The Preceptress of the National College
appointed her daughter Wanna as a guide and instructor
to me. I formed a deep and strong attachment for
her, which, it pains me to remember, was the cause
of her unhappy fate. In stature she was above
the medium height, with a form of the fairest earthly
loveliness and exquisite grace. Her eyes were
so deep a blue, that at first I mistook them for brown.
Her hair was the color of a ripe chestnut frosted
with gold, and in length and abundance would cover
her like a garment. She was vivacious and fond
of athletic sports. Her strength amazed me.
Those beautiful hands, with their tapering fingers,
had a grip like a vise. They had discovered, in
this wonderful land, that a body possessing perfectly
developed muscles must, by the laws of nature, be
symmetrical and graceful. They rode a great deal
on small, two-wheeled vehicles, which they propelled
themselves. They gave me one on which I accompanied
Wauna to all of the places of interest in the Capital
city and vicinity.
I must mention that Wauna’s
voice was exceedingly musical, even in that land of
sweet voices, but she did not excel as a singer.
The infant schools interested me more
than all the magnificence and grandeur of the college
buildings. The quaint courtesy, gentle manners
and affectionate demeanor of the little ones toward
one another, was a surprise to me. I had visited
infant schools of my own and other countries, where
I had witnessed the display of human nature, unrestrained
by mature discretion and policy. Fights, quarrels,
kicks, screams, the unlawful seizure of toys and trinkets,
and other misdemeanors, were generally the principal
exhibits. But here it was all different.
I thought, as I looked at them, that should a philanthropist
from the outside world have chanced unknowingly upon
the playground of a Mizora infant school, he would
have believed himself in a company of little angels.
At first, a kindness so universal
impressed me as studied; a species of refined courtesy
in which the children were drilled. But time and
observation proved to me that it was the natural impulse
of the heart, an inherited trait of moral culture.
In my world, kindness and affection were family
possessions, extended occasionally to acquaintances.
Beyond this was courtesy only for the great busy bustling
mass of humanity called “the world.”
It must not be understood that there
was no variety of character in Mizora. Just as
marked a difference was to be found there as elsewhere;
but it was elevated and ennobled. Its evil tendencies
had been eliminated. There were many causes that
had made this possible. The first, and probably
the most influential, was the extreme cheapness of
living. Food and fuel were items of so small consequence,
that poverty had become unknown. Added to this,
and to me by far the most vital reason, was their
system of free education. In contemplating the
state of enlightenment to which Mizora had attained,
I became an enthusiast upon the subject of education,
and resolved, should I ever again reach the upper
world, to devote all my energies and ability to convincing
the governments of its importance. I believe
it is the duty of every government to make its schools
and colleges, and everything appertaining to education FREE.
To be always starved for knowledge is a more pitiful
craving than to hunger for bread. One dwarfs the
body; the other the mind.
The utmost care was bestowed upon
the training and education of the children. There
was nothing that I met with in that beautiful and happy
country I longed more to bring with me to the inhabitants
of my world, than their manner of rearing children.
The most scrupulous attention was paid to their diet
and exercise, both mental and physical. The result
was plump limbs, healthy, happy faces and joyous spirits.
In all the fifteen years that I spent in Mizora, I
never saw a tear of sorrow fall from children’s
eyes. Admirable sanitary regulations exist in
all the cities and villages of the land, which insures
them pure air. I may state here that every private-house
looks as carefully to the condition of its atmosphere,
as we do to the material neatness of ours.
The only intense feeling that I could
discover among these people was the love between parent
and child. I visited the theater where the tragedy
of the play was the destruction of a daughter by shipwreck
in view of the distracted mother. The scenery
was managed with wonderful realism. The thunder
of the surf as it beat upon the shore, the frightful
carnival of wind and waves that no human power could
still, and the agony of the mother watching the vessel
break to pieces upon the rock and her child sink into
the boiling water to rise no more, was thrilling beyond
my power to describe. I lost control of my feelings.
