“What in the world are you going
to do now, Jo?” asked Meg one snowy afternoon,
as her sister came tramping through the hall, in rubber
boots, old sack, and hood, with a broom in one hand
and a shovel in the other.
“Going out for exercise,”
answered Jo with a mischievous twinkle in her eyes.
“I should think two long walks
this morning would have been enough! It’s
cold and dull out, and I advise you to stay warm and
dry by the fire, as I do,” said Meg with a shiver.
“Never take advice! Can’t
keep still all day, and not being a pussycat, I don’t
like to doze by the fire. I like adventures,
and I’m going to find some.”
Meg went back to toast her feet and
read Ivanhoe, and Jo began to dig paths with
great energy. The snow was light, and with her
broom she soon swept a path all round the garden,
for Beth to walk in when the sun came out and the
invalid dolls needed air. Now, the garden separated
the Marches’ house from that of Mr. Laurence.
Both stood in a suburb of the city, which was still
country-like, with groves and lawns, large gardens,
and quiet streets. A low hedge parted the two
estates. On one side was an old, brown house,
looking rather bare and shabby, robbed of the vines
that in summer covered its walls and the flowers,
which then surrounded it. On the other side was
a stately stone mansion, plainly betokening every
sort of comfort and luxury, from the big coach house
and well-kept grounds to the conservatory and the
glimpses of lovely things one caught between the rich
curtains.
Yet it seemed a lonely, lifeless sort
of house, for no children frolicked on the lawn, no
motherly face ever smiled at the windows, and few
people went in and out, except the old gentleman and
his grandson.
To Jo’s lively fancy, this fine
house seemed a kind of enchanted palace, full of splendors
and delights which no one enjoyed. She had long
wanted to behold these hidden glories, and to know
the Laurence boy, who looked as if he would like to
be known, if he only knew how to begin. Since
the party, she had been more eager than ever, and had
planned many ways of making friends with him, but he
had not been seen lately, and Jo began to think he
had gone away, when she one day spied a brown face
at an upper window, looking wistfully down into their
garden, where Beth and Amy were snow-balling one another.
“That boy is suffering for society
and fun,” she said to herself. “His
grandpa does not know what’s good for him, and
keeps him shut up all alone. He needs a party
of jolly boys to play with, or somebody young and
lively. I’ve a great mind to go over and
tell the old gentleman so!”
The idea amused Jo, who liked to do
daring things and was always scandalizing Meg by her
queer performances. The plan of ‘going
over’ was not forgotten. And when the
snowy afternoon came, Jo resolved to try what could
be done. She saw Mr. Lawrence drive off, and
then sallied out to dig her way down to the hedge,
where she paused and took a survey. All quiet,
curtains down at the lower windows, servants out of
sight, and nothing human visible but a curly black
head leaning on a thin hand at the upper window.
“There he is,” thought
Jo, “Poor boy! All alone and sick this
dismal day. It’s a shame! I’ll
toss up a snowball and make him look out, and then
say a kind word to him.”
Up went a handful of soft snow, and
the head turned at once, showing a face which lost
its listless look in a minute, as the big eyes brightened
and the mouth began to smile. Jo nodded and laughed,
and flourished her broom as she called out...
“How do you do? Are you sick?”
Laurie opened the window, and croaked out as hoarsely
as a raven...
“Better, thank you. I’ve had a bad
cold, and been shut up a week.”
“I’m sorry. What do you amuse yourself
with?”
“Nothing. It’s dull as tombs up
here.”
“Don’t you read?”
“Not much. They won’t let me.”
“Can’t somebody read to you?”
“Grandpa does sometimes, but
my books don’t interest him, and I hate to ask
Brooke all the time.”
“Have someone come and see you then.”
“There isn’t anyone I’d
like to see. Boys make such a row, and my head
is weak.”
“Isn’t there some nice
girl who’d read and amuse you? Girls are
quiet and like to play nurse.”
“Don’t know any.”
“You know us,” began Jo, then laughed
and stopped.
“So I do! Will you come, please?”
cried Laurie.
“I’m not quiet and nice,
but I’ll come, if Mother will let me. I’ll
go ask her. Shut the window, like a good boy,
and wait till I come.”
