THE GREATEST AMERICAN WOMAN
MISS FRANCES E. WILLARD'S LAST AUTOBIOGRAPHICAL INTERVIEW.
HER ACCOUNT OF HER METHODS OF WORK AND DAILY LIFE.
HER INTERPRETATION OF THE GOSPEL MESSAGES.
BY GEORGE T. B. DAVIS.
It was my privilege to obtain the last autobiographical
interview given by Miss Willard before her departure for a better
world. Little did I imagine as the eloquent leader tripped lightly
over her varied career, calling up early and late experiences
in answer to my queries, that it was her final earthly talk about
herself for periodical publication. It is remarkable but eminently
fitting, that such an interview should have been given to the
magazine of which she was an associateeditor for seven years!
'Two years ago, I secured a romantic "dying
interview" with Miss Willard in a Pullman car of the "Lake
Shore Limited" as it sped eastward from Chicago. The worldfamous
reformer was just starting on her journey to England to spend
fifteen months at the home of Lady Henry Somerset. Never shall
I forget that wonderful interview! Miss Willard was in a jubilant
mood. Whether her exhilaration was due to the moving train, to
the prospect of a long rest, or to the anticipation of meeting
once more her bosom friend, Lady Henry Somerset, I know not, but
certain it is that Miss Willard spoke like one inspired. As I
sat in the seat beside her, I became permeated by the exaltation
of her spirit, and knew that I was in the presence of one of the
masterminds of the world's history. As we flew along, past
field and village, and I gazed at her face aglow with an indescribable
spiritual radiance, I felt as if I was being transported through
come fairyland in an enchanted car beside a genie of Wisdom and
Love. That interview was my most thrilling journalistic experience.
During Miss WiIIard's recent stay of two months in
Chicago, previous to her departure for New York, she was entertained
at the beautiful home of her cousin, Mrs. Lemmon, on Jackson Boulevard.
Miss Gordon, for more than twenty years her constant companion,
of course accompanied her. Miss Willard was very, very tired.
She had been suffering from severe anemia for more than a year,
and her extra exertions at the Buffalo Convention of the W. C.
T. U. had wellnigh prostrated her.
Miss Willard tried to rest. Miss Gordon and Mrs.
Lemmon acted as her "right and left guards" in
shielding her from unnecessary intrusion. But rest for a person
in her position was impossible. Daily there were scores of letters
to be answered; sometimes scores of callers game. Hardly a week
passed that she as not compelled to expend precious energy by
speaking in public.
One bright morning last December I sent up my card
to the heroic leader. I was entirely unaware of the extent of
her ill health. She appeared straightway with her rarely sweet
smile, and gave me a hearty welcome.
She recalled with delight our "flying interview."
I was astonished and saddened to note the transformation that
had taken place in her appearance since our last meeting. She
seemed five years older, instead of two. Her step was less buoyant,
her movements were less energetic. Her hair, however, was more
beautiful than formerly. It was a soft, fluffy, hazel brown, that
formed a fitting crown for a face suffused with the light of divinehuman
love. Once more I felt the irresistible spell of her magnetic
personality. When I informed her that I desired, if convenient,
am interview on "What the Twentieth Century Will Bring,"
or "A Prophetess' Vision of the Future," she consented,
and laughingly suggested that I again accompany her on the cars
for a distance, when she departed for New York a few days later.
I readily agreed, and departed, after a delightful personal chat
with her who has been well called the best woman conversationalist
of the day.
In the meantime, various events arose, upsetting
the proposed plan. Miss Wil1ard prolonged her stay in Chicago
until after the holidays. She seemed bent on visiting all her
old friends in Evanston. She addressed the students of Northwestern
and Chicago Universities. Finally, she paid a brief visit to Janesville,
Wis., and drove out to "Forest Home," the beautiful
farm on which her happy, noting girlhood was spent. I am now informed
that she felt it was her final pilgrimage to the scenes and friends
of former years. On her re turn to Chicago, Miss Willard was worn
and weary. Work was abandoned in so far as it was possible, and
she endeavored to recuperate before leaving for New York. She
gladly welcomed a change in the subject of our interview, by which
she would recount her methods of work and narrate some of her
experiences, instead of expressing her views on the coming age.