The audience wept and applauded; and when the curtain
fell, I could scarcely believe it had only been a
play. The love of Mizora women for their children
is strong and deep. They consider the care of
them a sacred duty, fraught with the noblest results
of life. A daughter of scholarly attainments
and noble character is a credit to her mother.
That selfish mother who looks upon her children as
so many afflictions is unknown to Mizora. If
a mother should ever feel her children as burdens
upon her, she would never give it expression, as any
dereliction of duty would be severely rebuked by the
whole community, if not punished by banishment.
Corporal punishment was unknown.
I received an invitation from a lady
prominent in literature and science to make her a
visit. I accepted with gratification, as it would
afford me the opportunity I coveted to become acquainted
with the domestic life of Mizora, and perhaps penetrate
its greatest mystery, for I must confess that the
singular dearth of anything and everything resembling
Man, never ceased to prey upon my curiosity.
The lady was the editor and proprietor
of the largest and most widely known scientific and
literary magazine in the country. She was the
mother of eight children, and possessed one of the
largest fortunes and most magnificent residences in
the country.
The house stood on an elevation, and
was a magnificent structure of grey granite, with
polished cornices. The porch floors were of clouded
marble. The pillars supporting its roof were round
shafts of the same material, with vines of ivy, grape
and rose winding about them, carved and colored into
perfect representations of the natural shrubs.
The drawing-room, which was vast and
imposing in size and appearance, had a floor of pure
white marble. The mantels and window-sills were
of white onyx, with delicate vinings of pink and green.
The floor was strewn with richly colored mats and
rugs. Luxurious sofas and chairs comprised the
only furniture. Each corner contained a piece
of fine statuary. From the centre of the ceiling
depended a large gold basin of beautiful design and
workmanship, in which played a miniature fountain
of perfumed water that filled the air with a delicate
fragrance. The walls were divided into panels
of polished and unpolished granite. On the unpolished
panels hung paintings of scenery. The dull, gray
color of the walls brought out in sharp and tasteful
relief the few costly and elegant adornments of the
room: a placid landscape with mountains dimly
outlining the distance. A water scene with a boat
idly drifting, occupied by a solitary figure watching
the play of variegated lights upon the tranquil waters.
Then came a wild and rugged mountain scene with precipices
and a foaming torrent. Then a concert of birds
amusingly treated.
The onyx marble mantel-piece contained
but a single ornament an orchestra.
A coral vase contained a large and perfect tiger lily,
made of gold. Each stamen supported a tiny figure
carved out of ivory, holding a musical instrument.
When they played, each figure appeared instinct with
life, like the mythical fairies of my childhood; and
the music was so sweet, yet faint, that I readily
imagined the charmed ring and tiny dancers keeping
time to its rhythm.
The drawing-room presented a vista
of arches draped in curtains of a rare texture, though
I afterward learned they were spun glass. The
one that draped the entrance to the conservatory looked
like sea foam with the faint blush of day shining
through it. The conservatory was in the shape
of a half sphere, and entirely of glass. From
its dome, more than a hundred feet above our heads,
hung a globe of white fire that gave forth a soft
clear light. Terminating, as it did, the long
vista of arches with their transparent hangings of
cobweb texture, it presented a picture of magnificence
and beauty indescribably.
The other apartments displayed the
same taste and luxury. The sitting-room contained
an instrument resembling a grand piano.
The grounds surrounding this elegant
home were adorned with natural and artificial beauties,
Grottoes, fountains, lakes, cascades, terraces of
flowers, statuary, arbors and foliage in endless variety,
that rendered it a miniature paradise. In these
grounds, darting in and out among the avenues, playing
hide-and-seek behind the statuary, or otherwise amusing
themselves, I met eight lovely children, ranging from
infancy to young maidenhood. The glowing cheeks
and eyes, and supple limbs spoke of perfect health
and happiness. When they saw their mother coming,
they ran to meet her, the oldest carrying the two-year
old baby. The stately woman greeted each with
a loving kiss. She showed in loving glance and
action how dear they all were to her. For the
time being she unbent, and became a child herself
in the interest she took in their prattle and mirth.
