登陆注册
38574900000078

第78章

IN 1867 the proposition to extend the suffrage to women and to colored men was submitted to the people of the State of Kansas, and, among other Eastern speakers, I was invited to make a campaign through the State. As the fall elections were pending, there was great excitement everywhere.

Suffrage for colored men was a Republican measure, which the press and politicians of that party advocated with enthusiasm.

As woman suffrage was not a party question, we hoped that all parties would favor the measure; that we might, at last, have one green spot on earth where women could enjoy full liberty as citizens of the United States.

Accordingly, in July, Miss Anthony and I started, with high hopes of a most successful trip, and, after an uneventful journey of one thousand five hundred miles, we reached the sacred soil where John Brown and his sons had helped to fight the battles that made Kansas a free State.

Lucy Stone, Mr. Blackwell, and Olympia Brown had preceded us and opened the campaign with large meetings in all the chief cities. Miss Anthony and I did the same. Then it was decided that, as we were to go to the very borders of the State, where there were no railroads, we must take carriages, and economize our forces by taking different routes. I was escorted by ex-Governor Charles Robinson. We had a low, easy carriage, drawn by two mules, in which we stored about a bushel of tracts, two valises, a pail for watering the mules, a basket of apples, crackers, and other such refreshments as we could purchase on the way. Some things were suspended underneath the carriage, some packed on behind, and some under the seat and at our feet. It required great skill to compress the necessary baggage into the allotted space. As we went to the very verge of civilization, wherever two dozen voters could be assembled, we had a taste of pioneer life. We spoke in log cabins, in depots, unfinished schoolhouses, churches, hotels, barns, and in the open air.

I spoke in a large mill one night. A solitary tallow candle shone over my head like a halo of glory; a few lanterns around the outskirts of the audience made the darkness perceptible; but all I could see of my audience was the whites of their eyes in the dim distance. People came from twenty miles around to these meetings, held either in the morning, afternoon, or evening, as was most convenient.

As the regular State election was to take place in the coming November, the interest increased from week to week, until the excitement of the people knew no bounds. There were speakers for and against every proposition before the people. This involved frequent debates on all the general principles of government, and thus a great educational work was accomplished, which is one of the advantages of our frequent elections.

The friends of woman suffrage were doomed to disappointment. Those in the East, on whom they relied for influence through the liberal newspapers, were silent, and we learned, afterward, that they used what influence they had to keep the abolitionists and Republicans of the State silent, as they feared the discussion of the woman question would jeopardize the enfranchisement of the black man. However, we worked untiringly and hopefully, not seeing through the game of the politicians until nearly the end of the canvass, when we saw that our only chance was in getting the Democratic vote. Accordingly, George Francis Train, then a most effective and popular speaker, was invited into the State to see what could be done to win the Democracy. He soon turned the tide, strengthened the weak-kneed Republicans and abolitionists, and secured a large Democratic vote.

For three months we labored diligently, day after day, enduring all manner of discomforts in traveling, eating, and sleeping. As there were no roads or guideposts, we often lost our way. In going through cañ;ons and fording streams it was often so dark that the Governor was obliged to walk ahead to find the way, taking off his coat so that I could see his white shirt and slowly drive after him. Though seemingly calm and cool, I had a great dread of these night adventures, as I was in constant fear of being upset on some hill and rolled into the water. The Governor often complimented me on my courage, when I was fully aware of being tempest-tossed with anxiety. I am naturally very timid, but, being silent under strong emotions of either pleasure or pain, I am credited with being courageous in the hour of danger.

For days, sometimes, we could find nothing at a public table that we could eat. Then passing through a little settlement we could buy dried herring, crackers, gum arabic, and slippery elm; the latter, we were told, was very nutritious. We frequently sat down to a table with bacon floating in grease, coffee without milk, sweetened with sorghum, and bread or hot biscuit, green with soda, while vegetables and fruit were seldom seen.

Our nights were miserable, owing to the general opinion among pioneers that a certain species of insect must necessarily perambulate the beds in a young civilization. One night, after traveling over prairies all day, eating nothing but what our larder provided, we saw a light in a cottage in the distance which seemed to beckon to us. Arriving, we asked the usual question,杋f we could get a night's lodging,杢o which the response was inevitably a hearty, hospitable "Yes." One survey of the premises showed me what to look for in the way of midnight companionship, so I said to the Governor, "I will resign in your favor the comforts provided for me to-night, and sleep in the carriage, as you do so often." I persisted against all the earnest persuasions of our host, and in due time I was ensconced for the night, and all about the house was silent.

