As to how my address at Atlanta was
received by the audience in the Exposition building,
I think I prefer to let Mr. James Creelman, the noted
war correspondent, tell. Mr. Creelman was present,
and telegraphed the following account to the New York
World:—
Atlanta, September 18.
While President Cleveland was waiting
at Gray Gables to-day, to send the electric spark
that started the machinery of the Atlanta Exposition,
a Negro Moses stood before a great audience of white
people and delivered an oration that marks a new epoch
in the history of the South; and a body of Negro troops
marched in a procession with the citizen soldiery
of Georgia and Louisiana. The whole city is thrilling
to-night with a realization of the extraordinary significance
of these two unprecedented events. Nothing has
happened since Henry Grady’s immortal speech
before the New England society in New York that indicates
so profoundly the spirit of the New South, except,
perhaps, the opening of the Exposition itself.
When Professor Booker T. Washington,
Principal of an industrial school for coloured people
in Tuskegee, Ala. stood on the platform of the Auditorium,
with the sun shining over the heads of his auditors
into his eyes, and with his whole face lit up with
the fire of prophecy, Clark Howell, the successor of
Henry Grady, said to me, “That man’s speech
is the beginning of a moral revolution in America.”
It is the first time that a Negro
has made a speech in the South on any important occasion
before an audience composed of white men and women.
It electrified the audience, and the response was
as if it had come from the throat of a whirlwind.
Mrs. Thompson had hardly taken her
seat when all eyes were turned on a tall tawny Negro
sitting in the front row of the platform. It
was Professor Booker T. Washington, President of the
Tuskegee (Alabama) Normal and Industrial Institute,
who must rank from this time forth as the foremost
man of his race in America. Gilmore’s Band
played the “Star-Spangled Banner,” and
the audience cheered. The tune changed to “Dixie”
and the audience roared with shrill “hi-yis.”
Again the music changed, this time to “Yankee
Doodle,” and the clamour lessened.
All this time the eyes of the thousands
present looked straight at the Negro orator.
A strange thing was to happen. A black man was
to speak for his people, with none to interrupt him.
As Professor Washington strode to the edge of the
stage, the low, descending sun shot fiery rays through
the windows into his face. A great shout greeted
him. He turned his head to avoid the blinding
light, and moved about the platform for relief.
Then he turned his wonderful countenance to the sun
without a blink of the eyelids, and began to talk.
There was a remarkable figure; tall,
bony, straight as a Sioux chief, high forehead, straight
nose, heavy jaws, and strong, determined mouth, with
big white teeth, piercing eyes, and a commanding manner.
The sinews stood out on his bronzed neck, and his
muscular right arm swung high in the air, with a lead-pencil
grasped in the clinched brown fist. His big feet
were planted squarely, with the heels together and
the toes turned out. His voice range out clear
and true, and he paused impressively as he made each
point. Within ten minutes the multitude was in
an uproar of enthusiasm—handkerchiefs were
waved, canes were flourished, hats were tossed in
the air. The fairest women of Georgia stood up
and cheered. It was as if the orator had bewitched
them.
And when he held his dusky hand high
above his head, with the fingers stretched wide apart,
and said to the white people of the South on behalf
of his race, “In all things that are purely
social we can be as separate as the fingers, yet one
as the hand in all things essential to mutual progress,”
the great wave of sound dashed itself against the
walls, and the whole audience was on its feet in a
delirium of applause, and I thought at that moment
of the night when Henry Grady stood among the curling
wreaths of tobacco-smoke in Delmonico’s banquet-hall
and said, “I am a Cavalier among Roundheads.”
I have heard the great orators of
many countries, but not even Gladstone himself could
have pleased a cause with most consummate power than
did this angular Negro, standing in a nimbus of sunshine,
surrounded by the men who once fought to keep his race
in bondage. The roar might swell ever so high,
but the expression of his earnest face never changed.