A true mother and happy children.
I discovered that each department
of this handsome home was under the care of a professional
artist. I remarked to my hostess that I had supposed
her home was the expression of her own taste.
“So it is,” she replied;
“but it requires an equally well educated taste
to carry out my designs. The arrangement and ornamentation
of my grounds were suggested by me, and planned and
executed by my landscape artist.”
After supper we repaired to the general
sitting-room. The eldest daughter had been deeply
absorbed in a book before we came in. She closed
and left it upon a table. I watched for an opportunity
to carelessly pick it up and examine it. It was
a novel I felt sure, for she appeared to resign it
reluctantly out of courtesy to her guest. I might,
from it, gather some clue to the mystery of the male
sex. I took up the book and opened it. It
was The Conservation of Force and The Phenomena of
Nature. I laid it down with a sigh of discomfiture.
The next evening, my hostess gave
a small entertainment, and what was my amazement,
not to say offense, to perceive the cook, the chamber-maid,
and in fact all the servants in the establishment,
enter and join in the conversation and amusement.
The cook was asked to sing, for, with the exception
of myself and I tried to conceal it no
one appeared to take umbrage at her presence.
She sat down to the piano and sang a pretty ballad
in a charming manner. Her voice was cultivated
and musical, as are all the voices in Mizora, but
it was lacking in the qualities that make a great
singer, yet it had a plaintive sweetness that was very
attractive.
I was dumbfounded at her presumption.
In my country such a thing is unknown as a servant
entertaining guests in such a capacity, and especially
among people of my rank and position in the world.
I repelled some advances she made
me with a hauteur and coldness that it mortified me
afterward to remember. Instead of being my
inferior, I was her’s, and she knew it; but
neither by look, tone nor action did she betray her
consciousness of it. I had to acknowledge that
her hands were more delicately modeled than mine,
and her bearing had a dignity and elegance that might
have been envied by the most aristocratic dame of my
own land. Knowing that the Mizora people were
peculiar in their social ideas, I essayed to repress
my indignation at the time, but later I unburdened
myself to Wauna who, with her usual sweetness and
gentleness, explained to me that her occupation was
a mere matter of choice with her.
“She is one of the most distinguished
chemists of this nation. She solved the problem
of making bread out of limestone of a much finer quality
than had been in use before.”
“Don’t tell me that you
gave me a stone when I asked for bread!” I exclaimed.
“We have not done that,”
replied Wauna; “but we have given you what you
took for bread, but which is manufactured out of limestone
and the refuse of the marble quarries.”
I looked at her in such inane astonishment
that she hastened to add:
“I will take you to one of the
large factories some day. They are always in
the mountains where the stone is abundant. You
can there see loaves by the thousands packed in great
glass tanks for shipment to the different markets.
And they do not cost the manufacturer above one centime
per hundred.”
“And what royalty does the discoverer
get for this wonder of chemistry?”
“None. Whenever anything
of that kind is discovered in our country, it is purchased
outright by the government, and then made public for
the benefit of all. The competition among manufacturers
consists in the care and exactness with which they
combine the necessary elements. There is quite
a difference in the taste and quality of our bread
as it comes from different factories.”
“Why doesn’t such a talented
person quit working in another woman’s kitchen
and keep herself like a lady?” I inquired, all
the prejudice of indolent wealth against labor coming
up in my thoughts.
“She has a taste for that kind
of work,” replied Wauna, “instead of for
making dresses, or carving gems, or painting.
She often says she could not make a straight line
if she tried, yet she can put together with such nicety
and chemical skill the elements that form an omelette
or a custard, that she has become famous. She
teaches all who desire to learn, but none seem to
equal her. She was born with a genius for cooking
and nothing else. Haven’t you seen her with
a long glass tube testing the vessels of vegetables
and fruit that were cooking?”
“Yes,” I answered.
“It was from that that I supposed her occupation
menial.”
“Visitors from other cities,”
continued Wauna, “nearly always inquire for
her first.”
