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Thoughts/Gertrude Mary Bird
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A Little book of Gertrude Bird's 1942
From Gertrude to her daughter Lilian
Ella Wheeler Wilcox 1850 - 1919
Two poems found in a book Gertrude gave to Thalia
Woman
Give us that grand word woman once again,
And lets have done with lady: ones a term
Full of fine force, strong, beautiful, and firm,
Fit for the noblest use of tongue or pen;
And ones a word for lackeys. One suggests
The Mother, Wife, and Sister! One the dame
Whose costly robe, mayhap, gives her the name,
One word upon its own strength leans and rests;
The other minces tiptoe. Who would be
The perfect woman must grow brave of heart
And broad of soul to play her troubled part
Well in lifes drama. While each day we see
The perfect lady skilled in what to do
And what to say, grace in each tone and act
(Tis taught in schools, but needs some native tact) ,
Yet narrow in her mind as in her shoe.
Give the first place then to the nobler phrase,
And leave the lesser word for lesser praise.
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
Woman And War
We women teach our little sons how wrong
And how ignoble blows are; school and church
Support our precepts and inoculate
The growing minds with thoughts of love and peace.
Let dogs delight to bark and bite, we say;
But human beings with immortal souls
Must rise above the methods of the brute
And walk with reason and with self-control.
And then dear God! you men, you wise, strong men,
Our self-announced superiors in brain,
Our peers in judgement, you go forth to war!
You leap at one another, mutilate
And starve and kill your fellow men, and ask
The worlds applause for such heroic deeds.
You boast and strut; and if no song is sung,
No laudatory epic writ in blood,
Telling how many widows you have made,
Why then, penforce, you say our bards are dead
And inspiration sleeps to wake no more.
And we, the women, we whose lives you are
What can we do but sit in silent homes
And wait and suffer? Not for us the blare
Of trumpets and the bugles call to arms
For us no waving banners, no supreme,
Triumphant hour of conquest. Ours the slow
Dread torture of uncertainty, each day
The bootless battle with the same despair.
And when at best your victories reach our ears,
There reaches with them to our pitying hearts
The thought of countless homes made desolate
And other women weeping for their dead.
O men, wise men, superior beings, say,
Is there no substitute for war in this
Great age and ere? If you answer No
Then let us rear our children to be wolves
And teach them from the cradle how to kill.
Why should we women take waste our time and work
In talking peace, when men declare for war?
Ella Wheeler Wilcox
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