With that, Jo shouldered her broom
and marched into the house, wondering what they would
all say to her. Laurie was in a flutter of excitement
at the idea of having company, and flew about to get
ready, for as Mrs. March said, he was ‘a little
gentleman’, and did honor to the coming guest
by brushing his curly pate, putting on a fresh color,
and trying to tidy up the room, which in spite of half
a dozen servants, was anything but neat. Presently
there came a loud ring, than a decided voice, asking
for ‘Mr. Laurie’, and a surprised-looking
servant came running up to announce a young lady.
“All right, show her up, it’s
Miss Jo,” said Laurie, going to the door of
his little parlor to meet Jo, who appeared, looking
rosy and quite at her ease, with a covered dish in
one hand and Beth’s three kittens in the other.
“Here I am, bag and baggage,”
she said briskly. “Mother sent her love,
and was glad if I could do anything for you.
Meg wanted me to bring some of her blanc mange, she
makes it very nicely, and Beth thought her cats would
be comforting. I knew you’d laugh at them,
but I couldn’t refuse, she was so anxious to
do something.”
It so happened that Beth’s funny
loan was just the thing, for in laughing over the
kits, Laurie forgot his bashfulness, and grew sociable
at once.
“That looks too pretty to eat,”
he said, smiling with pleasure, as Jo uncovered the
dish, and showed the blanc mange, surrounded by a garland
of green leaves, and the scarlet flowers of Amy’s
pet geranium.
“It isn’t anything, only
they all felt kindly and wanted to show it. Tell
the girl to put it away for your tea. It’s
so simple you can eat it, and being soft, it will
slip down without hurting your sore throat. What
a cozy room this is!”
“It might be if it was kept
nice, but the maids are lazy, and I don’t know
how to make them mind. It worries me though.”
“I’ll right it up in two
minutes, for it only needs to have the hearth brushed,
so and the things made straight on the mantelpiece,
so and the books put here, and the bottles
there, and your sofa turned from the light, and the
pillows plumped up a bit. Now then, you’re
fixed.”
And so he was, for, as she laughed
and talked, Jo had whisked things into place and given
quite a different air to the room. Laurie watched
her in respectful silence, and when she beckoned him
to his sofa, he sat down with a sigh of satisfaction,
saying gratefully...
“How kind you are! Yes,
that’s what it wanted. Now please take
the big chair and let me do something to amuse my
company.”
“No, I came to amuse you.
Shall I read aloud?” and Jo looked affectionately
toward some inviting books near by.
“Thank you! I’ve
read all those, and if you don’t mind, I’d
rather talk,” answered Laurie.
“Not a bit. I’ll
talk all day if you’ll only set me going.
Beth says I never know when to stop.”
“Is Beth the rosy one, who stays
at home good deal and sometimes goes out with a little
basket?” asked Laurie with interest.
“Yes, that’s Beth.
She’s my girl, and a regular good one she is,
too.”
“The pretty one is Meg, and
the curly-haired one is Amy, I believe?”
“How did you find that out?”
Laurie colored up, but answered frankly,
“Why, you see I often hear you calling to one
another, and when I’m alone up here, I can’t
help looking over at your house, you always seem to
be having such good times. I beg your pardon
for being so rude, but sometimes you forget to put
down the curtain at the window where the flowers are.
And when the lamps are lighted, it’s like looking
at a picture to see the fire, and you all around the
table with your mother. Her face is right opposite,
and it looks so sweet behind the flowers, I can’t
help watching it. I haven’t got any mother,
you know.” And Laurie poked the fire to
hide a little twitching of the lips that he could not
control.
The solitary, hungry look in his eyes
went straight to Jo’s warm heart. She had
been so simply taught that there was no nonsense in
her head, and at fifteen she was as innocent and frank
as any child. Laurie was sick and lonely, and
feeling how rich she was in home and happiness, she
gladly tried to share it with him. Her face was
very friendly and her sharp voice unusually gentle
as she said...
“We’ll never draw that
curtain any more, and I give you leave to look as
much as you like. I just wish, though, instead
of peeping, you’d come over and see us.
Mother is so splendid, she’d do you heaps of
good, and Beth would sing to you if I begged her to,
and Amy would dance. Meg and I would make you
laugh over our funny stage properties, and we’d
have jolly times. Wouldn’t your grandpa
let you?”
“I think he would, if your mother
asked him. He’s very kind, though he does
not look so, and he lets me do what I like, pretty
much, only he’s afraid I might be a bother to
strangers,” began Laurie, brightening more and
more.
