Mrs Jo often thought that Dan had
Indian blood in him, not only because of his love
of a wild, wandering life, but his appearance; for
as he grew up, this became more striking. At
twenty-five he was very tall, with sinewy limbs, a
keen, dark face, and the alert look of one whose senses
were all alive; rough in manner, full of energy, quick
with word and blow, eyes full of the old fire, always
watchful as if used to keep guard, and a general air
of vigour and freshness very charming to those who
knew the dangers and delights of his adventurous life.
He was looking his best as he sat talking with ‘Mother
Bhaer’, one strong brown hand in hers, and a
world of affection in his voice as he said:
’Forget old friends! How
could I forget the only home I ever knew? Why,
I was in such a hurry to come and tell my good luck
that I didn’t stop to fix up, you see; though
I knew you’d think I looked more like a wild
buffalo than ever,’ with a shake of his shaggy
black head, a tug at his beard, and a laugh that made
the room ring.
’I like it; I always had a fancy
for banditti and you look just like one.
Mary, being a newcomer, was frightened at your looks
and manners. Josie won’t know you, but
Ted will recognize his Danny in spite of the big beard
and flowing mane. They will all be here soon to
welcome you; so before they come tell me more about
yourself. Why, Dan, dear! it’s nearly two
years since you were here! Has it gone well with
you?’ asked Mrs Jo, who had been listening with
maternal interest to his account of life in California,
and the unexpected success of a small investment he
had made.
’First-rate! I don’t
care for the money, you know. I only want a trifle
to pay my way rather earn as I go, and not
be bothered with the care of a lot. It’s
the fun of the thing coming to me, and my being able
to give away, that I like. No use to lay up;
I shan’t live to be old and need it, my
sort never do,’ said Dan, looking as if his little
fortune rather oppressed him.
’But if you marry and settle
somewhere, as I hope you will, you must have something
to begin with, my son. So be prudent and invest
your money; don’t give it away, for rainy days
come to all of us, and dependence would be very hard
for you to bear,’ answered Mrs Jo with a sage
air, though she liked to see that the money-making
fever had not seized her lucky boy yet.
Dan shook his head, and glanced about
the room as if he already found it rather confined
and longed for all out-of-doors again.
’Who would marry a jack-o’-lantern
like me? Women like a steady-going man; I shall
never be that.’
’My dear boy, when I was a girl
I liked just such adventurous fellows as you are.
Anything fresh and daring, free and romantic, is always
attractive to us womenfolk. Don’t be discouraged;
you’ll find an anchor some day, and be content
to take shorter voyages and bring home a good cargo.’
‘What should you say if I brought
you an Indian squaw some day?’ asked Dan, with
a glimmer of mischief in the eyes that rested on a
marble bust of Galatea gleaming white and lovely in
the corner.
’Welcome her heartily, if she
was a good one. Is there a prospect of it?’
and Mrs Jo peered at him with the interest which even
literary ladies take in love affairs.
’Not at present, thank you.
I’m too busy “to gallivant”, as Ted
calls it. How is the boy?’ asked Dan, skilfully
turning the conversation, as if he had had enough
of sentiment.
Mrs Jo was off at once, and expatiated
upon the talents and virtues of her sons till they
came bursting in and fell upon Dan like two affectionate
young bears, finding a vent for their joyful emotions
in a sort of friendly wrestling-match; in which both
got worsted, of course, for the hunter soon settled
them. The Professor followed, and tongues went
like mill-clappers while Mary lighted up and cook devoted
herself to an unusually good supper, instinctively
divining that this guest was a welcome one.
After tea Dan was walking up and down
the long rooms as he talked, with occasional trips
into the hall for a fresher breath of air, his lungs
seeming to need more than those of civilized people.
In one of these trips he saw a white figure framed
in the dark doorway, and paused to look at it.
Bess paused also, not recognizing her old friend, and
quite unconscious of the pretty picture she made standing,
tall and slender, against the soft gloom of the summer
night, with her golden hair like a halo round her
head, and the ends of a white shawl blown out like
wings by the cool wind sweeping through the hail.