同类推荐
  • Green Mansions

    Green Mansions

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 声律启蒙

    声律启蒙

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 伤寒论条辨

    伤寒论条辨

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 华严经文义要决问答

    华严经文义要决问答

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 佛说出家功德经

    佛说出家功德经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 次元序

    次元序

    独立于真实世界的,还有六大平行宇宙,在这片广袤的寰宇之中,秩序与混沌,元能者与魔物,上演着一场场奇幻的斗争
  • 血影大帝

    血影大帝

    在迷茫者看来,血纹,是一种不幸。在执政者看来,血纹,是一种罪恶。在知情者看来,血纹,是一种未知。在观察者看来,血纹,是一种认可。而在拥有者看来,血纹,就是一座大山,一座压在他们身上,压的他们随时可能窒息而亡的大山。
  • 心魔契约

    心魔契约

    每个人心中都有另一个自己;你可以说她是天使,因为她给予你生活的希望;但大多数时候,他,是魔鬼;他是你的执念,他是你的阴暗面。在现实的光明之下,他只能隐藏在你内心中那阴暗的角落,等待时机。现在,他的机会来了。当魔鬼脱笼而出,面对欲望绘写的契约时,你该如何抉择?当信念崩塌,生活无望的时候,你又该何去何从?上述内容······和这本书没太大关系。这是一个讲述一个逗比带着另外两个逗比的冒险故事。
  • 重生妖王霸妻

    重生妖王霸妻

    前世所遭受的我一定百倍讨回女主竟然不是人女主天生长着翅膀女主是个受万人俯首的妖王?
  • 穿越狂妃之邪王太腹黑

    穿越狂妃之邪王太腹黑

    当逗逼女遇到腹黑男,会发生什么故事呢?女主穿越到平行世界,哦?世家少爷?贵族皇子?兄弟一起打扑克?修灵,炼药,小儿科小儿科!特工界的医圣,手持夙魂针!寻身世?解谜团?打白莲,殴绿茶!男主势力庞大,妖孽冷酷,手下们:我们主子还是之前的主子吗?!(泪奔)从不近女色,可偏偏对她,“女人,来了,就别想走了。”“敢惹姑奶奶我?”
  • 那些年我的校园生活

    那些年我的校园生活

    这本小说是根据我真实小学五年的生活,不是抄袭的,女主名便是作者的真实姓名。
  • 那女孩的倾城时光

    那女孩的倾城时光

    5个不是传统审美下女孩的追逐音乐之路。她们有梦想,有希望,却打破定义,标签。就是要做自己。成长的过程中,有糖,也有苦涩。但始终我们还都是我们自己。
  • 废材特工妃:皇叔就宠我

    废材特工妃:皇叔就宠我

    [停更停更,请勿跳坑!]十里穿越了,但是……她竟然穿到了自己写的小说里!真是惊喜(xia),不过呢,她是作者她怕谁,可以一路开挂,畅通无阻!突然某皇叔邪气地说:“玖~”让十里顿时面红耳赤,男主失控了怎么办,在线等!
  • 欢喜农家之神医小娘子

    欢喜农家之神医小娘子

    神医丁欢重生农家小哑巴,没爹没妈苦哈哈。好在空间在手,天下我有。任你起点再低,生活再差,也能混的风生水起还有那个猎户小哥哥,有没有空,要不要谈个恋爱先?
  • 农大爱情故事:幸福科达琳

    农大爱情故事:幸福科达琳

    悲恋版的《那些年》,冷痛版的《致青春》。青春是杯后劲十足的美酒,碰杯痛饮时我们酣畅淋漓,相拥而散后才一一醉倒。一段不以见面为目的的网络相遇,一场由相厌到相恋再到相决的爱恋,一个无微不至脉脉含情的守候,温文尔雅的腾笑,飞扬跋扈的景岚,低落尘埃的顾安之,扑朔迷离之中到底隐藏着怎样泪如雨下的过往,且看那些年令我们争风吃醋的女孩终究花落谁家。