“We are not strangers, we are
neighbors, and you needn’t think you’d
be a bother. We want to know you, and I’ve
been trying to do it this ever so long. We haven’t
been here a great while, you know, but we have got
acquainted with all our neighbors but you.”
“You see, Grandpa lives among
his books, and doesn’t mind much what happens
outside. Mr. Brooke, my tutor, doesn’t
stay here, you know, and I have no one to go about
with me, so I just stop at home and get on as I can.”
“That’s bad. You
ought to make an effort and go visiting everywhere
you are asked, then you’ll have plenty of friends,
and pleasant places to go to. Never mind being
bashful. It won’t last long if you keep
going.”
Laurie turned red again, but wasn’t
offended at being accused of bashfulness, for there
was so much good will in Jo it was impossible not
to take her blunt speeches as kindly as they were meant.
“Do you like your school?”
asked the boy, changing the subject, after a little
pause, during which he stared at the fire and Jo looked
about her, well pleased.
“Don’t go to school, I’m
a businessman girl, I mean. I go to
wait on my great-aunt, and a dear, cross old soul
she is, too,” answered Jo.
Laurie opened his mouth to ask another
question, but remembering just in time that it wasn’t
manners to make too many inquiries into people’s
affairs, he shut it again, and looked uncomfortable.
Jo liked his good breeding, and didn’t
mind having a laugh at Aunt March, so she gave him
a lively description of the fidgety old lady, her
fat poodle, the parrot that talked Spanish, and the
library where she reveled.
Laurie enjoyed that immensely, and
when she told about the prim old gentleman who came
once to woo Aunt March, and in the middle of a fine
speech, how Poll had tweaked his wig off to his great
dismay, the boy lay back and laughed till the tears
ran down his cheeks, and a maid popped her head in
to see what was the matter.
“Oh! That does me no end
of good. Tell on, please,” he said, taking
his face out of the sofa cushion, red and shining with
merriment.
Much elated with her success, Jo did
‘tell on’, all about their plays and plans,
their hopes and fears for Father, and the most interesting
events of the little world in which the sisters lived.
Then they got to talking about books, and to Jo’s
delight, she found that Laurie loved them as well
as she did, and had read even more than herself.
“If you like them so much, come
down and see ours. Grandfather is out, so you
needn’t be afraid,” said Laurie, getting
up.
“I’m not afraid of anything,”
returned Jo, with a toss of the head.
“I don’t believe you are!”
exclaimed the boy, looking at her with much admiration,
though he privately thought she would have good reason
to be a trifle afraid of the old gentleman, if she
met him in some of his moods.
The atmosphere of the whole house
being summerlike, Laurie led the way from room to
room, letting Jo stop to examine whatever struck her
fancy. And so, at last they came to the library,
where she clapped her hands and pranced, as she always
did when especially delighted. It was lined
with books, and there were pictures and statues, and
distracting little cabinets full of coins and curiosities,
and Sleepy Hollow chairs, and queer tables, and bronzes,
and best of all, a great open fireplace with quaint
tiles all round it.
“What richness!” sighed
Jo, sinking into the depth of a velour chair and gazing
about her with an air of intense satisfaction.
“Theodore Laurence, you ought to be the happiest
boy in the world,” she added impressively.
“A fellow can’t live on
books,” said Laurie, shaking his head as he
perched on a table opposite.
Before he could more, a bell rang,
and Jo flew up, exclaiming with alarm, “Mercy
me! It’s your grandpa!”
“Well, what if it is?
You are not afraid of anything, you know,” returned
the boy, looking wicked.
“I think I am a little bit afraid
of him, but I don’t know why I should be.
Marmee said I might come, and I don’t think
you’re any the worse for it,” said Jo,
composing herself, though she kept her eyes on the
door.
“I’m a great deal better
for it, and ever so much obliged. I’m only
afraid you are very tired of talking to me. It
was so pleasant, I couldn’t bear to stop,”
said Laurie gratefully.
“The doctor to see you, sir,”
and the maid beckoned as she spoke.
“Would you mind if I left you
for a minute? I suppose I must see him,”
said Laurie.
“Don’t mind me.
I’m happy as a cricket here,” answered
Jo.
Laurie went away, and his guest amused
herself in her own way. She was standing before
a fine portrait of the old gentleman when the door
opened again, and without turning, she said decidedly,
“I’m sure now that I shouldn’t be
afraid of him, for he’s got kind eyes, though
his mouth is grim, and he looks as if he had a tremendous
will of his own. He isn’t as handsome as
my grandfather, but I like him.”