A ragged, ebony giant, squatted on
the floor in one of the aisles, watched the orator
with burning eyes and tremulous face until the supreme
burst of applause came, and then the tears ran down
his face. Most of the Negroes in the audience
were crying, perhaps without knowing just why.
At the close of the speech Governor
Bullock rushed across the stage and seized the orator’s
hand. Another shout greeted this demonstration,
and for a few minutes the two men stood facing each
other, hand in hand.
So far as I could spare the time from
the immediate work at Tuskegee, after my Atlanta address,
I accepted some of the invitations to speak in public
which came to me, especially those that would take
me into territory where I thought it would pay to
plead the cause of my race, but I always did this with
the understanding that I was to be free to talk about
my life-work and the needs of my people. I also
had it understood that I was not to speak in the capacity
of a professional lecturer, or for mere commercial
gain.
In my efforts on the public platform
I never have been able to understand why people come
to hear me speak. This question I never can rid
myself of. Time and time again, as I have stood
in the street in front of a building and have seen
men and women passing in large numbers into the audience
room where I was to speak, I have felt ashamed that
I should be the cause of people—as it seemed
to me—wasting a valuable hour of their
time. Some years ago I was to deliver an address
before a literary society in Madison, Wis. An
hour before the time set for me to speak, a fierce
snow-storm began, and continued for several hours.
I made up my mind that there would be no audience,
and that I should not have to speak, but, as a matter
of duty, I went to the church, and found it packed
with people. The surprise gave me a shock that
I did not recover from during the whole evening.
People often ask me if I feel nervous
before speaking, or else they suggest that, since
I speak often, they suppose that I get used to it.
In answer to this question I have to say that I always
suffer intensely from nervousness before speaking.
More than once, just before I was to make an important
address, this nervous strain has been so great that
I have resolved never again to speak in public.
I not only feel nervous before speaking, but after
I have finished I usually feel a sense of regret, because
it seems to me as if I had left out of my address the
main thing and the best thing that I had meant to
say.
There is a great compensation, though,
for this preliminary nervous suffering, that comes
to me after I have been speaking for about ten minutes,
and have come to feel that I have really mastered
my audience, and that we have gotten into full and
complete sympathy with each other. It seems to
me that there is rarely such a combination of mental
and physical delight in any effort as that which comes
to a public speaker when he feels that he has a great
audience completely within his control. There
is a thread of sympathy and oneness that connects
a public speaker with his audience, that is just as
strong as though it was something tangible and visible.
If in an audience of a thousand people there is one
person who is not in sympathy with my views, or is
inclined to be doubtful, cold, or critical, I can pick
him out. When I have found him I usually go straight
at him, and it is a great satisfaction to watch the
process of his thawing out. I find that the most
effective medicine for such individuals is administered
at first in the form of a story, although I never
tell an anecdote simply for the sake of telling one.
That kind of thing, I think, is empty and hollow,
and an audience soon finds it out.
I believe that one always does himself
and his audience an injustice when he speaks merely
for the sake of speaking. I do not believe that
one should speak unless, deep down in his heart, he
feels convinced that he has a message to deliver.
When one feels, from the bottom of his feet to the
top of his head, that he has something to say that
is going to help some individual or some cause, then
let him say it; and in delivering his message I do
not believe that many of the artificial rules of elocution
can, under such circumstances, help him very much.
Although there are certain things, such as pauses,
breathing, and pitch of voice, that are very important,
none of these can take the place of soul in an address.
When I have an address to deliver, I like to forget
all about the rules for the proper use of the English
language, and all about rhetoric and that sort of thing,
and I like to make the audience forget all about these
things, too.
Nothing tends to throw me off my balance
so quickly, when I am speaking, as to have some one
leave the room. To prevent this, I make up my
mind, as a rule, that I will try to make my address
so interesting, will try to state so many interesting
facts one after another, that no one can leave.
The average audience, I have come to believe, wants
facts rather than generalities or sermonizing.