One evening in the early part of January, I called
and found the public woman I most admired, daintily gowned and
seated before a cheery grate fire in the beautiful drawing room
of her hostess, Mrs. Lemmon. With matchless sympathy and friendliness
the great leader opened her heart and talked with me as to a brother
for more than an hour. Her words express her final verdict concerning
some of the deepest mysteries of life. They are the result of
probably as varied experience and wide knowledge of books and
people as has fallen to the lot of a woman during the history
of the world.
Miss Willard was one of the hardest workers of the
age. She accomplished an amount of work each day that appears
miraculous to the uninitiated, End marvelous to her associates.
Though frail in body, she was capable of an endurance of fatigue
that demonstrated the supremacy of mind over matter. Her stupendous
achievements during the last twentyfive years are well known,
and might be called one of the wonders of the modern world. In
view of these things, I asked the Reformer regarding her love
for work, and her working ways.
In reply, Miss Willard gave the following narrative
of a typical working day: "The earliest book in the day,
before breakfast, if possible, is a book of devotion: either the
New Testament or a volume of texts and comments like 'Daily Strength
for Daily Needs.' After breakfast I glance over the daily papers.
Then, at perhaps 9 o'clock, I call my stenographer and dictate
articles and letters continuously for eight hours, with an intercession
of half an hour for luncheon.
"The amount of mental concentration dictation
involves is not reported or conceived of by those not engaged
in it. Today, a memorial must be written to the authorities of
every college in the United States, showing with tact and an attempt
at least at sweet reasonableness why the territory adjacent to
a college ought to be under prohibition. Tomorrow, a memorial
to the authorities of the National Library at Washington,
showing why intoxicating liquors as a beverage should not be sold
in the library restaurant. The next day a form of statute must
be carefully prepared, in consultation with the best legal minds,
and sent out to the state W. C. T. U. presidents, urging that
it be taken as a basis for the winter's legislative work.
"Editorials and other articles must be written
for the press, clearing up misunderstandings concerning leading
workers and the new departments to which they feel called-sometimes
with inconvenient frequency. Paragraphs that enshrine cogent fact
and argument must be prepared by the tens of thousands. Sketches
of workers of which there are thousands, must be written up in
sympathetic and intelligent characterization. Letters must be
read and replied to by thousand upon thousand. The man who wishes
to name his new brand of sausages after me must be shown reasons
why doing this would probably injure the sale. The man who inquires
about the advisability of giving his own name to his patent carpet
sweeper must be assured of the propriety of the action. The encyclopedia
editor who wishes sketches of living leaders, must be supplied
with data. The little boy who sends ten cents to the Temple Fund,
must not fail to receive a personal reply. The young worker who
wishes facts for projected speech, must be informed with the kind
consideration that becomes a veteran dealing with a new recruit.
The physician who offers an article on heredity, must be thanked.
The criticism of some department of our work by a leading editor,
must be carefully replied to. The perennially present epistle stating
'that above all things I should like to become your secretary,' must be
gently handed down the steep with the intimation that a ladder is to
be climbed one rung at a time and that per saltum is not a method
in vogue among white ribboners." |

Pictured are Lady Henry Somerset on the left, Mrs. Carse in the center, and Frances E.Willard on the right. |
Then with a sudden smile, Miss Willard said: "If
I were to continue this method of description for some days, it
would grow wearisome to you and irksome to me, but it would
not even skirmish the frontier of what is meant by eight hours
of dictation daily.
