It's not humanity dying—it is humanity going
mad!"
She was shivering again, that black horror growing in her
eyes.
"Gently dear, gently," I told her. Humanity is a large
proposition. You and I have a whole round world to visit—as soon as
it is safe to travel. And in the meantime I want to get you to my
country as soon as possible. We are not at war. Our people are
goodnatured and friendly. I think you'll like us."
It was not unnatural for an American, in war-mad Europe, to
think of his own land with warm approval, nor for a husband to want
his wife to appreciate his people and his country.
"You must tell me more about it," she said eagerly. "I must read
more too—study more. I do not do justice to the difference, I am
sure. I am judging the world only by Europe. And see here, my
darling—do you mind if we see the rest first? I want to know The
World as far as I can, and as quickly as I can. I'm sure that if I
study first for awhile, in England—they seem so familar with all
the world—that we might then go east instead of west, and see the
rest of it before we reach America— leave the best to the
last."
Except for the danger of traveling there seemed no great
objection to this plan. I would rather have her make her brief tour
and then return with me to my own dear country at the end, than to
have her uneasy there and planning to push on.
We went back to a quiet place in England, where we could
temporarily close our minds to the Horror, and Ellador, with
unerring judgment, found an encyclopedic young historian with the
teaching gift, and engaged his services for a time.
They had a series of maps—from old blank "terra incognita" ones,
with its bounding ocean of ancient times, to the spread of accurate
surveying which now gives us the whole surface of the earth. She
kissed the place where her little homeland lay hidden—but that was
when he was not looking.
The rapid grasp she made at the whole framework of our history
would have astonished anyone not acquainted with Herland brains and
Herland methods of education. It did astonish the young historian.
She by no means set herself to learn all that he wanted to teach
her; on the contrary she continually checked his flow of
information, receiving only what she wanted to know.
A very few good books on world evolution—geological, botanical,
zoological, and ethnic, gave her the background she needed, and
such a marvel of condensation as Winwood Reade's Martydom of Man
supplied the outline of history.
Her own clear strong uncrowded and logical mind, with its
child-fresh memory, saw, held and related the facts she learned,
with no apparent effort. Presently she had a distinct view of what
we people have been up to on earth for the few ages of our
occupancy. She had her estimate of time taken and of the rate of
our increased speed. I had never realized how long, how
immeasurably long and slow, were the years "before progress," so to
speak, or the value of each great push of new invention. But she
got them all clearly in place, and, rigidly refusing to be again
agonized by the ceaseless wars, she found eager joy in counting the
upward steps of social evolution.
This joy increased as the ages came nearer to our own. She
became fascinated with the record of inventions and discoveries and
their interrelative effects. Each great religion as it entered, was
noted, defined in its special power and weakness, and its
consequences observed. She made certain map effects for herself,
"washing in" the different areas with various colors, according to
the different religions, and lapping them over where they had
historically lapped, as for instance, where the "mafiana" of the
Spaniard marks the influence following Oriental invasion, and where
Buddhism produces such and such effects according to its reception
by Hindu, Chinese, or Japanese.
"I could spend a lifetime in these details," she eagerly
explained again, "but I'm only after enough to begin on. I must get
them placed—so that I can understand what each nation is for, what
they have done for one another, and for the world; which of them
are going on, and how fast; which of them are stopping—or sinking
back—and why. It is profoundly interesting."
Ellador's attitude vaguely nettled me, just a little, in that
earlier consciousness I was really outgrowing so fast. She seemed
like an enthusiastic young angel "slumming." I resented—a
little—this cheerful and relentless classification—just as poor
persons resent being treated as "cases."
But I knew she was right after all, and was more than delighted
to have her so soon triumph over the terrible influence of the war.
She did not, of course, wholly escape or forget it. Who could? But
she successfully occupied her mind with other matters.
"It's so funny," she said to me. "Here in all your history
books, the whole burden of information is as to who fought who—and
when; and who 'reigned' and when—especially when. Why are your
historians so morbidly anxious about the exact dat^?"
"Why it's important, isn't it?" I asked.
"From certain points of view, yes; but not in the least from
that of the general student. The doctor wants to know at just what
hour the fever rises, or declines; he has to have his 'chart' to
study. But the public ought to know how fever is induced and how it
is to be avoided.
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