Most people, I think, are able to draw proper conclusions
if they are given the facts in an interesting form
on which to base them.
As to the kind of audience that I
like best to talk to, I would put at the top of the
list an organization of strong, wide-awake, business
men, such, for example, as is found in Boston, New
York, Chicago, and Buffalo. I have found no other
audience so quick to see a point, and so responsive.
Within the last few years I have had the privilege
of speaking before most of the leading organizations
of this kind in the large cities of the United States.
The best time to get hold of an organization of business
men is after a good dinner, although I think that one
of the worst instruments of torture that was ever
invented is the custom which makes it necessary for
a speaker to sit through a fourteen-course dinner,
every minute of the time feeling sure that his speech
is going to prove a dismal failure and disappointment.
I rarely take part in one of these
long dinners that I do not wish that I could put myself
back in the little cabin where I was a slave boy,
and again go through the experience there—one
that I shall never forget—of getting molasses
to eat once a week from the “big house.”
Our usual diet on the plantation was corn bread and
pork, but on Sunday morning my mother was permitted
to bring down a little molasses from the “big
house” for her three children, and when it was
received how I did wish that every day was Sunday!
I would get my tin plate and hold it up for the sweet
morsel, but I would always shut my eyes while the molasses
was being poured out into the plate, with the hope
that when I opened them I would be surprised to see
how much I had got. When I opened my eyes I would
tip the plate in one direction and another, so as
to make the molasses spread all over it, in the full
belief that there would be more of it and that it would
last longer if spread out in this way. So strong
are my childish impressions of those Sunday morning
feasts that it would be pretty hard for any one to
convince me that there is not more molasses on a plate
when it is spread all over the plate than when it
occupies a little corner—if there is a corner
in a plate. At any rate, I have never believed
in “cornering” syrup. My share of
the syrup was usually about two tablespoonfuls, and
those two spoonfuls of molasses were much more enjoyable
to me than is a fourteen-course dinner after which
I am to speak.
Next to a company of business men,
I prefer to speak to an audience of Southern people,
of either race, together or taken separately.
Their enthusiasm and responsiveness are a constant
delight. The “amens” and “dat’s
de truf” that come spontaneously from the coloured
individuals are calculated to spur any speaker on
to his best efforts. I think that next in order
of preference I would place a college audience.
It has been my privilege to deliver addresses at many
of our leading colleges including Harvard, Yale, Williams,
Amherst, Fisk University, the University of Pennsylvania,
Wellesley, the University of Michigan, Trinity College
in North Carolina, and many others.
It has been a matter of deep interest
to me to note the number of people who have come to
shake hands with me after an address, who say that
this is the first time they have ever called a Negro
“Mister.”
When speaking directly in the interests
of the Tuskegee Institute, I usually arrange, some
time in advance, a series of meetings in important
centres. This takes me before churches, Sunday-schools,
Christian Endeavour Societies, and men’s and
women’s clubs. When doing this I sometimes
speak before as many as four organizations in a single
day.
Three years ago, at the suggestion
of Mr. Morris K. Jessup, of New York, and Dr. J.L.M.
Curry, the general agent of the fund, the trustees
of the John F. Slater Fund voted a sum of money to
be used in paying the expenses of Mrs. Washington and
myself while holding a series of meetings among the
coloured people in the large centres of Negro population,
especially in the large cities of the ex-slaveholding
states. Each year during the last three years
we have devoted some weeks to this work. The plan
that we have followed has been for me to speak in the
morning to the ministers, teachers, and professional
men. In the afternoon Mrs. Washington would speak
to the women alone, and in the evening I spoke to
a large mass-meeting. In almost every case the
meetings have been attended not only by the coloured
people in large numbers, but by the white people.
In Chattanooga, Tenn., for example, there was present
at the mass-meeting an audience of not less than three
thousand persons, and I was informed that eight hundred
of these were white. I have done no work that
I really enjoyed more than this, or that I think has
accomplished more good.