‘Is it Dan?’ she asked, coming in with
a gracious smile and outstretched hand.
’Looks like it; but I didn’t
know you, Princess. I thought it was a spirit,’
answered Dan, looking down at her with a curious softness
and wonder in his face.
‘I’ve grown very much,
but two years have changed you entirely’; and
Bess looked up with girlish pleasure at the picturesque
figure before her for it was a decided
contrast to the well-dressed people about her.
Before they could say more, Josie
rushed in, and, forgetfull of the newly acquired dignity
of her teens, let Dan catch her up and kiss her like
a child. Not till he set her down did he discover
she also was changed, and exclaimed in comic dismay:
’Hallo! Why, you are growing
up too! What am I going to do, with no young
one to play with? Here’s Ted going it like
a beanstalk, and Bess a young lady, and even you,
my mustard-seed, letting down your frocks and putting
on airs.’
The girls laughed, and Josie blushed
as she stared at the tall man, conscious that she
had leaped before she looked. They made a pretty
contrast, these two young cousins one as
fair as a lily, the other a little wild rose.
And Dan gave a nod of satisfaction as he surveyed
them; for he had seen many bonny girls in his travels,
and was glad that these old friends were blooming
so beautifully.
‘Here! we can’t allow
any monopoly of Dan!’ called Mrs Jo. ’Bring
him back and keep an eye on him, or he will be slipping
off for another little run of a year or two before
we have half seen him.’
Led by these agreeable captors, Dan
returned to the parlour to receive a scolding from
Josie for getting ahead of all the other boys and looking
like a man first.
’Emil is older; but he’s
only a boy, and dances jigs and sings sailor songs
just as he used to. You look about thirty, and
as big and black as a villain in a play. Oh,
I’ve got a splendid idea! You are just the
thing for Arbaces in The Last Days of Pompeii.
We want to act it; have the lion and the gladiators
and the eruption. Tom and Ted are going to shower
bushels of ashes down and roll barrels of stones about.
We wanted a dark man for the Egyptian; and you will
be gorgeous in red and white shawls. Won’t
he, Aunt Jo?’
This deluge of words made Dan clap
his hands over his ears; and before Mrs Bhaer could
answer her impetuous niece the Laurences, with Meg
and her family, arrived, soon followed by Tom and
Nan, and all sat down to listen to Dan’s adventures told
in brief yet effective manner, as the varying expressions
of interest, wonder, merriment, and suspense painted
on the circle of faces round him plainly showed.
The boys all wanted to start at once for California
and make fortunes; the girls could hardly wait for
the curious and pretty things he had picked up for
them in his travels; while the elders rejoiced heartily
over the energy and good prospects of their wild boy.
’Of course you will want to
go back for another stroke of luck; and I hope you
will have it. But speculation is a dangerous game,
and you may lose all you’ve won,’ said
Mr Laurie, who had enjoyed the stirring tale as much
as any of the boys, and would have liked to rough it
with Dan as well as they.
’I’ve had enough of it,
for a while at least; too much like gambling.
The excitement is all I care for, and it isn’t
good for me. I have a notion to try farming out
West. It’s grand on a large scale; and I
feel as if steady work would be rather jolly after
loafing round so long. I can make a beginning,
and you can send me your black sheep to stock my place
with. I tried sheep-farming in Australia, and
know something about black ones, any way.’
A laugh chased away the sober look
in Dan’s face as he ended; and those who knew
him best guessed that he had learned a lesson there
in San Francisco, and dared not try again.
‘That is a capital idea, Dan!’
cried Mrs Jo, seeing great hope in this desire to
fix himself somewhere and help others. ’We
shall know where you are, and can go and see you,
and not have half the world between us. I’ll
send my Ted for a visit. He’s such a restless
spirit, it would do him good. With you he would
be safe while he worked off his surplus energies and
learned a wholesome business.’
’I’ll use the “shubble
and de hoe” like a good one, if I get a chance
out there; but the Speranza mines sound rather jollier,’
said Ted, examining the samples of ore Dan had brought
for the Professor.
