登陆注册
19875600000054

第54章 MILL-GIRLS'MAGAZINES(6)

And,indeed,what we wrote was not remarkable,--perhaps no more so than the usual school compositions of intelligent girls.It would hardly be worth while to refer to it particularly,had not the Lowell girls and their magazines been so frequently spoken of as something phenomenal.But it was a perfectly natural out-growth of those girls'previous life.For what were we?Girls who were working in a factory for the time,to be sure;but none of us had the least idea of continuing at that kind of work permanently.Our composite photograph,had it been taken,would have been the representative New England girlhood of those days.

We had all been fairly educated at public or private schools,and many of us were resolutely bent upon obtaining a better education.Very few were among us without some distinct plan for bettering the condition of themselves and those they loved.For the first time,our young women had come forth from their home retirement in a throng,each with her own individual purpose.

For twenty years or so,Lowell might have been looked upon as a rather select industrial school for young people.The girls there were just such girls as are knocking at the doors of young women's colleges to-day.They had come to work with their hands,but they could not hinder the working of their minds also.Their mental activity was overflowing at every possible outlet.

Many of them were supporting themselves at schools like Bradford Academy or Ipswich Seminary half the year,by working in the mills the other half.Mount Holyoke Seminary broke upon the thoughts of many of them as a vision of hope,--I remember being dazzled by it myself for a while,--and Mary Lyon's name was honored nowhere more than among the Lowell mill-girls.Meanwhile they were improving themselves and preparing for their future in every possible way,by purchasing and reading standard books,by attending lectures,and evening classes of their own getting up,and by meeting each other for reading and conversation.

That they should write was no more strange than that they should study,or read,or think.And yet there were those to whom it seemed incredible that a girl could,in the pauses of her work,put together words with her pen that it would do to print;and after a while the assertion was circulated,through some distant newspaper,that our magazine was not written by ourselves at all,but by "Lowell lawyers."This seemed almost too foolish a suggestion to contradict,but the editor of the "Offering"thought it best to give the name and occupation of some of the writers by way of refutation.It was for this reason (much against my own wish)that my real name was first attached to anything I wrote.I was then book-keeper in the cloth-room of the Lawrence Mills.We had all used any fanciful signature we chose,varying it as we pleased.After I began to read and love Wordsworth,my favorite nom de plume was "Rotha."In the later numbers of the magazine,the editor more frequently made us of my initials.One day I was surprised by seeing my name in full in Griswold's "Female Poet's;"--no great distinction,however,since there were a hundred names or so,besides.

It seemed necessary to give these gossip items about myself;but the real interest of every separate life-story is involved in the larger life-history which is going on around it.We do not know ourselves without our companions and surroundings.I cannot narrate my workmates'separate experiences,but I know that because of having lived among them,and because of having felt the beauty and power of their lives,I am different from what Ishould otherwise have been,and it is my own fault if I am not better for my life with them.

In recalling those years of my girlhood at Lowell,I often think that I knew then what real society is better perhaps than ever since.For in that large gathering together of young womanhood there were many choice natures---some of the choicest in all our excellent New England,and there were no false social standards to hold them apart.It is the best society when people meet sincerely,on the ground of their deepest sympathies and highest aspirations,without conventionality or cliques or affectation;and it was in that way that these young girls met and became acquainted with each other,almost of necessity.

There were all varieties of woman-nature among them,all degrees of refinement and cultivation,and,of course,many sharp contrasts of agreeable and disagreeable.It was not always the most cultivated,however,who were the most companionable.There were gentle,untaught girls,as fresh and simple as wild flowers,whose unpretending goodness of heart was better to have than bookishness;girls who loved everybody,and were loved by everybody.Those are the girls that I remember best,and their memory is sweet as a breeze from the clover fields.

As I recall the throngs of unknown girlish forms that used to pass and repass me on the familiar road to the mill-gates,and also the few that I knew so well,those with whom I worked,thought,read,wrote,studied,and worshiped,my thoughts send a heartfelt greeting to them all,wherever in God's beautiful,busy universe they may now be scattered:--"I am glad I have lived in the world with you!"