"In addition there are speeches to be written
and delivered in the evening after a full day's work. There are
endless invitations to write for the daily and weekly press. Oh,
how I envy the great vistas of influence these open. We are working
in a cause whose magic keyword is influence, and when newspapers
or periodicals having a circulation of twentyfive to two
hundred thousand urge you to send them articles on subjects intimately
connected with your life work, it is almost more than human nature
can endure to consent to lose the opportunities."
"How many hours of sleep do you find' it necessary
to secure?" I asked.
"I generally sleep eight hours; never less than
seven."
"I recall the fact that you are not a hearty
eater."
"No. I have always been a most pitiful feeder.
In that regard I am like my parents before me who appeared to
live large1y on air. Lady Henry Somerset used to say playfully:
'You always peck away like a bird that has got the wrong seed.'
But for the fact that my power of assimilation has been wellnigh
perfect, I could not have lived half as long as I have. I have
cared very little about food, indeed, very little about anything,"
she said with one of her rare smiles, "except 'the matter
in hand.'" |

MISS WILLARD AT WORK IN HER FAMOUS "DEN" IN "REST COTTAGE," EVANSTON [ILLINOIS] |
I then asked Miss Willard how much exercise she found
necessary to keep her bodily machinery in working order for the
production of her tremendous tasks.
In answer, she made the remarkable statements and
confessions which follow:
"I have been altogether too negligent in respect
to exercise. When a girl I was very outdoorsy. I did whatever
my brother did. Probably it was the energy stored up during my
twelve years on the farm in Wisconsin that gave me my leverage.
The simple habits, the reasonable dress almost wholly of flannel,
the quiet, moderate manner of life, were wonderfully invigorating.
But from the time I went away to college at eighteen years of
age, I am sorry to say that I practically ceased to exercise.
Then in the years that followed, under the depressing influence
of car air, carriage air, audience air, and house air, I gradually
succumbed. I learned the bicycle as a matter of solemn duty to
try to exercise because I felt a physical lethargy. Though I have
been so careless in this respect I have never had a pain in the
head. My mind has been perfectly clear and perfectly equal to
its duties. I think these remarkable qualities were inherited.
So far as I can learn not one of ancestors for a couple of centuries
back was a user of liquor or tobacco, or one who kept untimely
hours. All were church members on both sides as far back as I
have ever heard. I think my unusual good fortune comes from a
storing up of conserved energy by Godly ancestors. These good
people lived and behaved themselves before I ever saw the light.
I think it is the American Church and school and home that nurtured
and cherished a little wayfarer from worlds unknown, and helped
her through when she worked too hard.
"1 further believe that if with such a send
off I had been true to God's laws of differentiation in the occupations
of each day; if I had lived much under the canopy of heaven and
not in stuffy rooms; if I had remembered that nothing helps the
world so much as a wellordered individual life; that it
matters little after all what we do, but is of infinite importance
what we are; I should have rounded out the purpose of my heavenly
father as I cannot now hope to.''
"What have been the chief sources of recreation
and amusement throughout your life'?" I asked.
"In youth, I enjoyed intensely the outdoor sports
both of the boys and girls. When traveling abroad I delighted
in the constant movement, in the variety of studies I undertook,
in writing articles. I had a great fondness for music, picture
galleries and architecture, but I enjoyed most of all the changing
face of Nature and of man. As an educator, books were my delight.
They seemed to include all that I needed by way of recreation.
As a reformer, it was my wont to travel anywhere from ten to thirty
thousand miles a year. During these journeys it has been my custom
to visit places of interest, and famous institutions, when doing
so did not keep me from my duties."
"Miss Willard, the theater wields a mighty power
today, and it is mainly evil in its influence. Do you think this
great institution will ever become a force making for righteousness?"