’You go and start a new town,
and when we are ready to swarm we will come out and
settle there. You will want a newspaper very soon,
and I like the idea of running one myself much better
than grinding away as I do now,’ observed Demi,
panting to distinguish himself in the journalistic
line.
’We could easily plant a new
college there. These sturdy Westerners are hungry
for learning, and very quick to see and choose the
best,’ added ever-young Mr March, beholding
with his prophetic eye many duplicates of their own
flourishing establishment springing up in the wide
West.
’Go on, Dan. It is a fine
plan, and we will back you up. I shouldn’t
mind investing in a few prairies and cowboys myself,’
said Mr Laurie, always ready to help the lads to help
themselves, both by his cheery words and ever-open
purse.
’A little money sort of ballasts
a fellow, and investing it in land anchors him for
a while, at least. I’d like to see what
I can do, but I thought I’d consult you before
I decided. Have my doubts about it suiting me
for many years; but I can cut loose when I’m
tired,’ answered Dan, both touched and pleased
at the eager interest of these friends in his plans.
’I know you won’t like
it. After having the whole world to roam over,
one farm will seem dreadfully small and stupid,’
said Josie, who much preferred the romance of the
wandering life which brought her thrilling tales and
pretty things at each return.
‘Is there any art out there?’
asked Bess, thinking what a good study in black and
white Dan would make as he stood talking, half turned
from the light.
’Plenty of nature, dear; and
that is better. You will find splendid animals
to model, and scenery such as you never saw in Europe
to paint. Even prosaic pumpkins are grand out
there. You can play Cinderella in one of them,
Josie, when you open your theatre in Dansville,’
said Mr Laurie, anxious that no cold water should
be thrown on the new plan.
Stage-struck Josie was caught at once,
and being promised all the tragic parts on the yet
unbuilt stage, she felt a deep interest in the project
and begged Dan to lose no time in beginning his experiment.
Bess also confessed that studies from nature would
be good for her, and wild scenery improve her taste,
which might grow over-nice if only the delicate and
beautiful were set before her.
‘I speak for the practice of
the new town,’ said Nan, always eager for fresh
enterprises. ’I shall be ready by the time
you get well started towns grow so fast
out there.’
’Dan isn’t going to allow
any woman under forty in his place. He doesn’t
like them, ‘specially young and pretty ones,’
put in Tom, who was raging with jealousy, because
he read admiration for Nan in Dan’s eyes.
’That won’t affect me,
because doctors are exceptions to all rules.
There won’t be much sickness in Dansville, everyone
will lead such active, wholesome lives, and only energetic
young people will go there. But accidents will
be frequent, owing to wild cattle, fast riding, Indian
scrimmages, and the recklessness of Western life.
That will just suit me. I long for broken bones,
surgery is so interesting and I get so little here,’
answered Nan, yearning to put out her shingle and begin.
’I’ll have you, Doctor,
and be glad of such a good sample of what we can do
in the East. Peg away, and I’ll send for
you as soon as I have a roof to cover you. I’ll
scalp a few red fellows or smash up a dozen or so of
cowboys for your special benefit,’ laughed Dan,
well pleased with the energy and fine physique which
made Nan a conspicuous figure among other girls.
’Thanks. I’ll come.
Would you just let me feel your arm? Splendid
biceps! Now, boys, see here: this is what
I call muscle.’ And Nan delivered a short
lecture with Dan’s sinewy arm to illustrate it.
Tom retired to the alcove and glowered at the stars,
while he swung his own right arm with a vigour suggestive
of knocking someone down.
’Make Tom sexton; he’ll
enjoy burying the patients Nan kills. He’s
trying to get up the glum expression proper to the
business. Don’t forget him, Dan,’
said Ted, directing attention to the blighted being
in the corner.
But Tom never sulked long, and came
out from his brief eclipse with the cheerful proposition:
’Look here, we’ll get
the city to ship out to Dansville all the cases of
yellow fever, smallpox, and cholera that arrive; then
Nan will be happy and her mistakes won’t matter
much with emigrants and convicts.’