These meetings have given Mrs. Washington
and myself an opportunity to get first-hand, accurate
information as to the real condition of the race,
by seeing the people in their homes, their churches,
their Sunday-schools, and their places of work, as
well as in the prisons and dens of crime. These
meetings also gave us an opportunity to see the relations
that exist between the races. I never feel so
hopeful about the race as I do after being engaged
in a series of these meetings. I know that on
such occasions there is much that comes to the surface
that is superficial and deceptive, but I have had
experience enough not to be deceived by mere signs
and fleeting enthusiasms. I have taken pains
to go to the bottom of things and get facts, in a
cold, business-like manner.
I have seen the statement made lately,
by one who claims to know what he is talking about,
that, taking the whole Negro race into account, ninety
per cent of the Negro women are not virtuous.
There never was a baser falsehood uttered concerning
a race, or a statement made that was less capable
of being proved by actual facts.
No one can come into contact with
the race for twenty years, as I have done in the heart
of the South, without being convinced that the race
is constantly making slow but sure progress materially,
educationally, and morally. One might take up
the life of the worst element in New York City, for
example, and prove almost anything he wanted to prove
concerning the white man, but all will agree that
this is not a fair test.
Early in the year 1897 I received
a letter inviting me to deliver an address at the
dedication of the Robert Gould Shaw monument in Boston.
I accepted the invitation. It is not necessary
for me, I am sure, to explain who Robert Gould Shaw
was, and what he did. The monument to his memory
stands near the head of the Boston Common, facing
the State House. It is counted to be the most
perfect piece of art of the kind to be found in the
country.
The exercises connected with the dedication
were held in Music Hall, in Boston, and the great
hall was packed from top to bottom with one of the
most distinguished audiences that ever assembled in
the city. Among those present were more persons
representing the famous old anti-slavery element that
it is likely will ever be brought together in the
country again. The late Hon. Roger Wolcott, then
Governor of Massachusetts, was the presiding officer,
and on the platform with him were many other officials
and hundreds of distinguished men. A report of
the meeting which appeared in the Boston Transcript
will describe it better than any words of mine could
do:—
The core and kernel of yesterday’s
great noon meeting, in honour of the Brotherhood of
Man, in Music Hall, was the superb address of the
Negro President of Tuskegee. “Booker T.
Washington received his Harvard A.M. last June, the
first of his race,” said Governor Wolcott, “to
receive an honorary degree from the oldest university
in the land, and this for the wise leadership of his
people.” When Mr. Washington rose in the
flag-filled, enthusiasm-warmed, patriotic, and glowing
atmosphere of Music Hall, people felt keenly that
here was the civic justification of the old abolition
spirit of Massachusetts; in his person the proof of
her ancient and indomitable faith; in his strong through
and rich oratory, the crown and glory of the old war
days of suffering and strife. The scene was full
of historic beauty and deep significance. “Cold”
Boston was alive with the fire that is always hot
in her heart for righteousness and truth. Rows
and rows of people who are seldom seen at any public
function, whole families of those who are certain
to be out of town on a holiday, crowded the place
to overflowing. The city was at her birthright
fete in the persons of hundreds of her best citizens,
men and women whose names and lives stand for the
virtues that make for honourable civic pride.
Battle-music had filled the air.
Ovation after ovation, applause warm and prolonged,
had greeted the officers and friends of Colonel Shaw,
the sculptor, St. Gaudens, the memorial Committee,
the Governor and his staff, and the Negro soldiers
of the Fifty-fourth Massachusetts as they came upon
the platform or entered the hall. Colonel Henry
Lee, of Governor Andrew’s old staff, had made
a noble, simple presentation speech for the committee,
paying tribute to Mr. John M. Forbes, in whose stead
he served. Governor Wolcott had made his short,
memorable speech, saying, “Fort Wagner marked
an epoch in the history of a race, and called it into
manhood.” Mayor Quincy had received the
monument for the city of Boston. The story of
Colonel Shaw and his black regiment had been told
in gallant words, and then, after the singing of
Mine eyes have seen the glory
Of the coming of the Lord,
Booker Washington arose. It was,
of course, just the moment for him. The multitude,
shaken out of its usual symphony-concert calm, quivered
with an excitement that was not suppressed. A
dozen times it had sprung to its feet to cheer and
wave and hurrah, as one person. When this man
of culture and voice and power, as well as a dark
skin, began, and uttered the names of Stearns and
of Andrew, feeling began to mount. You could see
tears glisten in the eyes of soldiers and civilians.
