cantata
composed for the occasion and given by
the Queen's Royal Band, under the direction of a
woman--Catharine van Rennes, one of the most
distinguished composers and teachers in Holland.
She wrote both words and music of her cantata and
directed it
admirably; and the musicians of the
Queen's Band entered fully into its spirit and played
like men inspired. That night we had more music,
as well as a never-to-be-forgotten
exhibition of folk-
dancing.
The same year, in June, we held the meeting of
the International Council in Toronto, and, as Canada
has never been
eagerly interested in
suffrage, an un-
successful effort was made to
exclude this subject
from the programme. I was asked to
preside at the
suffrage meetings on the artless and
obvious theory
that I would thus be kept too busy to say much.
I had hoped that the Countess of Aberdeen, who was
the
president of the International Council, would take
the chair; but she declined to do this, or even to
speak, as the Earl of Aberdeen had recently been
appointed Viceroy of Ireland, and she desired to
spare him any
embarrassment which might be
caused by her public activities. We recognized the
wisdom of her decision, but, of course, regretted
it; and I was
therefore especially pleased when, on
suffrage night, the
countess, accompanied by her
aides in their
brilliant uniforms, entered the hall.
We had not been sure that she would be with us,
but she entered in her usual
charming and gra-
cious manner, took a seat beside me on the platform,
and showed a deep interest in the programme and
the great
gathering before us.
As the meeting went on I saw that she was grow-
ing more and more
enthusiastic, and toward the
end of the evening I quietly asked her if she did
not wish to say a few words. She said she would
say a very few. I had put myself at the end of the
programme, intending to talk about twenty minutes;
but before
beginning my speech I introduced the
countess, and by this time she was so
enthusiasticthat, to my great delight, she used up my twenty
minutes in a capital speech in which she came out
vigorously for woman
suffrage. It gave us the best
and timeliest help we could have had, and was a
great
impetus to the
movement.
In London, at the Alliance Council of 1911, we
were entertained for the first time by a
suffrageorganization of men, and by the organized actresses
of the nation, as well as by the authors.
In Stockholm, the following year, we listened to
several of the most interesting women
speakers in
the world--Selma Lagerlof, who had just received
the Nobel prize, Rosica Schwimmer of Hungary,
Dr. Augsburg of Munich, and Mrs. Philip Snowden
of England. Miss Schwimmer and Mrs. Snowden
have since become familiar to American
audiences,
but until that time I had not heard either of them,
and I was
immensely impressed by their
ability and
their different methods--Miss Schwimmer being all
force and fire, alive from her feet to her finger-tips,
Mrs. Snowden all quiet reserve and
dignity. Dr.
Augsburg wore her hair short and dressed in a most
eccentric manner; but we forgot her appearance as
we listened to her, for she was an inspired
speaker.
Selma Lagerlof's speech made the great
audienceweep. Men as well as women
openly wiped their
eyes as she described the sacrifice and
suffering of
Swedish women whose men had gone to America
to make a home there, and who, when they were
left behind, struggled alone,
waiting and hoping for
the message to join their husbands, which too often
never came. The speech made so great an impres-
sion that we had it translated and distributed among
the Swedes of the United States
wherever we held
meetings in Swedish localities.
Miss Lagerlof interested me
extremely, and I was
delighted by an
invitation to breakfast with her one
morning. At our first meeting she had seemed
rather cold and shy--a little ``difficult,'' as we say;
but when we began to talk I found her frank, cor-
dial, and full of
magnetism. She is self-conscious
about her English, but really speaks our language
very well. Her great interest at the time was in
improving the condition of the peasants near her
home. She talked of this work and of her books
and of the Council programme with such friendly in-
timacy that when we parted I felt that I had always
known her.
At the Hague Council in 1913 I was the guest of
Mrs. Richard Halter, to whom I am also indebted
for a beautiful and wonderful motor journey from
end to end of Holland, bringing up finally in Amster-
dam at the home of Dr. Aletta Jacobs. Here we
met two young Holland women, Miss Boissevain and
Rosa Manus, both
wealthy, both
anxious to help
their countrywomen, but still a little
uncertain as
to the direction of their efforts. They came to Mrs.
Catt and me and asked our advice as to what they
should do, with the result that later they organized
and put through, largely unaided, a national ex-
position showing the development of women's work
from 1813 to 1913. The
suffrage-room at this ex-
position showed the progress of
suffrage in all parts
of the world; but when the Queen of Holland visited
the building she expressed a wish not to be detained
in this room, as she was not interested in
suffrage.
The Prince Consort, however, spent much time in it,
and wanted the whole
suffragemovement explained
to him, which was done
cheerfully and thoroughly
by Miss Boissevain and Miss Manus. The fol-
lowing winter, when the Queen read her address
from the
throne, she expressed an interest in so
changing the Constitution of Holland that
suffragemight possibly be
extended to women. We felt that
this change of heart was due to the
suffrage-room
arranged by our two young friends--aided, prob-
ably, by a few words from the Prince Consort!
Immediately after these days at Amsterdam we
started for Budapest to attend the International
Alliance Convention there, and
incidentally we in-
dulged in a
series of two-day conventions en route--
one at Berlin, one at Dresden, one at Prague, and
one at Vienna. At Prague I disgraced myself by
being in my hotel room in a sleep of utter exhaustion
at the hour when I was
supposed to be responding