’I should advise settling near
Jacksonville, or some such city, that you might enjoy
the society of cultivated persons. The Plato Club
is there, and a most ardent thirst for philosophy.
Everything from the East is welcomed hospitably, and
new enterprises would flourish in such kindly soil,’
observed Mr March, mildly offering a suggestion, as
he sat among the elders enjoying the lively scene.
The idea of Dan studying Plato was
very funny; but no one except naughty Ted smiled,
and Dan made haste to unfold another plan seething
in that active brain of his.
’I’m not sure the farming
will succeed, and have a strong leaning towards my
old friends the Montana Indians. They are a peaceful
tribe, and need help awfully; hundreds have died of
starvation because they don’t get their share.
The Sioux are fighters, thirty thousand strong, so
Government fears ’em, and gives ’em all
they want. I call that a damned shame!’
Dan stopped short as the oath slipped out, but his
eyes flashed, and he went on quickly: ’It
is just that, and I won’t beg pardon. If
I’d had any money when I was there I’d
have given every cent to those poor devils, cheated
out of everything, and waiting patiently, after being
driven from their own land to places where nothing
will grow. Now, honest agents could do much,
and I’ve a feeling that I ought to go and lend
a hand. I know their lingo, and I like ’em.
I’ve got a few thousands, and I ain’t
sure I have any right to spend it on myself and settle
down to enjoy it. Hey?’
Dan looked very manly and earnest
as he faced his friends, flushed and excited by the
energy of his words; and all felt that little thrill
of sympathy which links hearts together by the tie
of pity for the wronged.
‘Do it, do it!’ cried
Mrs Jo, fired at once; for misfortune was much more
interesting to her than good luck.
‘Do it, do it!’ echoed
Ted, applauding as if at a play, ’and take me
along to help. I’m just raging to get among
those fine fellows and hunt.’
‘Let us hear more and see if
it is wise,’ said Mr Laurie, privately resolving
to people his as yet unbought prairies with Montana
Indians, and increase his donations to the society
that sent missionaries to this much wronged people.
Dan plunged at once into the history
of what he saw among the Dakotas, and other tribes
in the Northwest, telling of their wrongs, patience,
and courage as if they were his brothers.
’They called me Dan Fire Cloud,
because my rifle was the best they ever saw.
And Black Hawk was as good a friend as a fellow would
want; saved my life more than once, and taught me
just what will be useful if I go back. They are
down on their luck, now, and I’d like to pay
my debts.’
By this time everyone was interested,
and Dansville began to lose its charm. But prudent
Mr Bhaer suggested that one honest agent among many
could not do much, and noble as the effort would be,
it was wiser to think over the matter carefully, get
influence and authority from the right quarters, and
meantime look at lands before deciding.
’Well, I will. I’m
going to take a run to Kansas and see how that promises.
Met a fellow in ’Frisco who’d been there,
and he spoke well of it. The fact is, there’s
so much to be done every where that I don’t
know where to catch on, and half wish I hadn’t
any money,’ answered Dan, knitting his brows
in the perplexity all kind souls feel when anxious
to help at the great task of the world’s charity.
’I’ll keep it for you
till you decide. You are such an impetuous lad
you’ll give it to the first beggar that gets
hold of you. I’ll turn it over while you
are prospecting, and hand it back when you are ready
to invest, shall I?’ asked Mr Laurie, who had
learned wisdom since the days of his own extravagant
youth.
’Thanky, sir, I’d be glad
to get rid of it. You just hold on till I say
the word; and if anything happens to me this time,
keep it to help some other scamp as you helped me.
This is my will, and you all witness it. Now
I feel better.’ And Dan squared his shoulders
as if relieved of a burden, after handing over the
belt in which he carried his little fortune.
No one dreamed how much was to happen
before Dan came to take his money back, nor how nearly
that act was his last will and testament; and while
Mr Laurie was explaining how he would invest it, a
cheery voice was heard singing:
’Oh, Peggy was a jolly
lass,
Ye heave ho, boys, ye
heave ho!
