MEMORIES OF MARGARET FLOY WASHBURN July 25, 1871-October 29, 1939 Others will write of Margaret Floy Washburn as a woman of genius, a great psychologist, and a great teacher. More than most women of her time she leaves an enduring monument in her scientific investigation, her published studies, and in the students whose careers have been promoted and inspired by her teaching and her friendship. I write tonight with a heart filled with memories of her vivid life, her brilliant and versatile mind, her passionate and loyal devotion to her mother, to Vassar College, and to her chosen friends. Words are cold things for describing a being of such vitality and strong impulse. She loved her work, her classes, her research, and she loved lfi‘e. All who knew her knew of her intense love of animals and of the impulsive generosity which made her spring to the help and defense of anyone who was in need or in trouble. To see an animal suffer was agony to her. In the diary of her uncle Michael Floy, professor of mathematics in Columbia University, he tells of working three hours one afternoon to rescue a toad that he had accidentally covered with earth when he was up- rooting a tree. Margaret Washburn had the same pity and care for all helpless things. She always fed the campus squirrels in winter. The last words she spoke to me before she was stricken concerned the care of my cat Mau during my proposed year in Europe. My thoughts often go back to that last walk with her on March 17, 1937. As clearly as though it were yesterday I can see her as I first saw her. She came to the Faculty table -- it was thirty-six years ago -- a tall, slender young woman, moving with ease and lightness. I remember well the warm and vivid glance of her brown eyes and the distinction of her whole presence. We became friends imediately, seeing each other daily in term time for many years. She was never dull. Her wit, her appreciation of life's ironies, her love of poetry, for which she had a remarkable memory, her knowledge of biography and literature, the entire absence of affectation in her attitude toward life and people made her a fascinating companion. That extraordinary vital quality in her made friendship with her an endless voyage of discovery. One knew her well, but never completely. She had so many resources and gifts that contributed to her happiness -- an intense love of music, of reading, especially in eighteenth century literature, and of thinking. Although she loved her friends I have often heard her say, laughing, "never less alone than when alone." MEMORIES OF MARGARET FLOY WASHBURN (Continued) Her study of her family genealogy gave her great pleasure. She investigated her Cornish, English, Dutch, French, and Scotch ancestry both in America and abroad. I once bought her a record which she prized, from a London church, of the death of her ancestor John Washburn in 1685 while on a visit to London. All the different strains of ancestry had united in her blood to form a being of rare genius with the instincts of a creative artist. How many walks and talks we have had together in the beauty of the Vassar which we both loved, for whose outward form she had so keen an eye. She saw so much in nature and often chided me for my slow v1§I6h. She cared for everything that had ever stirred her thought. For example, she could quote more of her favorite Latin poet, Horace, than many a professional Latin scholar could quote. She visited Rome, made a collection of Roman coins, and welcomed the plan which we carried out in the summer of 1936 of visiting Roman Gaul. We went to Orange, Vaison, Nimes, Arles, St. Remy, and Aignes Mortes and she took many pictures of Roman theatres and Roman monuments. When we were in England together and went to such places as St. Albans and Bath she had the most lively interest in Roman antiquities as well as in the later historical monuments. She took the part of the nurse in the Hippolytus of Euripides when that play was given by the Department of Dramatic Production and the Classical Departments, and she learned the large amount of Greek that belonged to her part rapidly and with ease. Her mind was always active and she loved beautiful bodily movement, such as dancing. It was no superficial interest that she took in things outside her own specialty. Indeed, I think she thought that nothing was outside her specialty. She felt that a broad foundation 3f_knowledge and culture was necessary for the student of psychology and I never saw her bored by anything intellectual. So many memories crowd upon me of our personal friendship and our trips together, of her work in the Faculty, presiding over it splendidly in the absence of the President from the chair, serving on many important committees, to which her colleagues constantly elected her; of her encouragement of young scholars, of the many honors she received from institutions throughout the land; (she was happy over her election to the National Academy of Sciences); of her generosities to poor people who were struggling to pay off a mortgage, or to carry on a little business, and of her keen enjoyment of the beauty of life. MEMORIES OF MARGARET FLOY WASHBURN (Continued) It is hard to believe that that flame is quenched. Her work and her memory remain, as long as Vassar stands, in the college to which she gave her love, her life, and her talent. A hast of alumnae remember the inspiration of her teaching and the joy of her friendship. They have show: their love and gratitude in many ways and one of them, Polyxenie Kambouropoulou, has devoted herself to her daily during her long illness. She wrote her graduating essay on the poetry of Matthew Arnold, which she loved. She gave me her old copy of Arnold's poems. All today I have heard ringing in my brain his verse, which I have heard her repeat -- "Her cabin'd, ample spirit, It f1utter'd and fail'd for breath, Tonight it doth inherit The vasty hall of death." Her love for her mother was the strongest emotion of her life. She told me repeatedly that her mother was a perfect human being -- that she had never seen a fault in her. And her mother, who loved her and was quietly proud of her achievement, once told me that she considered her less her daughter than her contribution to the race. Grace Harriet Macurdy Vassar Alumnae Magazine January l94O, Page 3-4