"Reared in a Puritan home, I have never been
inside a theater a dozen times in all my life; but the other day
I went to see 'The Sign of the Cross,' for I was told by those
in whom I had the utmost confidence, that the play was a succession
of scenes illustrating the sufferings of the early Christians
under the tyrant Nero, and that no sermon could uplift the heart
toward truer loyalty to Him who gave Himself for us. Believing
as I do that my life has missed much by being shut out from the
dramatic representations of the great scenes of history and life,
and holding as I do that we Christians ought to discriminate between
good and bad dramas, I went to see 'The Sign of the Cross;' and
I frankly own it was to me a revelation of what the theatre might
do to help humanity to the heights of purity and holiness. I could
think of nothing but the Christians in Armenia, as scene after
scene passed before us, full of that same utter devotion to Christ
that they have sealed with their blood in this modern age, that
was to witness, according to the prophecies of unbelievers, the
downfall of Christianity; and as these devoted men, these saintly
women, heroic youth and maidens with their heavenly faces, passed
before us, I
saw them often through my tears, and I never felt in my life such
tender rejoicing to think that I, too, am a Christian and have
been since the sweet years of my youth. I remembered the evening
when in the old church at home I heard the invitation for those
who would confess Christ to come forward and kneel at the altar;
and if I ever thanked God for giving me courage to do so, it was
in that theatre, as I remembered how I went straight to that altar
without looking to the right or left, and though trembling so
that I could feel my heart beat as I went forward, I was saying
to myself, 'He that confesseth me before men, him will I confess
before my Father and the holy angels.'
"The drama that can rejoice a human heart and
renew its purpose, and vow still evermore to be a Christian, even
though mine be the slowest foot in the last battalion of the wonderful
militant army of Christ, is one that deserves well of all those
who bear the Christian name; and I should feel it wrong not to
make this frank admission, while I deprecate as strongly as anybody
can, much that is put forward on the stage, and only hope that
by the new discrimination constantly growing in the minds of Christian
people, we may realize ere long that which has been the hope of
the good since history began-namely, that the great heart of humanity
may find in that union of music, picture, song, and the actual
drama of life. passing before it, many of those lessons whereby
we are lifted to a holier plane, delivered from the bondage of
sense, and brought into harmony with God and His purposes of love
toward all mankind." |

FOREST HOME, WHERE THE HAPPY CHILDHOOD OF MISS WILLARD WAS PASSED. |
"When do you think any large per cent of the
plays presented to the public will partake of the uplifting character
of 'The Sign of the Cross?'"
"Alas! I am afraid that glad day will not dawn
until the era of Christian Socialism, when the theaters will be
controlled by the state."
"Oh, I am so glad you mentioned Christian Socialism,"
I exclaimed. "I wish you would give me your idea of what
it is and how it can be actualized in our country."
"It is the New Testament in action"- Miss
Willard began. But just at this point our conversation was interrupted.
That was practically the only remark I heard from the lips of
the famous reformer on this vitally important question. From other
sources, however, I have gleaned her most recent thoughts on the
subject. In a letter written to a friend not long since, Miss
Willard said:
"I believe in the things that Christian Socialism
stands for, and, were I not 'tee-totally' occupied, would go into
the movement heart and soul, as, indeed, I have done in public
utterances for many years. Oh, that I were young again, and it
should have my life! It is God's way out of the wilderness and
into the Promised Land. It is the very marrow and fatness of Christ's
Gospel. It is Christianity applied."
In her last annual address, in speaking of the colonization
scheme of Commander BoothTucker, Miss Willard declared it
is "one of the spurs of the 'delectable mountains' to which
many of our eyes are steadily lifted, and their name is Christian
Socialism, 'all for each and each for all;' the utilization
of the utmost force of this earth for the corporate benefit of
Man; the cherishing of his labor as the holiest thing alive,
and the development of individual gifts of brain, heart and hand
under the inspiration of that universal sense of brotherhood which
will be, as I believe, the perpetual tonic that will some day
render all coarser stimulants distasteful."
