I had begun to feel an intense longing
to return to my own country, but it was accompanied
by a desire, equally as strong, to carry back to that
woe-burdened land some of the noble lessons and doctrines
I had learned in this. I saw no means of doing
it that seemed so available as a companion, a
being, born and bred in an atmosphere of honor and
grandly humane ideas and actions.
My heart and my judgment turned to
Wauna. She was endeared to me by long and gentle
association. She was self-reliant and courageous,
and possessed a strong will. Who, of all my Mizora
acquaintances, was so well adapted to the service
I required.
When I broached the subject to her,
Wauna expressed herself as really pleased with the
idea; but when we went to the Preceptress, she acknowledged
a strong reluctance to the proposition. She said:
“Wauna can form no conception
of the conditions of society in your country.
They are far, very far, behind our own. They will,
I fear, chafe her own nature more than she can improve
theirs. Still, if I thought she could lead your
people into a broader intelligence, and start them
on the way upward to enlightenment and real happiness,
I would let her go. The moment, however, that
she desires to return she must be aided to do so.”
I pledged myself to abide by any request
the Preceptress might make of me. Wauna’s
own inclinations greatly influenced her mother, and
finally we obtained her consent. Our preparations
were carefully made. The advanced knowledge of
chemistry in Mizora placed many advantages in our
way. Our boat was an ingenious contrivance with
a thin glass top that could be removed and folded
away until needed to protect us from the rigors of
the Arctic climate.
I had given an accurate description
of the rapids that would oppose us, and our boat was
furnished with a motive power sufficient to drive us
through them at a higher rate of speed than what they
moved at. It was built so as to be easily converted
into a sled, and runners were made that could be readily
adjusted. We were provided with food and clothing
prepared expressly for the severe change to and rigors
of the Arctic climate through which we must pass.
I was constantly dreading the terrors
of that long ice-bound journey, but the Preceptress
appeared to be little concerned about it. When
I spoke of its severities, she said for us to observe
her directions, and we should not suffer. She
asked me if I had ever felt uncomfortable in any of
the air-ship voyages I had taken, and said that the
cold of the upper regions through which I had passed
in their country was quite as intense as any I could
meet within a lower atmosphere of my own.
The newspapers had a great deal to
say about the departure of the Preceptress’
daughter on so uncertain a mission, and to that strange
land of barbarians which I represented. When the
day arrived for our departure, immense throngs of
people from all parts of the country lined the shore,
or looked down upon us from their anchored air-ships.
The last words of farewell had been
spoken to my many friends and benefactors. Wauna
had bidden a multitude of associates good-bye, and
clasped her mother’s hand, which she held until
the boat parted from the shore. Years have passed
since that memorable parting, but the look of yearning
love in that Mizora mother’s eyes haunts me still.
Long and vainly has she watched for a boat’s
prow to cleave that amber mist and bear to her arms
that vision of beauty and tender love I took away from
her. My heart saddens at the thought of her grief
and long, long waiting that only death will end.
We pointed the boat’s prow toward
the wide mysterious circle of amber mists, and then
turned our eyes for a last look at Mizora. Wauna
stood silent and calm, earnestly gazing into the eyes
of her mother, until the shore and the multitude of
fair faces faded like a vision of heaven from our
views.
“O beautiful Mizora!”
cried the voice of my heart. “Shall I ever
again see a land so fair, where natures so noble and
aims so lofty have their abiding place? Memory
will return to you though my feet may never again
tread your delightful shores. Farewell, sweet
ideal land of my Soul, of Humanity, farewell!”
My thoughts turned to that other world
from which I had journeyed so long. Would the
time ever come when it, too, would be a land of universal
intelligence and happiness? When the difference
of nations would be settled by argument instead of
battle? When disease, deformity and premature
death would be unknown? When locks, and bolts
and bars would be useless?
I hoped so much from the personal
influence of Wauna. So noble, so utterly unconscious
of wrong, she must surely revolutionize human nature
whenever it came in contact with her own.
I pictured to myself my own dear land dear,
despite its many phases of wretchedness smiling
in universal comfort and health. I imagined its
political prisons yawning with emptiness, while their
haggard and decrepit and sorrowful occupants hobbled
out into the sunshine of liberty, and the new life
we were bringing to them. Fancy flew abroad on
the wings of hope, dropping the seeds of progress wherever
it passed.
The poor should be given work, and
justly paid for it, instead of being supported by
charity. The charity that had fostered indolence
in its mistaken efforts to do good, should be employed
to train poverty to skillful labor and economy in
living. And what a world of good that one measure
would produce! The poor should possess exactly
the same educational advantages that were supplied
to the rich. In this one measure, if I
could only make it popular, I would see the golden
promise of the future of my country. “Educate
your poor and they will work out their own salvation.
Educated Labor can dictate its rights to Capital.”
How easy of accomplishment it all
seemed to me, who had seen the practical benefits
arising to a commonwealth that had adopted these mottoes.
I doubted not that the wiser and better of my own people
would aid and encourage me. Free education would
lead to other results.
Riches should be accumulated only
by vast and generous industries that reached a helping
hand to thousands of industrious poor, instead of
grinding them out of a few hundred of poorly-paid and
over-worked artisans. Education in the hands
of the poor would be a powerful agent with which they
would alleviate their own condition, and defend themselves
against oppression and knavery.
The prisons should be supplied with
schools as well as work-rooms, where the intellect
should be trained and cultivated, and where moral idiocy,
by the stern and rigorous law of Justice to Innocence,
should be forced to deny itself posterity.
No philanthropical mind ever spread
the wings of its fancy for a broader flight.