友情提示:如果本网页打开太慢或显示不完整,请尝试鼠标右键“刷新”本网页!
读书室 返回本书目录 加入书签 我的书架 我的书签 TXT全本下载 『收藏到我的浏览器』

the story of a pioneer-第13部分

快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部! 如果本书没有阅读完,想下次继续接着阅读,可使用上方 "收藏到我的浏览器" 功能 和 "加入书签" 功能!


young men to decide upon the speaker and then an…

nounce his name to the women; who humbly con…

firmed it。  On this occasion; however; when the

name came in to us; I sent a message to our brother

society to the effect that we; too; intended to make

a nomination and to send in a name。



At such unprecedented behavior the entire stu…

dent body arose in excitement; which; among the

girls; was combined with equal parts of exhilaration

and awe。  The men refused to consider our nominee;

and as a friendly compromise we suggested that we

have a joint meeting of all the societies and elect

the speaker at this gathering; but this plan also

the men at first refused; giving in only after weeks

of argument; during which no one had time for

the calmer pleasures of study。  When the joint

meeting was finally held; nothing was accomplished;

we girls had one more member than the boys had;

and we promptly re…elected our candidate; who was

as promptly declined by the boys。  Two of our girls

were engaged to two of the boys; and it was secretly

planned by our brother society that during a second

joint meeting these two men should take the girls

out for a drive and then slip back to vote; leaving

the girls at some point sufficiently remote from col…

lege。  We discovered the plot; however; in time to

thwart it; and at last; when nothing but the un…

precedented tie…up had been discussed for months;

the boys suddenly gave up their candidate and

nominated me for orator。



This was not at all what I wanted; and I immedi…

ately declined to serve。  We girls then nominated

the young man who had been first choice of our

brother society; but he haughtily refused to accept

the compliment。  The reunion was only a fortnight

away; and the programme had not been printed; so

now the president took the situation in hand and

peremptorily ordered me to accept the nomination

or be suspended。  This was a wholly unexpected

boomerang。  I had wished to make a good fight for

equal rights for the girls; and to impress the boys

with the fact of our existence as a society; but I

had not desired to set the entire student body by

the ears nor to be forced to prepare and deliver an

oration at the eleventh hour。  Moreover; I had no

suitable gown to wear on so important an occasion。 

One of my classmates; however; secretly wrote to

my sister; describing my blushing honors and ex…

plaining my need; and my family rallied to the call。 

My father bought the material; and my mother and

Mary paid for the making of the gown。  It was a

white alpaca creation; trimmed with satin; and the

consciousness that it was extremely becoming sus…

tained me greatly during the mental agony of pre…

paring and delivering my oration。  To my family

that oration was the redeeming episode of my early

career。  For the moment it almost made them for…

get my crime of preaching。



My original fund of eighteen dollars was now

supplemented by the proceeds of a series of lectures

I gave on temperance。  The temperance women were

not yet organized; but they had their speakers; and

I was occasionally paid five dollars to hold forth

for an hour or two in the little country school…houses

of our region。  As a licensed preacher I had no

tuition fees to pay at college; but my board; in the

home of the president and his wife; was costing me

four dollars a week; and this was the limit of my

expenses; as I did my own laundry…work。  During

my first college year the amount I paid for amuse…

ment was exactly fifty cents; that went for a lec…

ture。  The mental strain of the whole experience

was rather severe; for I never knew how much I

would be able to earn; and I was beginning to feel

the effects of this when Christmas came and brought

with it a gift of ninety…two dollars; which Miss Foot

had collected among my Big Rapids friends。  That;

with what I could earn; carried me through the

year。



The following spring our brother James; who

was now living in St。 Johnsbury; Vermont; invited

my sister Mary and me to spend the summer

with him; and Mary and I finally dug a grave for

our little hatchet and went East together with

something of our old…time joy in each other's so…

ciety。  We reached St。 Johnsbury one Saturday;

and within an hour of our arrival learned that my

brother had arranged for me to preach in a local

church the following day。  That threatened to spoil

the visit for Mary and even to disinter the hatchet! 