“Thank you, ma’am,”
said a gruff voice behind her, and there, to her great
dismay, stood old Mr. Laurence.
Poor Jo blushed till she couldn’t
blush any redder, and her heart began to beat uncomfortably
fast as she thought what she had said. For a
minute a wild desire to run away possessed her, but
that was cowardly, and the girls would laugh at her,
so she resolved to stay and get out of the scrape
as she could. A second look showed her that the
living eyes, under the bushy eyebrows, were kinder
even than the painted ones, and there was a sly twinkle
in them, which lessened her fear a good deal.
The gruff voice was gruffer than ever, as the old
gentleman said abruptly, after the dreadful pause,
“So you’re not afraid of me, hey?”
“Not much, sir.”
“And you don’t think me as handsome as
your grandfather?”
“Not quite, sir.”
“And I’ve got a tremendous will, have
I?”
“I only said I thought so.”
“But you like me in spite of it?”
“Yes, I do, sir.”
That answer pleased the old gentleman.
He gave a short laugh, shook hands with her, and,
putting his finger under her chin, turned up her face,
examined it gravely, and let it go, saying with a nod,
“You’ve got your grandfather’s spirit,
if you haven’t his face. He was a fine
man, my dear, but what is better, he was a brave and
an honest one, and I was proud to be his friend.”
“Thank you, sir,” And
Jo was quite comfortable after that, for it suited
her exactly.
“What have you been doing to
this boy of mine, hey?” was the next question,
sharply put.
“Only trying to be neighborly,
sir.” And Jo told how her visit came about.
“You think he needs cheering up a bit, do you?”
“Yes, sir, he seems a little
lonely, and young folks would do him good perhaps.
We are only girls, but we should be glad to help if
we could, for we don’t forget the splendid Christmas
present you sent us,” said Jo eagerly.
“Tut, tut, tut! That was
the boy’s affair. How is the poor woman?”
“Doing nicely, sir.”
And off went Jo, talking very fast, as she told all
about the Hummels, in whom her mother had interested
richer friends than they were.
“Just her father’s way
of doing good. I shall come and see your mother
some fine day. Tell her so. There’s
the tea bell, we have it early on the boy’s
account. Come down and go on being neighborly.”
“If you’d like to have me, sir.”
“Shouldn’t ask you, if
I didn’t.” And Mr. Laurence offered
her his arm with old-fashioned courtesy.
“What would Meg say to this?”
thought Jo, as she was marched away, while her eyes
danced with fun as she imagined herself telling the
story at home.
“Hey! Why, what the dickens
has come to the fellow?” said the old gentleman,
as Laurie came running downstairs and brought up with
a start of surprise at the astounding sight of Jo
arm in arm with his redoubtable grandfather.
“I didn’t know you’d
come, sir,” he began, as Jo gave him a triumphant
little glance.
“That’s evident, by the
way you racket downstairs. Come to your tea,
sir, and behave like a gentleman.” And
having pulled the boy’s hair by way of a caress,
Mr. Laurence walked on, while Laurie went through a
series of comic evolutions behind their backs, which
nearly produced an explosion of laughter from Jo.
The old gentleman did not say much
as he drank his four cups of tea, but he watched the
young people, who soon chatted away like old friends,
and the change in his grandson did not escape him.
There was color, light, and life in the boy’s
face now, vivacity in his manner, and genuine merriment
in his laugh.
“She’s right, the lad
is lonely. I’ll see what these little girls
can do for him,” thought Mr. Laurence, as he
looked and listened. He liked Jo, for her odd,
blunt ways suited him, and she seemed to understand
the boy almost as well as if she had been one herself.
If the Laurences had been what Jo
called ‘prim and poky’, she would not
have got on at all, for such people always made her
shy and awkward. But finding them free and easy,
she was so herself, and made a good impression.
When they rose she proposed to go, but Laurie said
he had something more to show her, and took her away
to the conservatory, which had been lighted for her
benefit. It seemed quite fairylike to Jo, as
she went up and down the walks, enjoying the blooming
walls on either side, the soft light, the damp sweet
air, and the wonderful vines and trees that hung about
her, while her new friend cut the finest flowers till
his hands were full. Then he tied them up, saying,
with the happy look Jo liked to see, “Please
give these to your mother, and tell her I like the
medicine she sent me very much.”