同类推荐
  • 台湾海防并开山日记

    台湾海防并开山日记

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说苦阴因事经

    佛说苦阴因事经

    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。
  • 湘中记

    湘中记

    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。
  • 客杭日记

    客杭日记

    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。
  • 书生初见

    书生初见

    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。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 喜你如命

    喜你如命

    爱情像一本无字书,刻着我写下的相思苦。无论什么样的身份,无论什么样的故事,于真正深爱的人而言,轰轰烈烈是沧桑,平平淡淡亦是沧桑。15个迥然不同的故事,写尽这世间种种、爱恨情仇。无论是轻狂年少时的飞扬恣意,还是悲欢尝尽后的烽火永寂,或许未完待续,才是唯一的圆满结局。
  • 赴仙令

    赴仙令

    在这三界中,传闻有一块青铜令牌可以窥探到飞仙长生的秘密。但也是因为这块令牌弄得天下战火纷争,民不聊生。仙族,人族,魔族,妖族几个种族之间为了争夺这块无上之宝,无所不用其极。而主角从一出生就背负着家族的使命,身怀青铜令牌,却不知道自己的身世.....≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡≡书友群:176968770欢迎大家进群交流,提供龙套角色
  • 绝色宠妃:纨绔六小姐

    绝色宠妃:纨绔六小姐

    她一朝惨死,无意中重生在慕容府上的六小姐慕容云舞,重生后的身体是废物,无法修炼,备受世人的嘲笑与唾弃,却有一副绝色的容颜?是废物么?无法修炼么?被世人嘲笑、唾弃么?呵呵?我倒要让看看你们的眼中废物到底是不是废物?他说“你慕容云舞生生世世都是我的妃!”“我可不想生生世世身边都带着一株烂桃花。那样会很累的?”她冷冷的说道“我可以把它想成是你在吃醋了么?”他邪魅一笑,仿佛天地都失了颜色。在此声明下,本书是作者自己想出来的,若有相似之处纯属巧合。不喜勿喷
  • 花开半世之木马情缘

    花开半世之木马情缘

    花开半世,昔人已变。薰衣草之约,他还记得吗?
  • 霸气少爷别碰我

    霸气少爷别碰我

    韩韵琳是一个女佣,小时候因为家里贫穷,父母将她卖给了一个富豪家当女佣他从小被那个富豪家的少爷欺负,从小忍气吞声,这个少爷便是冷家的大少爷冷凌风,到了冷凌风16岁时,韩韵琳变成了他的陪读女佣,和她一起上学,慢慢的时间久了,他们俩走到了一起……
  • 马克思传

    马克思传

    本书是著名经济学家萧灼基先生历三十年而完成的一部完整的马克思学术传记,全面记述了马克思一生的学术思想发展历史,并结合当时的历史背景,社会实践,对不同时期的代表作进行了新的概括和总结,资料翔实,脉络清晰,具有重要的学术价值。
  • 夜半鬼影

    夜半鬼影

    流行恐怖问题、夜深鬼影、探险盗墓……只有你想不到的,没有周智懿没经历过的。每天晚上发生的恐怖经历让周智懿再也忍不下去了,终于有一天他开始调查起这件事来……
  • 开天圣举

    开天圣举

    不指望超越鸿钧,也没想过凌驾盘古,因为神话永远是神话。不愿做超越神话的神话,只求自己所在的世界,以己为尊,以己为最,以己为至上存在。等级划分:赤元,橙元,黄元,绿元,青元,蓝元,紫元,地元,天元(共九级,每级又分为初阶、中阶、高阶及巅峰四段)
  • 一颗最闪亮的星

    一颗最闪亮的星

    那是一个飘着小雪的季节,那个小男孩姗姗而来,他不管前方有多么黑暗,总是勇敢的为自己写下:“相信自己,相信明天,相信未来”。即使我多么渺小,我都不会停下自己前进的脚步。前方或许是风雨,是湍流,是暴风雪,也许有辛酸,有无奈,有眼泪,星空告诉他,做梦还是圆梦?他老人家只喜欢执着的小男孩,小男孩望着流星划过的轨迹,那是他对月的告白。我相信月亮代表我的心。
  • 从白领到精英

    从白领到精英

    这是解决白领问题的职场宝典,是职场精英们生存的终极指南,是实现从白领到精英的必修课。本书揭示了白领光鲜亮丽的外表下,身心俱疲、困扰缠身的真实处境,并详细阐述了白领应如何解决面临的现实问题,如何实现从白领跨越到精英的梦想。