Page:History of Woman Suffrage Volume 1.djvu/235

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First Worcester Convention.
217

"You do me but justice in supposing me deeply interested in the question of woman's elevation. Catherine M. Sedgwick.'

"'The new movement has my fullest sympathy, and my name is at its service. "'William Henry Channing.'

"None came with such perfect and entire fullness as the one from which I quote the closing paragraph:

"'Yes, with all my heart I give my name to your noble call.

"'Elizabeth Cady Stanton.'

"You are at liberty to append my own and my wife's name to your admirable call,

"Ann Green Phillips,
"'Wendell Phillips.'

"Rey. Samuel J. May's letter, full of the warmest sympathy, well deserves to be quoted entire, but space forbids; suffice it that we have always known just where to find him.

"'Your business is to launch new ideas — not one of them will ever be wrecked or lost. Under the dominion of these ideas, right practice must gradually take the place of wrong, and the first we shall know we shall find the social swallowing up the political, and the whole governing its parts.

"'With genuine respect, your co-worker,
"Mrs. Paulina W. Davis. Elizur Wright.'

"Letters from Gerrit Smith, Joshua R. Giddings, John G. Whittier, Ralph Waldo Emerson, A. Bronson Alcott, Caroline Kirkland, Ann Estelle Lewis, Jane G. Swisshelm, William Elder, Rev. Thomas Brainard, and many others, expressive of deep interest, are before us.

"The Convention came together in the bright October days, a solemn, earnest crowd of noble men and women.

"One great disappointment fell upon us. Margaret Fuller, toward whom many eyes were turned as the future leader in this Movement, was not with us. The 'hungry, ravening sea,' had swallowed her up, and we were left to mourn her guiding hand — her royal presence. To her, I, at least, had hoped to confide the leadership of this movement. It can never be known if she would have accepted it; the desire had been expressed to her by letter; but be that as it may, she was, and still is, a leader of thought; a position far more desirable than a leader of numbers.

"The Convention was called to order by Mrs. Sarah H. Earl,[1] of Worcester, and a permanent list of officers presented in due order, and the whole business of the Convention was conducted in a par-

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  1. Wife of John Milton Earl, editor of the Worcester Spy.