登陆注册
19969300000051

第51章 First Years as a Woman's Editor (2)

Yes, Miss Ashmead in your department," was the answer.

The whereabouts of the manuscript was then disclosed, and the editor called for its return.He had called the department "Side Talks with Girls" by Ruth Ashmead.

"My girls all hope this is going into the magazine," said the superintendent when he returned the manuscript.

"Why?" asked the editor.

"Well, they say it's the best stuff for girls they have ever read.

They'd love to know Miss Ashmead better."Here was exactly what the editor wanted, but he was the author! He changed the name to Ruth Ashmore, and decided to let the manuscript go into the magazine.He reasoned that he would then have a month in which to see the writer he had in mind, and he would show her the proof.But a month filled itself with other duties, and before the editor was aware of it, the composition-room wanted "copy" for the second installment of "Side Talks with Girls." Once more the editor furnished the copy!

Within two weeks after the second article had been written, the magazine containing the first installment of the new department appeared, and the next day two hundred letters were received for "Ruth Ashmore," with the mail-clerk asking where they should be sent."Leave them with me, please," replied the editor.On the following day the mail-clerk handed him five hundred more.

The editor now took two letters from the top and opened them.He never opened the third! That evening he took the bundle home, and told his mother of his predicament.She read the letters and looked at her son.

"You have no right to read these," she said.The son readily agreed.

His instinct had correctly interpreted the need, but he never dreamed how far the feminine nature would reveal itself on paper.

The next morning the editor, with his letters, took the train for New York and sought his friend, Mrs.Isabel A.Mallon, the "Bab" of his popular syndicate letter.

"Have you read this department?" he asked, pointing to the page in the magazine.

"I have," answered Mrs.Mallon."Very well done, too, it is.Who is 'Ruth Ashmore'?'

"You are," answered Edward Bok.And while it took considerable persuasion, from that time on Mrs.Mallon became Ruth Ashmore, the most ridiculed writer in the magazine world, and yet the most helpful editor that ever conducted a department in periodical literature.For sixteen years she conducted the department, until she passed away, her last act being to dictate a letter to a correspondent.In those sixteen years she had received one hundred and fifty-eight thousand letters: she kept three stenographers busy, and the number of girls who to-day bless the name of Ruth Ashmore is legion.

But the newspaper humorists who insisted that Ruth Ashmore was none other than Edward Bok never knew the partial truth of their joke!

The editor soon supplemented this department with one dealing with the spiritual needs of the mature woman."The King's Daughters" was then an organization at the summit of its usefulness, with Margaret Bottome its president.Edward Bok had heard Mrs.Bottome speak, had met her personally, and decided that she was the editor for the department he had in mind.

"I want it written in an intimate way as if there were only two persons in the world, you and the person reading.I want heart to speak to heart.We will make that the title," said the editor, and unconsciously he thus created the title that has since become familiar wherever English is spoken: "Heart to Heart Talks." The title gave the department an instantaneous hearing; the material in it carried out its spirit, and soon Mrs.Bottome's department rivaled, in popularity, the page by Ruth Ashmore.

These two departments more than anything else, and the irresistible picture of a man editing a woman's magazine, brought forth an era of newspaper paragraphing and a flood of so-called "humorous" references to the magazine and editor.It became the vogue to poke fun at both.The humorous papers took it up, the cartoonists helped it along, and actors introduced the name of the magazine on the stage in plays and skits.

Never did a periodical receive such an amount of gratuitous advertising.

Much of the wit was absolutely without malice: some of it was written by Edward Bok's best friends, who volunteered to "let up" would he but raise a finger.

But he did not raise the finger.No one enjoyed the "paragraphs" more heartily when the wit was good, and in that case, if the writer was unknown to him, he sought him out and induced him to write for him.In this way, George Fitch was found on the Peoria, Illinois, Transcript and introduced to his larger public in the magazine and book world through The Ladies' Home Journal, whose editor he believed he had "most unmercifully roasted";--but he had done it so cleverly that the editor at once saw his possibilities.

When all his friends begged Bok to begin proceedings against the New York Evening Sun because of the libellous (?) articles written about him by "The Woman About Town," the editor admired the style rather than the contents, made her acquaintance, and secured her as a regular writer:

she contributed to the magazine some of the best things published in its pages.But she did not abate her opinions of Bok and his magazine in her articles in the newspaper, and Bok did not ask it of her: he felt that she had a right to her opinions--those he was not buying; but he was eager to buy her direct style in treating subjects he knew no other woman could so effectively handle.

