登陆注册
26268100000057

第57章 X(1)

THE PASSING OF ``AUNT SUSAN''

On one occasion Miss Anthony had the doubt- f ul pleasure of reading her own obituary notices, and her interest in them was characteristically *****.

She had made a speech at Lakeside, Ohio, during which, for the first time in her long experience, she fainted on the platform. I was not with her at the time, and in the excitement following her collapse it was rumored that she had died. Immediately the news was telegraphed to the Associated Press of New York, and from there flashed over the country. At Miss Anthony's home in Rochester a reporter rang the bell and abruptly informed her sister, Miss Mary Anthony, who came to the door, that ``Aunt Susan'' was dead. Fortunately Miss Mary had a cool head.

``I think,'' she said, ``that if my sister had died I would have heard about it. Please have your editors telegraph to Lakeside.''

The reporter departed, but came back an hour later to say that his newspaper had sent the tele- g ram and the reply was that Susan B. Anthony was dead.

``I have just received a better telegram than that,'' r emarked Mary Anthony. `` Mine is from my sister; she tells me that she fainted to-night, but soon recovered and will be home to-morrow.''

Nevertheless, the next morning the American newspapers gave much space to Miss Anthony's obituary notices, and ``Aunt Susan'' spent some in- t eresting hours reading them. One that pleased her vastly was printed in the Wichita Eagle, whose editor, Mr. Murdock, had been almost her bitterest op- p onent. He had often exhausted his brilliant vo- c abulary in editorial denunciations of suffrage and suffragists, and Miss Anthony had been the special target of his scorn. But the news of her death seemed to be a bitter blow to him; and of all the tributes the American press gave to Susan B. Anthony dead, few equaled in beauty and appreciation the one penned by Mr. Murdock and published in the Eagle.

He must have been amused when, a few days later, he received a letter from ``Aunt Susan'' herself, thanking him warmly for his changed opinion of her and hoping that it meant the conversion of his soul to our Cause. It did not, and Mr. Murdock, though never again quite as bitter as he had been, soon resumed the free editorial expression of his anti- s uffrage sentiments. Times have changed, however, and to-day his son, now a member of Congress, is one of our strongest supporters in that body.

In 1905 it became plain that Miss Anthony's health was failing. Her visits to Germany and England the previous year, triumphant though they had been, had also proved a drain on her vitality; a nd soon after her return to America she entered upon a task which helped to exhaust her remaining strength. She had been deeply interested in se- c uring a fund of $50,000 to enable women to enter Rochester University, and, one morning, just after we had held a session of our executive committee in her Rochester home, she read a newspaper an- n ouncement to the effect that at four o'clock that afternoon the opportunity to admit women to the university would expire, as the full fifty thousand dollars had not been raised. The sum of eight thousand dollars was still lacking.

With characteristic energy, Miss Anthony under- t ook to save the situation by raising this amount within the time limit. Rushing to the telephone, she called a cab and prepared to go forth on her difficult quest; but first, while she was putting on her hat and coat, she insisted that her sister, Mary Anthony, should start the fund by contributing one thousand dollars from her meager savings, and this Miss Mary did. ``Aunt Susan'' made every second count that day, and by half after three o'clock she had secured the necessary pledges. Several of the trustees of the university, however, had not seemed especially anxious to have the fund raised, and at the last moment they objected to one pledge for a thousand dollars, on the ground that the man who had given it was very old and might die before the time set to pay it; then his family, they feared, might repudiate the obligation. Without a word Miss Anthony seized the pledge and wrote her name across it as an indorsement. ``I am good for it,'' s he then said, quietly, ``if the gentleman who signed it is not.''

That afternoon she returned home greatly fa- t igued. A few hours later the girl students who had been waiting admission to the university came to serenade her in recognition of her successful work for them, but she was too ill to see them. She was passing through the first stage of what proved to be her final breakdown.

In 1906, when the date of the annual convention of the National American Woman Suffrage Association in Baltimore was drawing near, she became convinced that it would be her last convention. She was right.

She showed a passionate eagerness to make it one of the greatest conventions ever held in the history of the movement; and we, who loved her and saw that the flame of her life was burning low, also bent all our energies to the task of realizing her hopes.

In November preceding the convention she visited me and her niece, Miss Lucy Anthony, in our home in Mount Airy, Philadelphia, and it was clear that her anxiety over the convention was weighing heavily upon her. She visibly lost strength from day to day. One morning she said abruptly, ``Anna, let's go and call on President M. Carey Thomas, of Bryn Mawr.''