They found Mr. Laurence standing before
the fire in the great drawing room, but Jo’s
attention was entirely absorbed by a grand piano, which
stood open.
“Do you play?” she asked,
turning to Laurie with a respectful expression.
“Sometimes,” he answered modestly.
“Please do now. I want to hear it, so
I can tell Beth.”
“Won’t you first?”
“Don’t know how. Too stupid to learn,
but I love music dearly.”
So Laurie played and Jo listened,
with her nose luxuriously buried in heliotrope and
tea roses. Her respect and regard for the ‘Laurence’
boy increased very much, for he played remarkably well
and didn’t put on any airs. She wished
Beth could hear him, but she did not say so, only
praised him till he was quite abashed, and his grandfather
came to his rescue.
“That will do, that will do,
young lady. Too many sugarplums are not good
for him. His music isn’t bad, but I hope
he will do as well in more important things.
Going? well, I’m much obliged to you, and I
hope you’ll come again. My respects to
your mother. Good night, Doctor Jo.”
He shook hands kindly, but looked
as if something did not please him. When they
got into the hall, Jo asked Laurie if she had said
something amiss. He shook his head.
“No, it was me. He doesn’t like
to hear me play.”
“Why not?”
“I’ll tell you some day. John is
going home with you, as I can’t.”
“No need of that. I am
not a young lady, and it’s only a step.
Take care of yourself, won’t you?”
“Yes, but you will come again, I hope?”
“If you promise to come and see us after you
are well.”
“I will.”
“Good night, Laurie!”
“Good night, Jo, good night!”
When all the afternoon’s adventures
had been told, the family felt inclined to go visiting
in a body, for each found something very attractive
in the big house on the other side of the hedge.
Mrs. March wanted to talk of her father with the old
man who had not forgotten him, Meg longed to walk
in the conservatory, Beth sighed for the grand piano,
and Amy was eager to see the fine pictures and statues.
“Mother, why didn’t Mr.
Laurence like to have Laurie play?” asked Jo,
who was of an inquiring disposition.
“I am not sure, but I think
it was because his son, Laurie’s father, married
an Italian lady, a musician, which displeased the old
man, who is very proud. The lady was good and
lovely and accomplished, but he did not like her,
and never saw his son after he married. They
both died when Laurie was a little child, and then
his grandfather took him home. I fancy the boy,
who was born in Italy, is not very strong, and the
old man is afraid of losing him, which makes him so
careful. Laurie comes naturally by his love of
music, for he is like his mother, and I dare say his
grandfather fears that he may want to be a musician.
At any rate, his skill reminds him of the woman he
did not like, and so he ‘glowered’ as
Jo said.”
“Dear me, how romantic!” exclaimed Meg.
“How silly!” said Jo.
“Let him be a musician if he wants to, and not
plague his life out sending him to college, when he
hates to go.”
“That’s why he has such
handsome black eyes and pretty manners, I suppose.
Italians are always nice,” said Meg, who was
a little sentimental.
“What do you know about his
eyes and his manners? You never spoke to him,
hardly,” cried Jo, who was not sentimental.
“I saw him at the party, and
what you tell shows that he knows how to behave.
That was a nice little speech about the medicine Mother
sent him.”
“He meant the blanc mange, I suppose.”
“How stupid you are, child! He meant you,
of course.”
“Did he?” And Jo opened
her eyes as if it had never occurred to her before.
“I never saw such a girl!
You don’t know a compliment when you get it,”
said Meg, with the air of a young lady who knew all
about the matter.
“I think they are great nonsense,
and I’ll thank you not to be silly and spoil
my fun. Laurie’s a nice boy and I like
him, and I won’t have any sentimental stuff
about compliments and such rubbish. We’ll
all be good to him because he hasn’t got any
mother, and he may come over and see us, mayn’t
he, Marmee?”
“Yes, Jo, your little friend
is very welcome, and I hope Meg will remember that
children should be children as long as they can.”
“I don’t call myself a
child, and I’m not in my teens yet,” observed
Amy. “What do you say, Beth?”
“I was thinking about our ’Pilgrim’s
Progress’,” answered Beth, who had
not heard a word. “How we got out of the
Slough and through the Wicket Gate by resolving to
be good, and up the steep hill by trying, and that
maybe the house over there, full of splendid things,
is going to be our Palace Beautiful.”
“We have got to get by the lions
first,” said Jo, as if she rather liked the
prospect.