun
to take notice of him; and when he wa’n’t
tendin’ to business, he was hobnobbin’
with them, so’s to bring <i>more</i> business.
And--of course she, with her babies and housework,
didn’t have no time for that.</p>
<p>“Well, next they moved away. When they went
they took my oldest girl, Mary, to help Betty; and
so we still kept track of ’em. Mary said it was
worse than ever in the new place. It was quite a big
city and just livin’ cost a lot. Mr. Whitermore,
of course, had to look decent, out among folks as
he was, so he had to be ’tended to first. Then
what was left of money and time went to the children.
It wa’n’t long, too, before the big folks
<i>there</i> begun to take notice, and Mr. Whitermore
would come home all excited and tell about what was
said to him and what fine things he was bein’
asked to do. He said ‘twas goin’ to mean
everythin’ to his career.</p>
<p>“Then come the folks to call, ladies in fine
carriages with dressed-up men to hold the door open
and all that; but always, after they’d gone,
Mary’d find Betty cryin’ somewhere, or
else tryin’ to fix a bit of old lace or ribbon
on to some old dress. Mary said Betty’s clo’s
were awful, then. You see, there wa’n’t
never any money left for <i>her</i> things. But
all this didn’t last long, for very soon the
fine ladies stopped comin’ and Betty just settled
down to the children and didn’t try to fix her
clo’s any more.</p>
<p>“But by and by, of course, the money begun to
come in--lots of it--and that meant more changes,
naturally. They moved into a bigger house, and got
two more hired girls and a man, besides Mary. Mr. Whitermore
said he didn’t want his wife to work so hard
now, and that, besides, his position demanded it.
He was always talkin’ about his position those
days, tryin’ to get his wife to go callin’
and go to parties and take her place as his wife,
as he put it.</p>
<p>“And Mary said Betty did try, and try hard.
Of course she had nice clo’s now, lots of ’em;
but somehow they never seemed to look just right. And
when she did go to parties, she never knew what to
talk about, she told Mary. She didn’t know a
thing about the books and pictures and the plays and
quantities of other things that everybody else seemed
to know about; and so she just had to sit still and
say nothin’.</p>
<p>“Mary said she could see it plagued her and
she wa’n’t surprised when, after a time,
Betty begun to have headaches and be sick party nights,
and beg Mr. Whitermore to go alone--and then cry because
he did go alone. You see, she’d got it into
her head then that her husband was ashamed of her.”</p>
<p>“And was--he?” demanded I.</p>
<p>“I don’t know. Mary said she couldn’t
tell exactly. He seemed worried, sometimes, and quite
put out at the way his wife acted about goin’
to places. Then, other times, he didn’t seem
to notice or care if he did have to go alone. It wa’n’t
that he was unkind to her. It was just that he was
so busy lookin’ after himself that he forgot
all about her. But Betty took it all as bein’
ashamed of her, no matter what he did; and for a while
she just seemed to pine away under it. They’d
moved to Washington by that time and, of course, with
him in the President’s Cabinet, it was pretty
hard for her.</p>
<p>“Then, all of a sudden, she took a new turn
and begun to study and to try to learn things--everything:
how to talk and dress and act, besides stuff that
was just book-learnin’. She’s been doin’
that for quite a spell and Mary says she thinks she’d
do pretty well now, in lots of ways, if only she had
half a chance--somethin’ to encourage her, you
know. But her husband don’t seem to take no notice,
now, just as if he’s got tired expectin’
anythin’ of her and that’s made her so
scared and discouraged she’s too nervous to
act as if she <i>did</i> know anythin’.
An’ there ’t is.</p>
<p>“Well, maybe she is just an ordinary woman,”
sighed the old man, a little sternly, “if bein’
‘ordinary’ means she’s like lots
of others. For I suspect, stranger, that, if the truth
was told, lots of other big men have got wives just
like her--women what have been workin’ so tarnal
hard to help their husbands get ahead that they hain’t
had time to see where they themselves was goin’.