And with his own limited knowledge of the sex, he needed, and none knew it better than did he, the ablest women he could obtain to help him realize his ideals.Their personal opinions of him did not matter so long as he could command their best work.Sooner or later, when his purposes were better understood, they might alter those opinions.For that he could afford to wait.But he could not wait to get their work.

同类推荐
  • 摩利支菩萨略念诵法

    摩利支菩萨略念诵法

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 竹窗随笔

    竹窗随笔

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Satires of Circumstance

    Satires of Circumstance

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • Wild Wales

    Wild Wales

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 途次大梁雪中奉天平

    途次大梁雪中奉天平

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
热门推荐
  • 带着热武闯异界

    带着热武闯异界

    现代热武器和炼金术的结合,再配上会古武的机甲。将整个宇宙都当做炼成阵,炼成一门能够发射一整个星系的魔改意大利炮。“什么?你问我最强的武器?当然是魔改型意大利炮了!洞穿宇宙!还有没有别的?”楚夏抽了口雪茄,悠悠道:“只有你想不到的,没有我炼不成的。”王者?不!高唱着凯歌,四处征服的霸者才更让人憧憬,不是吗?!讨论群:102798126欢迎大家进群提出意见和建议新人新书求呵护,求收藏!!!求推荐!!!求点评!!!
  • 独臂武神

    独臂武神

    主角通幽被人砍掉左臂,却在魔兽森林自创无臂袖功法。回到风云城,杀得血腥四起。进入天骄学院,战得四面动荡。神魔遗迹中铁血手段,加入第一门派望月,成为绝顶强者。......他们称他为独臂武神!且战且看!
  • 皇家独宠爱:逃婚公主

    皇家独宠爱:逃婚公主

    皇上因为一个有权有事的将军威胁,被迫将自己最小也是最可爱的女儿嫁给那个丑陋无比的将军,可是这一切的谈话都让小公主听到了,一气之下,她逃出宫去,先是到了打杂的地方只是想赚点钱,没想到却被老板卖到了青楼去,在那里,她遇到了这辈子都无法想象的人
  • 灵曰

    灵曰

    现代首席杀手云轻,一生冷血无情,本以为会一生如此,谁知却遇上了那以为的真爱……但是谁又曾想那真爱却为了区区一百万,而对其痛下杀手。云轻死前不愿再爱,却重生在了异界大陆,并在17年后开始遇上命中注定的一切。当面对早已心动的命定之人,当一切的真相浮上水面,云轻又该何去何从?
  • 天下为聘:拐走女王陛下

    天下为聘:拐走女王陛下

    你有没有对你而言很重要的人呢?我有呢。如果有,你会好好守着她吗?我却没做到。我是一个国家的王,可我眼睁睁看着我生命中最重要的人在我身前倒下。她的离去好像把什么美好的东西都带走了。我像是得了一种怪病,脾气越来越暴躁。我知道病源是什么,可我治不了,因为她死了。记得那时年纪小,她爱谈天我爱笑。不知不觉睡着了,梦里花落人散场。桃夭是个骗子,她说她会陪汐儿一起长大,看汐儿治理国家,为汐儿挑选夫君,还会帮汐儿的孩子拟名,当孩子的教母。然后和汐儿一起慢慢慢慢地变老。她说,她们不会分开。可她说谎。我每次想起以前都会笑着流泪。桃夭说我的笑是天下最美的,我要笑给她看。可她看不见,我又忍不住流泪。
  • 豪门替婚:替婚新娘

    豪门替婚:替婚新娘

    表姐“逃婚”,她来代嫁,信誓旦旦的说不喜欢他,但却不可自拔的爱上他,傻傻的她以为他爱她,到头来,发现这只是一场阴谋…………
  • 巨星小农民

    巨星小农民

    谁说农民的儿子,就只能种地,低人一等。小农民重生,缔造一个盛世娱乐帝国!
  • 穿越之妖孽傻王妃

    穿越之妖孽傻王妃

    单身的小资女竟莫名其妙的穿越在了新婚王妃的身上...好吧,看在夫君长的那么妖孽的份上,她认了。。未料到自己的身份其实只是个人质,离!才不受不了这鸟气~她从不沾花惹草,只是为什么...门外来了那么多找自己算账的妖孽男...
  • 天路帝国

    天路帝国

    一个地球宅男,自己研制汽车,意外坠落到异世大陆,修真,创世啦。
  • 别说你懂通货膨胀

    别说你懂通货膨胀

    本书分为通货膨胀基础知识、通货膨胀与生活、通货膨胀与理财三部分,内容包括:通货膨胀进行时——谁动了我的生活、通货膨胀预期:临渴掘井还是未雨绸缪、私企是通货膨胀的“替罪羊”、谁将是房地产泡沫的终结者、通货膨胀对养老金有什么作用等。