She never grudged her
Jack a glass,
Ye heave ho, boys, ye
heave ho!
And when he sailed the
raging main,
She faithful was unto
her swain,
Ye heave ho, boys, ye
heave ho!’
Emil always announced his arrival
in that fashion, and in a moment he came hurrying
in with Nat, who had been giving lessons in town all
day. It was good to see the latter beam at his
friend as he nearly shook his hand off; better still
to see how Dan gratefully remembered all he owed Nat,
and tried to pay the debt in his rough way; and best
of all to hear the two travellers compare notes and
reel off yarns to dazzle the land-lubbers and home-keepers.
After this addition the house would
not contain the gay youngsters, so they migrated to
the piazza and settled on the steps, like a flock of
night-loving birds. Mr March and the Professor
retired to the study, Meg and Amy went to look after
the little refection of fruit and cake which was to
come, and Mrs Jo and Mr Laurie sat in the long window
listening to the chat that went on outside.
‘There they are, the flower
of our flock!’ she said, pointing to the group
before them. ’The others are dead or scattered,
but these seven boys and four girls are my especial
comfort and pride. Counting Alice Heath, my dozen
is made up, and my hands are full trying to guide these
young lives as far as human skill can do it.’
’When we remember how different
they are, from what some of them came, and the home
influences about others, I think we may feel pretty
well satisfied so far,’ answered Mr Laurie soberly,
as his eyes rested on one bright head among the black
and brown ones, for the young moon shone alike on
all.
’I don’t worry about the
girls; Meg sees to them, and is so wise and patient
and tender they can’t help doing well; but my
boys are more care every year, and seem to drift farther
away from me each time they go,’ sighed Mrs
Jo. ’They will grow up, and I can only hold
them by one little thread, which may snap at any time,
as it has with Jack and Ned. Dolly and George
still like to come back, and I can say my word to them;
and dear old Franz is too true ever to forget his own.
But the three who are soon going out into the world
again I can’t help worrying about. Emil’s
good heart will keep him straight, I hope, and
’"A sweet little cherub
sits up aloft,
To look out for the life of
poor Jack."’
Nat is to make his first flight, and
he’s weak in spite of your strengthening influence;
and Dan is still untamed. I fear it will take
some hard lesson to do that.’
’He’s a fine fellow, Jo,
and I almost regret this farming project. A little
polish would make a gentleman of him, and who knows
what he might become here among us,’ answered
Mr Laurie, leaning over Mrs Bhaer’s chair, just
as he used to do years ago when they had mischievous
secrets together.
’It wouldn’t be safe,
Teddy. Work and the free life he loves will make
a good man of him, and that is better than any amount
of polish, with the dangers an easy life in a city
would bring him. We can’t change his nature only
help it to develop in the right direction. The
old impulses are there, and must be controlled, or
he will go wrong. I see that; but his love for
us is a safeguard, and we must keep a hold on him till
he is older or has a stronger tie to help him.’
Mrs Jo spoke earnestly, for, knowing
Dan better than anyone else, she saw that her colt
was not thoroughly broken yet, and feared while she
hoped, knowing that life would always be hard for one
like him. She was sure that before he went away
again, in some quiet moment he would give her a glimpse
of his inner self, and then she could say the word
of warning or encouragement that he needed. So
she bided her time, studying him meanwhile, glad to
see all that was promising, and quick to detect the
harm the world was doing him. She was very anxious
to make a success of her ‘firebrand’ because
others predicted failure; but having learned that
people cannot be moulded like clay, she contented herself
with the hope that this neglected boy might become
a good man, and asked no more. Even that was
much to expect, so full was he of wayward impulses,
strong passions, and the lawless nature born in him.
Nothing held him but the one affection of his life the
memory of Plumfield, the fear of disappointing these
faithful friends, the pride, stronger than principle,
that made him want to keep the regard of the mates
who always had admired and loved him in spite of all
his faults.