I wrote a note to Miss Thomas, telling her of Miss Anthony's desire to see her, and received an im- m ediate reply inviting us to luncheon the following day. We found Miss Thomas deep in the work connected with her new college buildings, over which she showed us with much pride. Miss Anthony, of course, gloried in the splendid results Miss Thomas had achieved, but she was, for her, strangely silent and preoccupied. At luncheon she said:

``Miss Thomas, your buildings are beautiful; y our new library is a marvel; but they are not the cause of our presence here.''

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 追寻你的香气

    追寻你的香气

    我以为自己是个局外人,可从他注意到我的那一刻起就注定纠缠不休。无论是在大学的那四年还是进了社会总会有他的身影出现。很多人都说他喜欢我,连我自己也这么认为,可始终抵不过事实。是他先走进了我的生活,然而当我朝他靠近时,他却逃开了,当我想放弃的时候他又出现在我的视线里。“你喜欢我吗?”“嗯,你很香”。“……。”
  • 70后离婚

    70后离婚

    左梅和丈夫是朋友同事眼中的神仙眷侣,一向自我感觉良好的左梅有一天却听到丈夫说不再爱她了,如同一闷棒将左梅从天堂打入了地狱,左梅的生活陷入了难以收拾的境地……
  • 来自未来世界的探访

    来自未来世界的探访

    《来自未来世界的探访》中将详细研究令人神往的时间旅行的可行性,还将介绍和探讨已被证明是现实存在的理论和实践,要知道,这种时间旅行对那些来自我们未来的时空的男女访客来说,简直是司空见惯的现象,可是,我们往往容易将这些来自未来时空的时间访客误认作外星人。让此书伴随我们在意识和观念上爆发一场革命。不!不是让宇宙飞船将我们送往遥远的星系,期待着我们的是通往更高精神生活和令人难以置信的发达技术的殿堂。多维空间隧道。要倾听时间访客的呼唤,加速我们的心灵升华。获得时间旅行的可能,并利用这一可能完善整个世界,未来将成为今天,让我们共同迎接那令人神往的未来吧!
  • tfboys你是星我是尘

    tfboys你是星我是尘

    这是我第一次写小说,希望大家多多关照哦!嘿嘿
  • 神兵万象

    神兵万象

    神兵异象逆苍穹!人世险恶,妖魔横行;正道邪道,与他何干?真气流失,命运使然;千年蛇妖,长生之谜;少年蜕变,冷酷无情;位高权重,又有何用;红颜去时,天道不公;空留皮囊,杀心渐重;天下之大,无奇不有;可有长生?可有不老?还魂之术,九幽地府;争斗杀戮,可有净土?蓬莱仙岛,与世无争;五湖四海,海市蜃楼;异族嗜杀,虎视眈眈;魔域暗涌,剑指天道;自古以来,邪不胜正;何去何从,回顾往昔;红颜依然,旧地重游;人之一生,意义何在?修真炼道,可笑!还不如携手红颜,天涯海角。【不想在命运的安排下伤害你】【不属于爽文,却能令人在沉默中沸腾的故事】
  • 恶鬼附体

    恶鬼附体

    恶鬼附体即附有恶鬼的特殊体质,这样的人比一般人强大,也有着一般人没有的缺陷。在北京读高三的匡群,却被自己十年没见过面的妹妹叫回江西老家,理由是不回来会死……
  • 职业阴阳师

    职业阴阳师

    一只鬼眼明鉴三界,半腔正气玩转阴阳。诡异的赶尸家族,神秘的阴阳之道,鬼龙复生,天下大乱!
  • 甘肃江河地理名录

    甘肃江河地理名录

    本稿对甘肃河流和湖泊从其所赋有的名称、自然地理特征、水文气候变化、开发利用概况、社会经济情势、人文历史考证、风景旅游特色等角度进行了总结,详细描述了各条河流和每个湖泊水域的全貌。将有助于人们进一步认识甘肃江河湖泊在中华文明进程中的独特而重要作用,从而唤醒人们关注河流健康和保护水生态系统的意识,对促进甘肃生态文明建设具有重要意义。
  • 绝世妖孽:嗜血覆天下

    绝世妖孽:嗜血覆天下

    古有妖孽曰汐云…她,是世间唯一的混沌体,数百万年前,封印自己时,不慎出了差错,一魂落入二十一世纪。但又因一次坠崖回到了原来的世界。力量全无,重新修炼,接受新的身份,从头开始……但……那一个又一个百万年前的熟人美男蹦出来,都嚷着要娶她是要闹哪样……冷酷的神王,自恋的魔王,邪魅的妖帝,温和的精灵王,还有妖冶的冥帝……看她如何倾覆这个世界!【这是某寂第一次写书,欢迎跳坑,不要嫌弃】【还有,欢迎戳门。门牌号是489637412哦】
  • 灵舞沧海

    灵舞沧海

    对不起,这里不再更新了。