贝壳电子书 > 英文原著电子书 > kansas women in literature(文学中的堪萨斯女人) >

第1章

kansas women in literature(文学中的堪萨斯女人)-第1章


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!
————未阅读完?加入书签已便下次继续阅读!




                        KANSAS WOMEN IN LITERATURE 



KANSAS WOMEN IN 

          LITERATURE 



          BY NETTIE GARMER BARKER 



                                    1 


… Page 2…

                             KANSAS WOMEN IN LITERATURE 



    TO   MY   NEAREST   AND   DEAREST   MY   SILENT   PARTNERS 

MY HUSBAND AND MY MOTHER。 



    ‘‘We are proud of Kansas; the beautiful queen; And proud are we of 

her fields of corn; But a nobler pride than these I ween; Is our pride in her 

children; Kansas born!'' 

    Ellen P。 Allerton 

      Or adopted。 In this galaxy of bright women; the State has a noble 

pride for every name; be its owner Kansas born or adopted; is a mightier 

force for good than its ‘‘walls of corn。'' 



                                       2 


… Page 3…

                                 KANSAS WOMEN IN LITERATURE 



                         EFFIE GRAHAM。 



       The last place one would expect to find romance is in arithmetic and 

yetMiss Effie Graham; the head of the Department of Mathematics in the 

Topeka   High   School;   has   found   it   there   and   better   still;   in   her   lecture 

‘‘Living Arithmetic'' she has shown others the way to find it there。 Miss 

Graham is one of the most talented women of the state。 Ex…Gov。 Hoch has 

called her ‘‘one of the most gifted women in the state noted for its brilliant 

women。 Her heart and life are as pure as her mind is bright。'' 

     She   was   born   and   reared   in   Ohio;   the   daughter   of   a   family   of   Ohio 

pioneers; a descendant of a Revolutionary soldier and also; of a warrior of 

1812。 As   a  student   of   the  Ohio   Northern   University  and   later   as   a   post… 

graduate worker at the University of California; Chicago University; and 

Harvard Summer School; she has as she says; ‘‘graduated sometimes and 

has a degree but never ‘finished' her education。'' 

     Desiring to get the school out into the world as well as the world back 

to   the   school;   she   has   spoken   and   written   on   ‘‘Moving   Into   The   King 

Row;''   ‘‘Other   Peoples'   Children;''   ‘‘Spirit   of   the   Younger   Generation;'' 

‘‘Vine Versus Oak;'' and ‘‘The Larger Service。'' 

     ‘‘Pictures      Eight     Hundred      Children      Selected;''     ‘‘Speaking      of 

Automobiles;'' ‘‘The Unusual Thing;'' ‘‘The High Cost of Learning;'' and 

‘‘WantedA  Funeral   of Algebraic   Phraseology;''   also;   some   verse;   ‘‘The 

Twentieth Regiment Knight'' and ‘‘Back to God's Country'' are magazine 

work that never came back。 School Science & Mathematics; a magazine to 

which she contributes and of which she is an associate editor; gives hers as 

the only woman's name on its staff of fifty editors。 

     Her book; ‘‘The Passin' On Party;'' raises the author to the rank of a 

classic。 To quote a critic: it is ‘‘a little like ‘Mrs。 Wiggs of the Cabbage 

Patch;' a little like ‘Uncle Tom's Cabin;' but not just like either of them。 

She reaches right down into human breasts and grips the heart strings。'' 

     It is the busy people who find time to do things and the mother…heart 

of Miss Graham finds expression in her household in West Lawn; a suburb 

of   Topeka。   Among   the   members   of   her   family   are   a   niece   and   nephew 



                                             3 


… Page 4…

                                       KANSAS WOMEN IN LITERATURE 



whose High School and College education she directs。 



                                                     4 


… Page 5…

                                 KANSAS WOMEN IN LITERATURE 



                     ESTHER M。 CLARK。 



       Every Kansan; homesick in a foreign land; knows the call of Kansas 

and every Kansan book lover knows Esther Clark's ‘‘Call of Kansas。'' 