At first she positively refused to go to hear me; but

after a few hours of reflection she announced gloom…

ily that if she did not go I would not have my hair

arranged properly or get my hat on straight。  Moved

by this conviction; she joined the family parade to

the church; and later; in the sacristy; she pulled me

about and pinned me up to her heart's content。 

Then; reluctantly; she went into the church and

heard me preach。  She offered no tributes after our

return to the house; but her protests ceased from

that time; and we gave each other the love and

understanding which had marked our girlhood days。 

The change made me very happy; for Mary was the

salt of the earth; and next only to my longing for

my mother; I had longed for her in the years of our

estrangement。



Every Sunday that summer I preached in or near

St。 Johnsbury; and toward autumn we had a big

meeting which the ministers of all the surrounding

churches attended。  I was asked to preach the ser…

mona high complimentand I chose that impor…

tant day to make a mistake in quoting a passage

from Scripture。  I asked; ‘‘Can the Ethiopian change

his spots or the leopard his skin?''  I realized at

once that I had transposed the words; and no doubt

a look of horror dawned in my eyes; but I went on

without correcting myself and without the slightest

pause。  Later; one of the ministers congratulated

me on this presence of mind。



‘‘If you had corrected yourself;'' he said; ‘‘all the

young people would have been giggling yet over

the spotted nigger。  Keep to your rule of going

right ahead!''



At the end of the summer the various churches

in which I had preached gave me a beautiful gold

watch and one hundred dollars in money; and with

an exceedingly light heart I went back to college

to begin my second year of work。



From that time life was less complex。  I had

enough temperance…work and preaching in the

country school…houses and churches to pay my col…

lege expenses; and; now that my financial anxieties

were relieved; my health steadily improved。  Sev…

eral times I preached to the Indians; and these

occasions were among the most interesting of my

experiences。  The squaws invariably brought their

babies with them; but they had a simple and effective

method of relieving themselves of the care of the

infants as soon as they reached the church。  The

papooses; who were strapped to their boards; were

hung like a garment on the back wall of the building

by a hole in the top of the board; which projected

above their heads。  Each papoose usually had a

bit of fat pork tied to the end of a string fastened

to its wrist; and with these sources of nourishment

the infants occupied themselves pleasantly while

the sermon was in progress。  Frequently the pork

slipped down the throat of the papoose; but the

struggle of the child and the jerking of its hands

in the strangulation that followed pulled the piece

safely out again。  As I faced the congregation I also

faced the papooses; to whom the indifferent backs

of their mothers were presented; it seemed to me

there was never a time when some papoose was not

choking; but no matter how much excitement or

discomfort was going on among the babies; not one

squaw turned her head to look back at them。  In

that assemblage the emotions were not allowed to

interrupt the calm intellectual enjoyment of the

sermon。



My most dramatic experience during this period

occurred in the summer of 1874; when I went to a

Northern lumber…camp to preach in the pulpit of a

minister who was away on his honeymoon。  The

stage took me within twenty…two miles of my desti…

nation; to a place called Seberwing。  To my dismay;

however; when I arrived at Seberwing; Saturday

evening; I found that the rest of the journey lay

through a dense woods; and that I could reach my

pulpit in time the next morning only by having some

one drive me through the woods that night。  It was

not a pleasant prospect; for I had heard appalling

tales of the stockades in this region and of the

women who were kept prisoners there。  But to miss

the engagement was not to be thought of; and when;

after I had made several vain efforts to find a driver;

a man appeared in a two…seated wagon and offered

to take me to my destination; I felt that I had to go

with him; though I did not like his appearance。 

He was a huge; muscular person; with a protruding

jaw and a
返回目录 上一页 下一页 回到顶部 1 1
快捷操作: 按键盘上方向键 ← 或 → 可快速上下翻页 按键盘上的 Enter 键可回到本书目录页 按键盘上方向键 ↑ 可回到本页顶部!
温馨提示: 温看小说的同时发表评论,说出自己的看法和其它小伙伴们分享也不错哦!发表书评还可以获得积分和经验奖励,认真写原创书评 被采纳为精评可以获得大量金币、积分和经验奖励哦!