"Mary White"
by William Allen White
Emporia Gazette, May 17, 1921.
The Associated Press reports carrying the news of Mary White's death
declared that it came as the result of a fall from a horse. How she
would have hooted at that! She never fell from a horse in her life.
Horses have fallen on her and with her--"I'm always trying to hold
'em in my lap," she used to say. But she was proud of few things,
and one of them was that she could ride anything that had four legs
and hair. Her death resulted not from a fall but from a blow on the
head which fractured her skull, and the blow came from the limb of an
overhanging tree on the parking.
The last hour of her life was typical of its happiness. She came
home from a day's work at school, topped off by a hard grind with
the copy on the High School Annual, and felt that a ride would
refresh her. She climbed into her khakis, chattering to her mother
about the work she was doing, and hurried to get her horse and be
out on the dirt roads for the country air and the radiant green
fields of spring. As she rode through the town on an easy gallop,
she kept waving at passers-by. She knew everyone in town. For a
decade the little figure in the long pigtail and the red hair
ribbon has been familiar on the streets of Emporia, and she got in
the way of speaking to those who nodded at her. She passed the
Kerrs, walking the horse in front of the Normal Library, and waved
at them; passed another friend a few hundred feet farther on, and
waved at her.
The horse was walking, and as she turned into North Merchant Street
she took off her cowboy hat, and the horse swung into a lope. She
passed the Tripletts and waved her cowboy hat at them, still moving
gayly north on Merchant Street. A Gazette carrier passed--a High
School boy friend--and she waved at him, but with her bridle hand;
the horse veered quickly, plunged into the parking where the low-hanging limb faced her and, while she still looked back waving, the
blow came. But she did not fall from the horse; she slipped off,
dazed a bit, staggered, and fell in a faint. She never quite
recovered consciousness.
But she did not fall from the horse, neither was she riding fast.
A year or so ago she used to go like the wind. But that habit was
broken, and she used the horse to get into the open, to get fresh,
hard exercise, and to work off a certain surplus energy that welled
up in her and needed a physical outlet. The need has been in her
heart for years. It was back of the impulse that kept the
dauntless little brown-clad figure on the streets and country roads
of the community and built into a strong, muscular body what had
been a frail and sickly frame during the first years of her life.
But the riding gave her more than a body. It released a gay and
hardy soul. She was the happiest thing in the world. And she was
happy because she was enlarging her horizon. She came to know all
sorts and conditions of men; Charley O'Brien, the traffic cop, was
one of her best friends. W. L. Holtz, the Latin teacher, was
another. Tom O'Connor, farmer-politician, and the Rev. J. H. Rice,
preacher and police judge, and Frank Beach, music master, were her
special friends; and all the girls, black and white, above the
track and below the track, in Pepville and Stringtown, were among
her acquaintances. And she brought home riotous stories of her
adventures. She loved to rollick; persiflage was her natural
expression at home. Her humor was a continual bubble of joy. She
seemed to think in hyperbole and metaphor. She was mischievous
without malice, as full of faults as an old shoe. No angel was
Mary White, but an easy girl to live with for she never nursed a
grouch five minutes in her life.
With all her eagerness for the out-of-doors, she loved books. On her
table when she left her room were a book by Conrad, one by Galsworthy,
"Creative Chemistry" by E. E. Slosson, and a Kipling book.
She read Mark Twain, Dickens, and Kipling before she was ten--all of
their writings. Wells and Arnold Bennett particularly amused and diverted
her. She was entered as a student in Wellesley for 1922; was assistant
editor of the High School Annual this year, and in line for election
to the editorship next year. She was a member of the executive committee
of the High School Y.W.C.A.
Within the last two years she had begun to be moved by an ambition
to draw. She began as most children do by scribbling in her school
books, funny pictures. She bought cartoon magazines and took a
course--rather casually, naturally, for she was, after all, a child
with no strong purposes--and this year she tasted the first fruits
of success by having her pictures accepted by the High School
Annual. But the thrill of delight she got when Mr. Ecord, of the
Normal Annual, asked her to do the cartooning for that book this
spring, was too beautiful for words. She fell to her work with all
her enthusiastic heart. Her drawings were accepted, and her pride--always repressed by a lively sense of the ridiculous figure she
was cutting--was a really gorgeous thing to see. No successful
artist every drank a deeper draft of satisfaction than she took
from the little fame her work was getting among her schoolfellows.