’Don’t fret, old dear;
Emil is one of the happy-go-lucky sort who always
fall on their legs. I’ll see to Nat, and
Dan is in a good way now. Let him take a look
at Kansas, and if the farm plan loses its charm, he
can fall back on poor Lo, and really do good out there.
He’s unusually fitted for that peculiar task
and I hope he’ll decide to do it. Fighting
oppressors, and befriending the oppressed will keep
those dangerous energies of his busy, and the life
will suit him better than sheep-folds and wheat-fields.’
‘I hope so. What is that?’
and Mrs Jo leaned forward to listen, as exclamations
from Ted and Josie caught her ear.
’A mustang! a real, live one;
and we can ride it. Dan, you are a first-class
trump!’ cried the boy.
’A whole Indian dress for me!
Now I can play Namioka, if the boys act Metamora,’
added Josie, clapping her hands.
’A buffalo’s head for
Bess! Good gracious, Dan, why did you bring such
a horrid thing as that to her?’ asked Nan.
’Thought it would do her good
to model something strong and natural. She’ll
never amount to anything if she keeps on making namby-pamby
gods and pet kittens,’ answered irreverent Dan,
remembering that when he was last here Bess was vibrating
distractedly between a head of Apollo and her Persian
cat as models.
’Thank you; I’ll try it,
and if I fail we can put the buffalo up in the hall
to remind us of you,’ said Bess, indignant at
the insult offered the gods of her idolatry, but too
well bred to show it except in her voice, which was
as sweet and as cold as ice-cream.
’I suppose you won’t come
out to see our new settlement when the rest do?
Too rough for you?’ asked Dan, trying to assume
the deferential air all the boys used when addressing
their Princess.
’I am going to Rome to study
for years. All the beauty and art of the world
is there, and a lifetime isn’t long enough to
enjoy it,’ answered Bess.
’Rome is a mouldy old tomb compared
to the “Garden of the gods” and my magnificent
Rockies. I don’t care a hang for art; nature
is as much as I can stand, and I guess I could show
you things that would knock your old masters higher
than kites. Better come, and while Josie rides
the horses you can model ’em. If a drove
of a hundred or so of wild ones can’t show you
beauty, I’ll give up,’ cried Dan, waxing
enthusiastic over the wild grace and vigour which
he could enjoy but had no power to describe.
’I’ll come some day with
papa, and see if they are better than the horses of
St Mark and those on Capitol Hill. Please don’t
abuse my gods, and I will try to like yours,’
said Bess, beginning to think the West might be worth
seeing, though no Raphael or Angelo had yet appeared
there.
’That’s a bargain!
I do think people ought to see their own country before
they go scooting off to foreign parts, as if the new
world wasn’t worth discovering,’ began
Dan, ready to bury the hatchet.
’It has some advantages, but
not all. The women of England can vote, and we
can’t. I’m ashamed of America that
she isn’t ahead in all good things,’ cried
Nan, who held advanced views on all reforms, and was
anxious about her rights, having had to fight for some
of them.
’Oh, please don’t begin
on that. People always quarrel over that question,
and call names, and never agree. Do let us be
quiet and happy tonight,’ pleaded Daisy, who
hated discussion as much as Nan loved it.
’You shall vote as much as you
like in our new town, Nan; be mayor and aldermen,
and run the whole concern. It’s going to
be as free as air, or I can’t live in it,’
said Dan, adding, with a laugh, ’I see Mrs Giddygaddy
and Mrs Shakespeare Smith don’t agree any better
than they used to.’
’If everyone agreed, we should
never get on. Daisy is a dear, but inclined to
be an old fogy; so I stir her up; and next fall she
will go and vote with me. Demi will escort us
to do the one thing we are allowed to do as yet.’
’Will you take ’em, Deacon?’
asked Dan, using the old name as if he liked it.
‘It works capitally in Wyoming.’
’I shall be proud to do it.
Mother and the aunts go every year, and Daisy will
come with me. She is my better half still; and
I don’t mean to leave her behind in anything,’
said Demi, with an arm round his sister of whom he
was fonder than ever.