And by and by they wake up to the fact that they hain’t
got nowhere. They’ve just stayed still, ’way
behind.</p>
<p>“Mary says she don’t believe Betty would
mind even that, if her husband only seemed to care--to--to
understand, you know, how it had been with her and
how--Crickey! I guess they’ve come,” broke
off the old man suddenly, craning his neck for a better
view of the door.</p>
<p>From outside had sounded the honk of an automobile
horn and the wild cheering of men and boys. A few
minutes later the long-delayed programme began.</p>
<p>It was the usual thing. Before the Speaker of the
Day came other speakers, and each of them, no matter
what his subject, failed not to refer to “our
illustrious fellow townsman” in terms of highest
eulogy. One told of his humble birth, his poverty-driven
boyhood, his strenuous youth. Another drew a vivid
picture of his rise to fame. A third dilated upon
the extraordinary qualities of brain and body which
had made such achievement possible and which would
one day land him in the White House itself.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, close to the speaker’s stand sat
the Honorable Jonas Whitermore himself, for the most
part grim and motionless, though I thought I detected
once or twice a repetition of the half-troubled, half-questioning
glances directed toward his wife that I had seen before.
Perhaps it was because I was watching him so closely
that I saw the sudden change come to his face. The
lips lost their perfunctory smile and settled into
determined lines. The eyes, under their shaggy brows,
glowed with sudden fire. The entire pose and air of
the man became curiously alert, as if with the eager
impatience of one who has determined upon a certain
course of action and is anxious only to be up and
doing. Very soon after that he was introduced, and,
amid deafening cheers, rose to his feet. Then, very
quietly, he began to speak.</p>
<p>We had heard he was an orator. Doubtless many of us
were familiar with his famous nickname “Silver-tongued
Joe.” We had expected great things of him--a
brilliant discourse on the tariff, perhaps, or on our
foreign relations, or yet on the Hague Tribunal. But
we got none of these. We got first a few quiet words
of thanks and appreciation for the welcome extended
him; then we got the picture of an everyday home just
like ours, with all its petty cares and joys so vividly
drawn that we thought we were seeing it, not hearing
about it. He told us it was a little home of forty
years ago, and we began to realize, some way, that
he was speaking of himself.</p>
<p>“I may, you know, here,” he said, “for
I am among my own people. I am at home.”</p>
<p>Even then I didn’t see what he was coming to.
Like the rest I sat slightly confused, wondering what
it all meant. Then, suddenly, into his voice there
crept a tense something that made me sit more erect
in my seat.</p>
<p>“<i>My</i> indomitable will-power? <i>My</i>
superb courage? <i>My</i> stupendous strength
of character? <i>My</i> undaunted persistence
and marvelous capacity for hard work?” he was
saying. “Do you think it’s to that I owe
what I am? Never! Come back with me to that little
home of forty years ago and I’ll show you to
what and to whom I do owe it. First and foremost I
owe it to a woman--no ordinary woman, I want you to
understand--but to the most wonderful woman in the
world.”</p>
<p>I knew then. So did my neighbor, the old man at my
side. He jogged my elbow frantically and whispered:--</p>
<p>“He’s goin’ to--he’s goin’
to! He’s goin’ to show her he <i>does</i>
care and understand! He <i>did</i> hear that girl.
Crickey! But ain’t he the cute one to pay her
back like that, for what she said?”</p>
<p>The little wife down front did not know--yet, however.
I realized that, the minute I looked at her and saw
her drawn face and her frightened, staring eyes fixed
on her husband up there on the platform--her husband,
who was going to tell all these people about some wonderful
woman whom even she had never heard of before, but
who had been the making of him, it seemed.</p>
<p>“<i>My</i> will-power?” the Honorable
Jonas Whitermore was saying then. “Not mine,
but the will-power of a woman who did not know the
meaning of the word ‘fail.’ Not my superb
courage, but the courage of one who, day in and day
out, could work for a victory whose crown was to go,
not to herself, but to another. Not my stupendous
strength of character, but that of a beautiful young
girl who could see youth and beauty and opportunity
nod farewell, and yet smile as she saw them go. Not
my undaunted persistence, but the persistence of one
to whom the goal is always just ahead, but never reached.
And last, not my marvelous capacity for hard work,
but that of the wife and mother who bends her back
each morning to a multitude of tasks and cares that
she knows night will only interrupt--not finish.”</p>
<p>My eyes were still on the little brown-clad woman
down in front, so I saw the change come to her face
as her husband talked. I saw the terror give way to
puzzled questioning, and that, in turn, become surprise,
incredulity, then overwhelming joy as the full meaning
came to her that she herself was that most wonderful
woman in the world who had been the making of him.