Perceiving the mistake that I had
made, I ventured an apology for my behavior toward
her, and Wauna replied, with a frankness that nearly
crushed me:
“We all noticed it, but do not
fear a retaliation,” she added sweetly.
“We know that you are from a civilization that
we look back upon as one of barbarism.”
I acknowledged that if any superciliousness
existed in Mizora while I was there, I must have had
it.
The guests departed without refreshments
having been served. I explained the custom of
entertainment in my country, which elicited expressions
of astonishment. It would be insulting to offer
refreshments of any kind to a guest between the regular
hours for dining, as it would imply a desire on your
part to impair their health. Such was the explanation
of what in my country would be deemed a gross neglect
of duty. Their custom was probably the result
of two causes: an enlightened knowledge of the
laws of health, and the extreme cheapness of all luxuries
of the table which the skill of the chemist had made
available to every class of people in the land.
The word “servant” did
not exist in the language of Mizora; neither had they
an equivalent for it in the sense in which we understand
and use the word. I could not tell a servant for
I must use the word to be understood from
a professor in the National College. They were
all highly-educated, refined, lady-like and lovely.
Their occupations were always matters of choice, for,
as there was nothing in them to detract from their
social position, they selected the one they knew they
had the ability to fill. Hence those positions
we are accustomed to regard as menial, were
there filled by ladies of the highest culture and
refinement; consequently the domestic duties of a Mizora
household moved to their accomplishment with the ease
and regularity of fine machinery.
It was long before I could comprehend
the dignity they attached to the humblest vocations.
They had one proverb that embraced it all: “Labor
is the necessity of life.” I studied this
peculiar phase of Mizora life, and at last comprehended
that in this very law of social equality lay the foundation
of their superiority. Their admirable system of
adapting the mind to the vocation in which it was
most capable of excelling, and endowing that with
dignity and respect, and, at the same time, compelling
the highest mental culture possible, had produced a
nation in the enjoyment of universal refinement, and
a higher order of intelligence than any yet known
to the outside world.
The standard of an ordinary education
was to me astonishingly high. The reason for
it was easily understood when informed that the only
aristocracy of the country was that of intellect.
Scholars, artists, scientists, literateurs, all those
excelling in intellectual gifts or attainments, were
alone regarded as superiors by the masses.
In all the houses that I had visited
I had never seen a portrait hung in a room thrown
open to visitors. On inquiry, I was informed that
it was a lack of taste to make a portrait conspicuous.
“You meet faces at all times,”
said my informant, “but you cannot at all times
have a variety of scenery before you. How monotonous
it would be with a drawing-room full of women, and
the walls filled with their painted representatives.
We never do it.”
“Then where do you keep your family portraits?”
“Ours is in a gallery upstairs.”
I requested to be shown this, and
was conducted to a very long apartment on the third
floor, devoted exclusively to relics and portraits
of family ancestry. There were over three thousand
portraits of blond women, which my hostess’
daughter informed me represented her grandmothers
for ages back. Not one word did she say about
her grandfathers.
I may mention here that no word existed
in their dictionaries that was equivalent to the word
“man.” I had made myself acquainted
with this fact as soon as I had acquired sufficient
knowledge of their language. My astonishment
at it cannot be described. It was a mystery that
became more and more perplexing. Never in the
closest intimacy that I could secure could I obtain
the slightest clue, the least suggestion relating
to the presence of man. My friend’s infant,
scarcely two years old, prattled of everything but
a father.
I cannot explain a certain impressive
dignity about the women of Mizora that, in spite of
their amiability and winning gentleness, forbade a
close questioning into private affairs. My hostess
never spoke of her business. It would have been
a breach of etiquette to have questioned her about
it. I could not bring myself to intrude the question
of the marked absence of men, when not the slightest
allusion was ever made to them by any citizen.
So time passed on, confirming my high
opinion of them, and yet I knew and felt and believed
that some strange and incomprehensible mystery surrounded
them, and when I had abandoned all hope of a solution
to it, it solved itself in the most unexpected and
yet natural manner, and I was more astonished at the
solution than I was at the mystery.