Publication information |
Source: The Speaking Oak and 300 Other Tales of Life, Love and Achievement Source type: book Document type: essay Document title: “The Woman from Grimesville” Author(s): Iglehart, Ferdinand C. Publisher: Christian Herald Place of publication: New York, New York Year of publication: 1902 Pagination: 199-200 |
Citation |
Iglehart, Ferdinand C. “The Woman from Grimesville.” The Speaking Oak and 300 Other Tales of Life, Love and Achievement. New York: Christian Herald, 1902: pp. 199-200. |
Transcription |
full text of essay; excerpt of book |
Keywords |
McKinley assassination (personal response); McKinley assassination (religious response); Ida McKinley; presidential assassinations (comparison). |
Named persons |
Ida McKinley; William McKinley; Victoria. |
Document |
The Woman from Grimesville
WHILE President McKinley was lying so dangerously wounded in
Buffalo, the police and soldiers were forced to be rather strict with pedestrians
at West Ferry street and Delaware avenue, the corner nearest the Milburn house.
Down at Highland avenue, a block way [sic], was the first rope barrier. It was
there that a sweet-faced woman of sixty or seventy was stopped by the policeman.
She carried a bunch of old-fashioned garden posies, tied with a faded pink ribbon.
“You can’t go through lady,” said the officer, stepping in front of her. The
old lady stepped back trembling, and the tears began to flow, as [199][200]
she said: “Will you be so kind as to give these to Mrs. McKinley? They’re from
my own yard, and I’ve walked clear in from out near Grimesville to give them
to her with my love, and tell her that we are all praying out at Grimesville
that her husband will get well.” It was said at the Milburn house that, while
there were bouquets made of huge clusters of American Beauty roses, here and
there about the room, the bunch of old-fashioned posies from the woman at Grimesville,
who prayed for the President, had the place of honor on the dresser.
The plain, old woman with the old-fashioned flowers,
is a fair expression of the universal sympathy of the common people of this
country, and of the civilized world for Mrs. McKinley, as well as for her husband,
and the afflicted nation of which he was the head. Mrs. McKinley, though a confirmed
invalid, was brought into public notice and favor, because the President was
so devoted to her, and nursed her so tenderly. It was perfectly natural for
this plain woman, who, no doubt, had known what sorrow was herself, by her message
and offering to voice the sympathy of American womanhood. It was right for the
old-fashioned flowers to have the chief place on the dresser, for a woman’s
sympathy had gotten into their colors to enrich their beauty, and into their
odors as an incense of love.
When our two other Presidents were shot down by
the assassin’s bullet, Queen Victoria sent special messages of condolence to
their wives, and the Christian sympathy and prayers of the ruler of a great
empire, and those of the woman from Grimesville were exactly the same, and are
as beautiful flowers as have been brought from the field of heaven to bloom
in the garden of earth.
The woman not only brought her sympathy and flowers,
but the promise of her prayers. She knew that the sympathy of her poor heart,
with the best flowers she could find to emphasize it, would be so futile! But
she did know that God’s Holy Spirit could comfort her, and that the consolations
of the spirit could be secured by prayer.