Dan looked at them wistfully, thinking
how sweet it must be to have such a tie; and his lonely
youth seemed sadder than ever as he recalled its struggles.
A gusty sigh from Tom made sentiment impossible, as
he said pensively:
’I always wanted to be a twin.
It’s so sociable and so cosy to have someone
glad to lean on a fellow and comfort him, if other
girls are cruel.’
As Tom’s unrequited passion
was the standing joke of the family, this allusion
produced a laugh, which Nan increased by whipping out
a bottle of Nux, saying, with her professional air:
’I knew you ate too much lobster
for tea. Take four pellets, and your dyspepsia
will be all right. Tom always sighs and is silly
when he’s overeaten.’
’I’ll take ’em.
These are the only sweet things you ever give me.’
And Tom gloomily crunched his dose.
’"Who can minister to a mind
diseased, or pluck out a rooted sorrow?” quoted
Josie tragically from her perch on the railing.
’Come with me, Tommy, and I’ll
make a man of you. Drop your pills and powders,
and cavort round the world a spell, and you’ll
soon forget you’ve got a heart, or a stomach
either,’ said Dan, offering his one panacea
for all ills.
’Ship with me, Tom. A good
fit of seasickness will set you up, and a stiff north-easter
blow your blue-devils away. Come along as surgeon easy
berth, and no end of larks.’
’"And if your Nancy
frowns, my lad,
And scorns a jacket
blue,
Just hoist your
sails for other ports,
And find a maid
more true."’
added Emil, who had a fragment of
song to cheer every care and sorrow, and freely offered
them to his friends.
’Perhaps I’ll think of
it when I’ve got my diploma. I’m not
going to grind three mortal years and have nothing
to show for it. Till then, ’
‘I’ll never desert Mrs
Micawber,’ interrupted Teddy, with a gurgling
sob. Tom immediately rolled him off the step into
the wet grass below; and by the time this slight skirmish
was over, the jingle of teaspoons suggested refreshments
of a more agreeable sort. In former times the
little girls waited on the boys, to save confusion;
now the young men flew to serve the ladies, young
and old; and that slight fact showed plainly how the
tables were turned by time. And what a pleasant
arrangement it was! Even Josie sat still, and
let Emil bring her berries; enjoying her young lady-hood,
till Ted stole her cake, when she forgot manners,
and chastised him with a rap on the knuckles.
As guest of honour, Dan was only allowed to wait on
Bess, who still held the highest place in this small
world. Tom carefully selected the best of everything
for Nan, to be crushed by the remark:
‘I never eat at this hour; and
you will have a nightmare if you do.’
So, dutifully curbing the pangs of
hunger, he gave the plate to Daisy, and chewed rose-leaves
for his supper.
When a surprising quantity of wholesome
nourishment had been consumed, someone said, ‘Let’s
sing!’ and a tuneful hour followed. Nat
fiddled, Demi piped, Dan strummed the old banjo, and
Emil warbled a doleful ballad about the wreck of the
Bounding Betsey; then everybody joined in the old
songs till there was very decidedly ‘music in
the air’; and passers-by said, as they listened
smiling: ‘Old Plum is gay tonight!’
When all had gone Dan lingered on
the piazza, enjoying the balmy wind that blew up from
the hayfields, and brought the breath of flowers from
Parnassus; and as he leaned there romantically in the
moonlight, Mrs Jo came to shut the door.
‘Dreaming dreams, Dan?’
she asked, thinking the tender moment might have come.
Imagine the shock when, instead of some interesting
confidence or affectionate word, Dan swung round,
saying bluntly:
‘I was wishing I could smoke.’
Mrs Jo laughed at the downfall of her hopes, and answered
kindly:
‘You may, in your room; but don’t set
the house afire.’
Perhaps Dan saw a little disappointment
in her face, or the memory of the sequel of that boyish
frolic touched his heart; for he stooped and kissed
her, saying in a whisper: ‘Good night, mother.’
And Mrs Jo was half satisfied.