When the orator turned to the coloured soldiers on
the platform, to the colour-bearer of Fort Wagner,
who smilingly bore still the flag he had never lowered
even when wounded, and said, “To you, to the
scarred and scattered remnants of the Fifty-fourth,
who, with empty sleeve and wanting leg, have honoured
this occasion with your presence, to you, your commander
is not dead. Though Boston erected no monument
and history recorded no story, in you and in the loyal
race which you represent, Robert Gould Shaw would have
a monument which time could not wear away,” then
came the climax of the emotion of the day and the
hour. It was Roger Wolcott, as well as the Governor
of Massachusetts, the individual representative of
the people’s sympathy as well as the chief magistrate,
who had sprung first to his feet and cried, “Three
cheers to Booker T. Washington!”
Among those on the platform was Sergeant
William H. Carney, of New Bedford, Mass., the brave
coloured officer who was the colour-bearer at Fort
Wagner and held the American flag. In spite of
the fact that a large part of his regiment was killed,
he escape, and exclaimed, after the battle was over,
“The old flag never touched the ground.”
This flag Sergeant Carney held in
his hands as he sat on the platform, and when I turned
to address the survivors of the coloured regiment
who were present, and referred to Sergeant Carney,
he rose, as if by instinct, and raised the flag.
It has been my privilege to witness a good many satisfactory
and rather sensational demonstrations in connection
with some of my public addresses, but in dramatic
effect I have never seen or experienced anything which
equalled this. For a number of minutes the audience
seemed to entirely lose control of itself.
In the general rejoicing throughout
the country which followed the close of the Spanish-American
war, peace celebrations were arranged in several of
the large cities. I was asked by President William
R. Harper, of the University of Chicago, who was chairman
of the committee of invitations for the celebration
to be held in the city of Chicago, to deliver one
of the addresses at the celebration there. I
accepted the invitation, and delivered two addresses
there during the Jubilee week. The first of these,
and the principal one, was given in the Auditorium,
on the evening of Sunday, October 16. This was
the largest audience that I have ever addressed, in
any part of the country; and besides speaking in the
main Auditorium, I also addressed, that same evening,
two overflow audiences in other parts of the city.
It was said that there were sixteen
thousand persons in the Auditorium, and it seemed
to me as if there were as many more on the outside
trying to get in. It was impossible for any one
to get near the entrance without the aid of a policeman.
President William McKinley attended this meeting,
as did also the members of his Cabinet, many foreign
ministers, and a large number of army and navy officers,
many of whom had distinguished themselves in the war
which had just closed. The speakers, besides myself,
on Sunday evening, were Rabbi Emil G. Hirsch, Father
Thomas P. Hodnett, and Dr. John H. Barrows.
The Chicago Times-Herald, in describing
the meeting, said of my address:—
He pictured the Negro choosing slavery
rather than extinction; recalled Crispus Attucks shedding
his blood at the beginning of the American Revolution,
that white Americans might be free, while black Americans
remained in slavery; rehearsed the conduct of the
Negroes with Jackson at New Orleans; drew a vivid and
pathetic picture of the Southern slaves protecting
and supporting the families of their masters while
the latter were fighting to perpetuate black slavery;
recounted the bravery of coloured troops at Port Hudson
and Forts Wagner and Pillow, and praised the heroism
of the black regiments that stormed El Caney and Santiago
to give freedom to the enslaved people of Cuba, forgetting,
for the time being, the unjust discrimination that
law and custom make against them in their own country.