Again, in the same speech, she uttered this eloquent
and striking thought:
"Nothing recurs to my mind with such frequency
and joyous hopes as this soliloquy (It was with me in the quiet
woods and hills of New England; it kept time to the soft sea waves;
it twinkled in my soul when I looked up into the sky's bright
dome): 'I wonder why we don't set at work and abolish poverty
in this great generous land within the next half century. We manage
our public schools and great universities as the equal property
of all; we carry on our entire postal system, our water supply,
our parks, streets and highways in the same manner. In some countries
the railroads, telegraph and telephone lines belong to the government.
and in some cities the lighting is done by the municipality. All
this works well. In the most progressive cities tenement houses
are built to rent to wage workers, and the old rookeries where
private capital demanded the highest rents and the lowest standard
of living, are being torn down like the Bastile of old-both being
parts of the same ungodly way of dealing with that holy thing
called Life. Why should we practically give away the right to
build railroads and street car lines, to manufacture gas, erect
great public buildings, and thus farm out the people's business
to corporate groups of men? Why do we not make the money basis
of the country, not a mound of metal white or yellow, dug out
of the ground and piled up in our treasury vaults at Washington,
but the country itself with 'I promise to pay' gleaming across,
its breast from Mt. Katahdin to Mt. Shasta. Beloved comrades,
whatever subject we may talk of here, no other the wide world
over, tingles with life like this one."
On renewing the interview a few moments later, Miss
Willard gave me a number of choice gems from her jewelbox
of Christian philosophy and experience: "It is perfectly
safe to say regarding the universe, that we are just beginning
to learn our ab abs Some people intimate that I have accomplished
something, but the sense I have of absolute inadequacy is the
most painful fact of my experience. However the droll part of
it is that this consideration has never for a moment hindered
me from launching forth as if I could do things well, for I have
ever felt that not to do is to drift: to drift, is to become a
derelict: than that there is no more dreadful fate. A locomotive
has no explanation except that it goes; neither has a human being.
He is here to locomote. If he cannot do that, he is to be eaten
with rust. There is no alternative.
"A woman eighty years of age once said to
me: 'Nothing makes any difference.' By which she meant that if
our eye is fixed on God, none of these things make any
difference. The everlasting purpose of being assimilated to the
image of God is the only thing.
"One of the little lay sermons of my mother
was this: 'You will have anything you take the most pains for.'
If you take the most pains for worldly things, you will be worldly;
if for spiritual things, you will be spiritual. That phrase is
an infallible touchstone. Everyone knows what he is taking
the most pains for, and that is really what he wants."
"Finally, Miss Willard, may I ask your opinion
in regard to the meaning and the application to daily life, of
the message contained in the Book of Books?"
Musing a moment she said, with a seriousness that
showed her words came from the fullness of her life experience:
"I have had man's increment to the Scriptures
so much, that I now don't think much of it. I have gone back literally
to the simple gospel. I believe that if it should be lived just
one day, the world would pass from death unto life. Lived, not
as theology or as duty, but lived as you live Baedeker
when travelers in Italy go to the places it says to go to, and
do the things it says are to be done. If you read the New Testament
like that, you don't sit at home surrounded by luxury and pray
like a dear, kind, rich man I used to hear, when in his blessing
three times daily, he always said: 'Oh, Lord, bless those who
lack these comforts of life and feed them out of
Thy bounteous hand.' There are some hands lying around loose that
will have to do some feeding before the New Testament becomes
a text book of daily life in the sense I think it ought to be.
I do not pretend to have attained, but I have at least got the
concept of what the New Testament is for. It seems to me to be
the world's text book of the theory and practice of being a man
and a brother."
At the close of our official interview, we sat and
conversed a few minutes upon personal and current topics. Miss
Willard showed me with great pleasure a telegram just received
from the proprietor of the Empire Hotel, New York, offering her
a suite of rooms at a merely nominal cost, and saying that he
would feel highly honored to entertain such a famous guest.