I looked then for just a touch of the old frightened,
self-consciousness at finding herself thus so conspicuous;
but it did not come. The little woman plainly had
forgotten us. She was no longer Mrs. Jonas Whitermore
among a crowd of strangers listening to a great man’s
Old-Home-Day speech. She was just a loving, heart-hungry,
tired, all-but-discouraged wife hearing for the first
time from the lips of her husband that he knew and
cared and understood.</p>
<p>“Through storm and sunshine, she was always
there at her post, aiding, encouraging, that I might
be helped,” the Honorable Jonas Whitermore was
saying. “Week in and week out she fought poverty,
sickness, and disappointments, and all without a murmur,
lest her complaints distract me for one precious moment
from my work. Even the nights brought her no rest,
for while I slept, she stole from cot to cradle and
from cradle to crib, covering outflung little legs
and arms, cooling parched little throats with water,
quieting fretful whimpers and hushing threatening
outcries with a low ’Hush, darling, mother’s
here. Don’t cry! You’ll wake father--and
father must have his sleep.’ And father had it--that
sleep, just as he had the best of everything else in
the house: food, clothing, care, attention--everything.</p>
<p>“What mattered it if her hands did grow rough
and toil-worn? Mine were left white and smooth--for
my work. What mattered it if her back and her head
and her feet did ache? Mine were left strong and painless--for
my work. What mattered her wakefulness if I slept?
What mattered her weariness if I was rested? What
mattered her disappointments if my aims were accomplished?
Nothing!”</p>
<p>The Honorable Jonas Whitermore paused for breath,
and I caught mine and held it. It seemed, for a minute,
as if everybody all over the house was doing the same
thing, too, so absolutely still was it, after that
one word--“nothing.” They were beginning
to understand--a little. I could tell that. They were
beginning to see this big thing that was taking place
right before their eyes. I glanced at the little woman
down in front. The tender glow on her face had grown
and deepened and broadened until her whole little
brown-clad self seemed transfigured. My own eyes dimmed
as I looked. Then, suddenly I became aware that the
Honorable Jonas Whitermore was speaking again.</p>
<p>“And not for one year only, nor two, nor ten,
has this quintessence of devotion been mine,”
he was saying, “but for twice ten and then a
score more--for forty years. For forty years! Did
you ever stop to think how long forty years could
be--forty years of striving and straining, of pinching
and economizing, of serving and sacrificing? Forty
years of just loving somebody else better than yourself,
and doing this every day, and every hour of the day
for the whole of those long forty years? It isn’t
easy to love somebody else <i>always</i> better
than yourself, you know! It means the giving up of
lots of things that <i>you</i> want. You might
do it for a day, for a month, for a year even--but
for forty years! Yet she has done it--that most wonderful
woman. Do you wonder that I say it is to her, and
to her alone, under God, that I owe all that I am,
all that I hope to be?”</p>
<p>Once more he paused. Then, in a voice that shook a
little at the first, but that rang out clear and strong
and powerful at the end, he said:</p>
<p>“Ladies, gentlemen, I understand this will close
your programme. It will give me great pleasure, therefore,
if at the adjournment of this meeting you will allow
me to present you to the most wonderful woman in the
world--my wife.”</p>
<p>I wish I could tell you what happened then. The words--oh,
yes, I could tell you in words what happened. For
that matter, the reporters at the little stand down
in front told it in words, and the press of the whole
country blazoned it forth on the front page the next
morning. But really to know what happened, you should
have heard it and seen it, and felt the tremendous
power of it deep in your soul, as we did who did see
it.</p>
<p>There was a moment’s breathless hush, then to
the canvas roof there rose a mighty cheer and a thunderous
clapping of hands as by common impulse the entire
audience leaped to its feet.</p>
<p>For one moment only did I catch a glimpse of Mrs.
Jonas Whitermore, blushing, laughing, and wiping teary
eyes in which the wondrous glow still lingered; then
the eager crowd swept down the aisle toward her.</p>
<p>“Crickey!” breathed the red-faced old
man at my side. “Well, stranger, even if it
does seem sometimes as if the good Lord give some folks
tongues and forgot to give ’em brains to run
’em with, I guess maybe He kinder makes up for
it, once in a while, by givin’ other folks the
brains to use their tongues so powerful well!”</p>
<p>I nodded dumbly. I could not speak just then--but
the young woman in front of me could. Very distinctly
as I passed her I heard her say:</p>
<p>“Well, now, ain’t that the limit, Sue?
And her such an ordinary woman, too!”</p>
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