In all of these things, the speaker
declared, his race had chosen the better part.
And then he made his eloquent appeal to the consciences
of the white Americans: “When you have gotten
the full story or the heroic conduct of the Negro
in the Spanish-American war, have heard it from the
lips of Northern soldier and Southern soldier, from
ex-abolitionist and ex-masters, then decide within
yourselves whether a race that is thus willing to die
for its country should not be given the highest opportunity
to live for its country.”
The part of the speech which seems
to arouse the wildest and most sensational enthusiasm
was that in which I thanked the President for his
recognition of the Negro in his appointments during
the Spanish-American war. The President was sitting
in a box at the right of the stage. When I addressed
him I turned toward the box, and as I finished the
sentence thanking him for his generosity, the whole
audience rose and cheered again and again, waving
handkerchiefs and hats and canes, until the President
arose in the box and bowed his acknowledgements.
At that the enthusiasm broke out again, and the demonstration
was almost indescribable.
One portion of my address at Chicago
seemed to have been misunderstood by the Southern
press, and some of the Southern papers took occasion
to criticise me rather strongly. These criticisms
continued for several weeks, until I finally received
a letter from the editor of the Age-Herald, published
in Birmingham, Ala., asking me if I would say just
what I meant by this part of the address. I replied
to him in a letter which seemed to satisfy my critics.
In this letter I said that I had made it a rule never
to say before a Northern audience anything that I
would not say before an audience in the South.
I said that I did not think it was necessary for me
to go into extended explanations; if my seventeen
years of work in the heart of the South had not been
explanation enough, I did not see how words could
explain. I said that I made the same plea that
I had made in my address at Atlanta, for the blotting
out of race prejudice in “commercial and civil
relations.” I said that what is termed
social recognition was a question which I never discussed,
and then I quoted from my Atlanta address what I had
said there in regard to that subject.
In meeting crowds of people at public
gatherings, there is one type of individual that I
dread. I mean the crank. I have become so
accustomed to these people now that I can pick them
out at a distance when I see them elbowing their way
up to me. The average crank has a long beard,
poorly cared for, a lean, narrow face, and wears a
black coat. The front of his vest and coat are
slick with grease, and his trousers bag at the knees.
In Chicago, after I had spoken at
a meeting, I met one of these fellows. They usually
have some process for curing all of the ills of the
world at once. This Chicago specimen had a patent
process by which he said Indian corn could be kept
through a period of three or four years, and he felt
sure that if the Negro race in the South would, as
a whole, adopt his process, it would settle the whole
race question. It mattered nothing that I tried
to convince him that our present problem was to teach
the Negroes how to produce enough corn to last them
through one year. Another Chicago crank had a
scheme by which he wanted me to join him in an effort
to close up all the National banks in the country.
If that was done, he felt sure it would put the Negro
on his feet.
The number of people who stand ready
to consume one’s time, to no purpose, is almost
countless. At one time I spoke before a large
audience in Boston in the evening. The next morning
I was awakened by having a card brought to my room,
and with it a message that some one was anxious to
see me. Thinking that it must be something very
important, I dressed hastily and went down. When
I reached the hotel office I found a blank and innocent-looking
individual waiting for me, who coolly remarked:
“I heard you talk at a meeting last night.
I rather liked your talk, and so I came in this morning
to hear you talk some more.”
I am often asked how it is possible
for me to superintend the work at Tuskegee and at
the same time be so much away from the school.
In partial answer to this I would say that I think
I have learned, in some degree at least, to disregard
the old maxim which says, “Do not get others
to do that which you can do yourself.”
My motto, on the other hand, is, “Do not do that
which others can do as well.”