In her glory, she almost forgot her horse--but never her car.
For she used the car as a jitney bus. It was her social life. She
never had a "party" in all her nearly seventeen years--wouldn't
have one; but she never drove a block in her life that she didn't begin
to fill the car with pick-ups! Everybody rode with Mary White--white
and black, old and young, rich and poor, men and women. She like nothing
better than to fill the car with long- legged High School boys and an
occasional girl, and parade the town. She never had a "date,"
nor went to a dance, except once with her brother Bill, and the "boy
proposition" didn't interest her--yet. But young people--great
spring-breaking, varnish- cracking, fender-bending, door-sagging carloads
of "kids"--gave her great pleasure. Her zests were keen. But the most
fun she ever had in her life was acting as chairman of the committee
that got up the big turkey dinner for the poor folks at the county home;
scores of pies, gallons of slaw, jam, cakes, preserves, oranges, and
a wilderness of turkey were loaded into the car and taken to the county
home. And, being of a practical turn of mind, she risked her own Christmas
dinner to see that the poor folks actually got it all. Not that she
was a cynic; she just disliked to tempt folks. While there, she found
a blind colored uncle, very old, who could do nothing but make rag rugs,
and she rustled up from her school friends rags enough to keep him busy
for a season. The last engagement she tried to make was to take the
guests at the county home out for a car ride. And the last endeavor
of her life was to try to get a rest room for colored girls in the High
School. She found one girl reading in the toilet, because there was
no better place for a colored girl to loaf, and it inflamed her sense
of injustice and she became a nagging harpy to those who she thought
could remedy the evil. The poor she always had with her and was glad
of it. She hungered and thirsted for righteousness; and was the most
impious creature in the world. She joined the church without consulting
her parents, not particularly for her soul's good. She never had a thrill
of piety in her life, and would have hooted at a "testimony."
But even as a little child, she felt the church was an agency for helping
people to more of life's abundance, and she wanted to help. She never
wanted help for herself. Clothes meant little to her. It was a fight
to get a new rig on her; but eventually a harder fight to get it off.
She never wore a jewel and had no ring but her High School class ring
and never asked for anything but a wrist watch. She refused to have
her hair up, though she was nearly seventeen. "Mother," she
protested," you don't know how much I get by with, in my braided
pigtails, that I could not with my hair up." Above every other
passion of her life was her passion not to grow up, to be a child. The
tomboy in her, which was big, seemed loath to be put away forever in
skirts. She was a Peter Pan who refused to grow up.
Her funeral yesterday at the Congregational Church was as she would
have wished it; no singing, no flowers except the big bunch of red roses
from her brother Bill's Harvard classmen--heavens, how proud that would
have made her!--and the red roses from the Gazette forces, in vases,
at her head and feet. A short prayer: Paul's beautiful essay on "Love"
from the Thirteenth Chapter of First Corinthians; some remarks about
her democratic spirit by her friend, John H. J. Rice, pastor and police
judge, which she would have deprecated if she could; a prayer sent down
for her by her friend Carl Nau; and, opening the service, the slow,
poignant movement from Beethoven's Moonlight Sonata, which she loved;
and closing the service a cutting from the joyously melancholy first
movement of Tchaikovsky's Pathetic Symphony, which she liked to hear,
in certain moods, on the phonograph, then the Lord's Prayer by her friends
in High School.
That was all.
For her pallbearers only her friends were chosen: her Latin
teacher, W. L. Holtz; her High School principal, Rice Brown; her
doctor, Frank Foncannon; her friend, W. W. Finney; her pal at the
Gazette office, Walter Hughes; and her brother Bill. It would have
made her smile to know that her friend, Charley O'Brien, the
traffic cop had been transferred from Sixth and Commercial to the
corner near the church to direct her friends who came to bid her
good-by.
A rift in the clouds in a gray day threw a shaft of sunlight upon
her coffin as her nervous, energetic little body sank to its last
sleep. But the soul of her, the glowing, gorgeous, fervent soul of
her, surely was flaming in eager joy upon some other dawn.
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