"Isn't that a brotherly message," exclaimed
the reformer with enthusiasm, and then added with a touch of pride
in her voice: "He is a Chicago man. He and his wife formerly
kept a hotel in this city."
As I rose to depart and thanked Miss Willard heartily
for having given our readers such a lengthy and excellent interview,
she replied, in her inimitable manner, that it gave her pleasure
to think that she was the instrument of affording pleasure or
profit. I can still feel the fragrance of her sympathy as she
followed me to the door and bid me a cordial good night. Little
did I imagine, as I walked down the street, that my notebook
contained her last autobiographical interview
After learning of Miss Willard's death, I again called
at the home the foremost American woman had hallowed by her presence
during her last stay in Chicago.
Mrs. Lemmon related many incidents of Miss Willard's
visit with them. What surprised me most was her declaration that
Miss Willard knew well her time of departure was near. "Many
times she repeated to me these words," said her cousin, sadly:
"'The end is so near and so sweet.'' This phrase coupled
with her dying words, "How beautiful to be with God,"
shows that, for her, death was robbed of its terrors; that it
was merely a silent blossoming of her soul into the full bloom
of celestial glory. Her flight to "fairer worlds unknown,"
was almost a translation. Like Enoch of old, she walked with God,
and she was not; for God took her.
In view of Miss Willard's forewarning of her transplanetary
journey, some of her latest utterances possess peculiar interest
and significance. During one of our talks shortly before Christmas,
she spoke substantially as follows of her fiftyninth birthday
resolution: |

HOW THE GREAT LEADER LOOKED AT DIFFERENT AGES (AT 20 ON LEFT; AT 35 ON RIGHT |
"On my recent birthday, it came to me that I
could gain no truer concept of God than by holding to the presence
of Him who is the Way, Truth, and the Life; as ever tenderly smiling
on me and saying, 'Receive My spirit,' and that in the halo round
His head I saw the words, 'With what measure ye mete, it shall
be measured to you again.' 'Receive My spirit! ' That is life's
safest and most alluring voice, but there will come a day when
we shall utter those great words back again, 'Lord Jesus, receive
my spirit,' and then the mystery of life, its discipline, its
joys and grief, will end, and the glad mystery of death will work
out the transfer to other realms of the Infinite Power."
In conclusion, listen to a wonderful prophecy of
the coming ages, made by Miss Willard shortly before her decease.
It is one of a myriad of prosepoems that flowed like heavenly
symphonies from the soul of the peerless seer of womankind:
"There will be other reforms and reformers when
we are gone. Societies will be organized, and parties will divide
on the right of men to make and carry deadly weapons, dynamite
and other destructive agencies still more powerful, that human
ingenuity will yet invent. They will divide on the question of
the shambles, and there will he an army of earnest souls socially
ostracized, as we are now, because they believe that the butcher
should cease to kill and the sale of meat be placed under the
ban of law. There will be a great movement to educate the
people so that they will use neither tea, coffee nor any of the
numerous forms of anodynes and sedatives that are now tempting
millions to deterioration and death, and which will more strongly
affect the finer brain tissues of more highly developed men and
women. Long after the triumph of the temperance reform has universally
crystallized upon the statute books; long after the complete right
of woman to herself and to the unlimited exercise of all her beneficent
powers is regarded as a matter of course; long after the great
trust of humanity takes to itself the earth and, the fullness
thereof as the equal property of all, there will remain reforms
as vital as any I have mentioned, and on them the people
will group themselves in separate camps even as they do today.
And it is not improbable that the chief value of the little work
that we have tried to do on this small planet, lies in the fact
that we have been, to some extent, attempered by it, we have become
inured to contradiction, and are may be useful either in coming
invisibly to the help of those who toil in the reforms of the
future, or we may be waging battles for God upon some other star." |
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| Scanned from Our Day (Volume
18, March 1898, pp. 107-16 by Liyan Liu |
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