One of the most encouraging signs
in connection with the Tuskegee school is found in
the fact that the organization is so thorough that
the daily work of the school is not dependent upon
the presence of any one individual. The whole
executive force, including instructors and clerks,
now numbers eighty-six. This force is so organized
and subdivided that the machinery of the school goes
on day by day like clockwork. Most of our teachers
have been connected with the institutions for a number
of years, and are as much interested in it as I am.
In my absence, Mr. Warren Logan, the treasurer, who
has been at the school seventeen years, is the executive.
He is efficiently supported by Mrs. Washington, and
by my faithful secretary, Mr. Emmett J. Scott, who
handles the bulk of my correspondence and keeps me
in daily touch with the life of the school, and who
also keeps me informed of whatever takes place in
the South that concerns the race. I owe more
to his tact, wisdom, and hard work than I can describe.
The main executive work of the school,
whether I am at Tuskegee or not, centres in what we
call the executive council. This council meets
twice a week, and is composed of the nine persons
who are at the head of the nine departments of the
school. For example: Mrs. B.K. Bruce,
the Lady Principal, the widow of the late ex-senator
Bruce, is a member of the council, and represents
in it all that pertains to the life of the girls at
the school. In addition to the executive council
there is a financial committee of six, that meets
every week and decides upon the expenditures for the
week. Once a month, and sometimes oftener, there
is a general meeting of all the instructors. Aside
from these there are innumerable smaller meetings,
such as that of the instructors in the Phelps Hall
Bible Training School, or of the instructors in the
agricultural department.
In order that I may keep in constant
touch with the life of the institution, I have a system
of reports so arranged that a record of the school’s
work reaches me every day of the year, no matter in
what part of the country I am. I know by these
reports even what students are excused from school,
and why they are excused—whether for reasons
of ill health or otherwise. Through the medium
of these reports I know each day what the income of
the school in money is; I know how many gallons of
milk and how many pounds of butter come from the dairy;
what the bill of fare for the teachers and students
is; whether a certain kind of meat was boiled or baked,
and whether certain vegetables served in the dining
room were bought from a store or procured from our
own farm. Human nature I find to be very much
the same the world over, and it is sometimes not hard
to yield to the temptation to go to a barrel of rice
that has come from the store—with the grain
all prepared to go in the pot—rather than
to take the time and trouble to go to the field and
dig and wash one’s own sweet potatoes, which
might be prepared in a manner to take the place of
the rice.
I am often asked how, in the midst
of so much work, a large part of which is for the
public, I can find time for any rest or recreation,
and what kind of recreation or sports I am fond of.
This is rather a difficult question to answer.
I have a strong feeling that every individual owes
it to himself, and to the cause which he is serving,
to keep a vigorous, healthy body, with the nerves
steady and strong, prepared for great efforts and
prepared for disappointments and trying positions.
As far as I can, I make it a rule to plan for each
day’s work—not merely to go through
with the same routine of daily duties, but to get rid
of the routine work as early in the day as possible,
and then to enter upon some new or advance work.
I make it a rule to clear my desk every day, before
leaving my office, of all correspondence and memoranda,
so that on the morrow I can begin a new day of
work. I make it a rule never to let my work drive
me, but to so master it, and keep it in such complete
control, and to keep so far ahead of it, that I will
be the master instead of the servant. There is
a physical and mental and spiritual enjoyment that
comes from a consciousness of being the absolute master
of one’s work, in all its details, that is very
satisfactory and inspiring. My experience teachers
me that, if one learns to follow this plan, he gets
a freshness of body and vigour of mind out of work
that goes a long way toward keeping him strong and
healthy. I believe that when one can grow to the
point where he loves his work, this gives him a kind
of strength that is most valuable.
When I begin my work in the morning,
I expect to have a successful and pleasant day of
it, but at the same time I prepare myself for unpleasant
and unexpected hard places. I prepared myself
to hear that one of our school buildings is on fire,
or has burned, or that some disagreeable accident
has occurred, or that some one has abused me in a
public address or printed article, for something that
I have done or omitted to do, or for something that
he had heard that I had said—probably something
that I had never thought of saying.
