"The inducements to war are all for men. Woman has no part or parcel in its glory. Woman's crown from war has been a crown of thorns; her honors have been dishonors, agony and pain, her gain has been the broken heart that comes from losing everything, even hope. The fife, the drum, the flaunting pageantry of war, the tramp, tramp, tramp of hurrying feet....everyone who can march is drawn."
"And then the last honors are paid. The rhythmic tread becomes more and more indistinct, is lost in the distance; the shrill notes of the fife come only now and then; the distant roll of the drum becomes more and more faint, and then silence--awful, agonizing silence, broken only by the choking sobs of the desolate ones."
"Then comes news of battle and hope is smothered in fear. There is the trembling clutch at the newspaper that has the list of the wounded and the dead. Dim eyes try in vain to read the names. They see the one. They try to look again, the heart almost stops."
"We erect monuments to those who, we say, died for their country--gave a brief hour to gain a point for somebody in a quarrel. But to those who endured to the end of the journey, picking up and fastening the broken threads of life and making of them a fabric of utility, we have as yet given little recognition."
Taken from Alice Moore Hubbard's book Woman's Work, published in 1908. Available Bound in Limp Leather or Boards for $2.00, Alicia for $5.00, Three-Quarters Levant $10, Modeled Leather for $20 or one copy in full Levant for $125. Note these are 1908 prices, a bit more today.
We're looking for supporting members of the Roycroft Campus Corporation to continue the mission of restoring the Roycroft Campus to a working community of artisans....as if Elbert Hubbard had never left. Are you a member yet?