     ‘‘Sweeter to me than the salt sea spray; the fragrance of summer rains: 

Nearer my heart than these mighty hills are the wind…swept Kansas plains: 

Dearer the sight of a shy; wild rose by the roadside's dusty way Than all 

the splendor of poppy…fields ablaze in the sun of May。 

     Gay   as   the   bold   poinsetta   is;   and   the   burden   of   pepper   trees;   The 

sunflower;   tawny   and   gold   and   brown;   is   richer;   to   me;   than   these。 And 

rising   ever   above   the   song of   the hoarse;   insistent sea; The   voice   of   the 

prairie; calling; calling me。 

       Miss   Clark   was   born   in   Neosho   Co。;   Kansas;   about   twelve   miles 

southeast of Chanute; on a farm。 At seven years of age; the family moved 

to   Chanute   and   her  school   days   were   spent   at   the  old   Pioneer   Building; 

where her mother went to school before her。 In 1894; she graduated here; 

later entering the University of Kansas for work in English。 

     In   1906;   ‘‘Verses   by   a   Commonplace   Person''   was   published。   ‘‘The 

Call of Kansas and Other Verse'' came out in 1909。 This volume contained 

‘‘My Dear'' and ‘‘Good Night'' which were set to music; and ‘‘Rose O' My 

Heart。'' 

     ‘‘Rose o' my heart; to…day I send A rose or two; You love roses; Rose 

o' my heart; I love you。 

     Rose o' my heart; a rose is sweet And fresh as dew。 Some have thorns; 

but; Rose o' my heart; None have you。 

     Rose o' my heart; this day wear My roses; do! For next to my heart; 

Rose o' my heart; I wear you。'' 

       ‘‘My Dear'' was written for her baby brother; during an absence from 

home; and is Miss Clark's favorite。 

     She is in the office of the Extension Department at the University of 

Kansas; and has exclusive charge of club programs and does some work in 

package libraries。 

     Just   now   she   is   contributing   prose   to   some   of   the   newspapers   and 



                                             5 


… Page 6…

                                         KANSAS WOMEN IN LITERATURE 



doing some splendid feature work。 



                                                        6 


… Page 7…

                                 KANSAS WOMEN IN LITERATURE 



           MARY VANCE HUMPHREY。 



       Mary Vance Humphrey of Junction City; Kansas; has written a series 

of short stories on the property rights of women in Kansas; a subject that 

was and is; still; of vital importance to the women of the state。 ‘‘The Legal 

Status of Mrs。 O'Rourke'' and ‘‘King Lear in Kansas'' are two of the series。 

     When young in heart and experience; Mrs。 Humphrey wrote a number 

of poems。 Her work in later years has been only prose。 Her novel; ‘‘The 

Squatter     Sovereign''     is  an   historical   romance     of   pioneer    days;   the 

settlement of Kansas in the fifties。 

     Mrs。   Humphrey   is   one   of   the   founders   of   the   Kansas   State   Social 

Science Club and the Woman's Kansas Day Club and the founder of the 

Reading   Club of   Junction   City。  She   has   served   as   President of   the   State 

Federation   and   as   Director of   the   General   Federation   of Women's   Clubs 

and President of the Woman's Kansas Day Club。 Her work as member of 

the Board of Education has done much for Junction City and her interest 

in libraries has done equally as much for the State of Kansas。 

     Of her record as an official; Margaret Hill McCarter has written: ‘‘Her 

whole   soul   is   in   her   work。   She   is   the   genuine   metal;   shirking   nothing; 

cheapening nothing; and withal happy in the enjoyment of her obligation。 

She stands for patriotism; progress and peace。 Something of the message 

of   the   shepherds   heard   out   beyond   Bethlehem   that   Christmas   morning 

long ago sounds in the chords she strikes。'' 

     As the wife of the late Judge James Humphrey; she proved herself the 

able companion of such a worthy man。 



                                            7 


… Page 8…

                                 KANSAS WOMEN IN LITERATURE 




返回目录 下一页 回到顶部 0 0

你可能喜欢的