In nineteen years of continuous work
I have taken but one vacation. That was two years
ago, when some of my friends put the money into my
hands and forced Mrs. Washington and myself to spend
three months in Europe. I have said that I believe
it is the duty of every one to keep his body in good
condition. I try to look after the little ills,
with the idea that if I take care of the little ills
the big ones will not come. When I find myself
unable to sleep well, I know that something is wrong.
If I find any part of my system the least weak, and
not performing its duty, I consult a good physician.
The ability to sleep well, at any time and in any
place, I find of great advantage. I have so trained
myself that I can lie down for a nap of fifteen or
twenty minutes, and get up refreshed in body and mind.
I have said that I make it a rule
to finish up each day’s work before leaving
it. There is, perhaps, one exception to this.
When I have an unusually difficult question to decide—one
that appeals strongly to the emotions—I
find it a safe rule to sleep over it for a night,
or to wait until I have had an opportunity to talk
it over with my wife and friends.
As to my reading; the most time I
get for solid reading is when I am on the cars.
Newspapers are to me a constant source of delight
and recreation. The only trouble is that I read
too many of them. Fiction I care little for.
Frequently I have to almost force myself to read a
novel that is on every one’s lips. The kind
of reading that I have the greatest fondness for is
biography. I like to be sure that I am reading
about a real man or a real thing. I think I do
not go too far when I say that I have read nearly
every book and magazine article that has been written
about Abraham Lincoln. In literature he is my
patron saint.
Out of the twelve months in a year
I suppose that, on an average, I spend six months
away from Tuskegee. While my being absent from
the school so much unquestionably has its disadvantages,
yet there are at the same time some compensations.
The change of work brings a certain kind of rest.
I enjoy a ride of a long distance on the cars, when
I am permitted to ride where I can be comfortable.
I get rest on the cars, except when the inevitable
individual who seems to be on every train approaches
me with the now familiar phrase: “Isn’t
this Booker Washington? I want to introduce myself
to you.” Absence from the school enables
me to lose sight of the unimportant details of the
work, and study it in a broader and more comprehensive
manner than I could do on the grounds. This absence
also brings me into contact with the best work being
done in educational lines, and into contact with the
best educators in the land.
But, after all this is said, the time
when I get the most solid rest and recreation is when
I can be at Tuskegee, and, after our evening meal
is over, can sit down, as is our custom, with my wife
and Portia and Baker and Davidson, my three children,
and read a story, or each take turns in telling a
story. To me there is nothing on earth equal
to that, although what is nearly equal to it is to
go with them for an hour or more, as we like to do
on Sunday afternoons, into the woods, where we can
live for a while near the heart of nature, where no
one can disturb or vex us, surrounded by pure air,
the trees, the shrubbery, the flowers, and the sweet
fragrance that springs from a hundred plants, enjoying
the chirp of the crickets and the songs of the birds.
This is solid rest.
My garden, also, what little time
I can be at Tuskegee, is another source of rest and
enjoyment. Somehow I like, as often as possible,
to touch nature, not something that is artificial or
an imitation, but the real thing. When I can
leave my office in time so that I can spend thirty
or forty minutes in spading the ground, in planting
seeds, in digging about the plants, I feel that I
am coming into contact with something that is giving
me strength for the many duties and hard places that
await me out in the big world. I pity the man
or woman who has never learned to enjoy nature and
to get strength and inspiration out of it.
Aside from the large number of fowls
and animals kept by the school, I keep individually
a number of pigs and fowls of the best grades, and
in raising these I take a great deal of pleasure.
I think the pig is my favourite animal. Few things
are more satisfactory to me than a high-grade Berkshire
or Poland China pig.
Games I care little for. I have
never seen a game of football. In cards I do
not know one card from another. A game of old-fashioned
marbles with my two boys, once in a while, is all I
care for in this direction. I suppose I would
care for games now if I had had any time in my youth
to give to them, but that was not possible.