“That boy is a perfect cyclops,
isn’t he?” said Amy one day, as Laurie
clattered by on horseback, with a flourish of his whip
as he passed.
“How dare you say so, when he’s
got both his eyes? And very handsome ones they
are, too,” cried Jo, who resented any slighting
remarks about her friend.
“I didn’t say anything
about his eyes, and I don’t see why you need
fire up when I admire his riding.”
“Oh, my goodness! That
little goose means a centaur, and she called him a
Cyclops,” exclaimed Jo, with a burst of laughter.
“You needn’t be so rude,
it’s only a ‘lapse of lingy’, as
Mr. Davis says,” retorted Amy, finishing Jo
with her Latin. “I just wish I had a little
of the money Laurie spends on that horse,” she
added, as if to herself, yet hoping her sisters would
hear.
“Why?” asked Meg kindly,
for Jo had gone off in another laugh at Amy’s
second blunder.
“I need it so much. I’m
dreadfully in debt, and it won’t be my turn to
have the rag money for a month.”
“In debt, Amy? What do you mean?”
And Meg looked sober.
“Why, I owe at least a dozen
pickled limes, and I can’t pay them, you know,
till I have money, for Marmee forbade my having anything
charged at the shop.”
“Tell me all about it.
Are limes the fashion now? It used to be pricking
bits of rubber to make balls.” And Meg
tried to keep her countenance, Amy looked so grave
and important.
“Why, you see, the girls are
always buying them, and unless you want to be thought
mean, you must do it too. It’s nothing
but limes now, for everyone is sucking them in their
desks in schooltime, and trading them off for pencils,
bead rings, paper dolls, or something else, at recess.
If one girl likes another, she gives her a lime.
If she’s mad with her, she eats one before
her face, and doesn’t offer even a suck.
They treat by turns, and I’ve had ever so many
but haven’t returned them, and I ought for they
are debts of honor, you know.”
“How much will pay them off
and restore your credit?” asked Meg, taking
out her purse.
“A quarter would more than do
it, and leave a few cents over for a treat for you.
Don’t you like limes?”
“Not much. You may have
my share. Here’s the money. Make
it last as long as you can, for it isn’t very
plenty, you know.”
“Oh, thank you! It must
be so nice to have pocket money! I’ll have
a grand feast, for I haven’t tasted a lime this
week. I felt delicate about taking any, as I
couldn’t return them, and I’m actually
suffering for one.”
Next day Amy was rather late at school,
but could not resist the temptation of displaying,
with pardonable pride, a moist brown-paper parcel,
before she consigned it to the inmost recesses of her
desk. During the next few minutes the rumor that
Amy March had got twenty-four delicious limes (she
ate one on the way) and was going to treat circulated
through her ‘set’, and the attentions of
her friends became quite overwhelming. Katy
Brown invited her to her next party on the spot.
Mary Kinglsey insisted on lending her her watch till
recess, and Jenny Snow, a satirical young lady, who
had basely twitted Amy upon her limeless state, promptly
buried the hatchet and offered to furnish answers
to certain appalling sums. But Amy had not forgotten
Miss Snow’s cutting remarks about ’some
persons whose noses were not too flat to smell other
people’s limes, and stuck-up people who were
not too proud to ask for them’, and she instantly
crushed ’that Snow girl’s’ hopes
by the withering telegram, “You needn’t
be so polite all of a sudden, for you won’t
get any.”
A distinguished personage happened
to visit the school that morning, and Amy’s
beautifully drawn maps received praise, which honor
to her foe rankled in the soul of Miss Snow, and caused
Miss March to assume the airs of a studious young
peacock. But, alas, alas! Pride goes before
a fall, and the revengeful Snow turned the tables with
disastrous success. No sooner had the guest paid
the usual stale compliments and bowed himself out,
than Jenny, under pretense of asking an important
question, informed Mr. Davis, the teacher, that Amy
March had pickled limes in her desk.
Now Mr. Davis had declared limes a
contraband article, and solemnly vowed to publicly
ferrule the first person who was found breaking the
law. This much-enduring man had succeeded in
banishing chewing gum after a long and stormy war,
had made a bonfire of the confiscated novels and newspapers,
had suppressed a private post office, had forbidden
distortions of the face, nicknames, and caricatures,
and done all that one man could do to keep half a
hundred rebellious girls in order. Boys are
trying enough to human patience, goodness knows, but
girls are infinitely more so, especially to nervous
gentlemen with tyrannical tempers and no more talent
for teaching than Dr. Blimber. Mr. Davis knew
any quantity of Greek, Latin, algebra, and ologies
of all sorts so he was called a fine teacher, and
manners, morals, feelings, and examples were not considered
of any particular importance. It was a most
unfortunate moment for denouncing Amy, and Jenny knew
it. Mr. Davis had evidently taken his coffee
too strong that morning, there was an east wind, which
always affected his neuralgia, and his pupils had
not done him the credit which he felt he deserved.
Therefore, to use the expressive, if not elegant,
language of a schoolgirl, “He was as nervous
as a witch and as cross as a bear”. The
word ‘limes’ was like fire to powder, his
yellow face flushed, and he rapped on his desk with
an energy which made Jenny skip to her seat with unusual
rapidity.
“Young ladies, attention, if you please!”
At the stern order the buzz ceased,
and fifty pairs of blue, black, gray, and brown eyes
were obediently fixed upon his awful countenance.
“Miss March, come to the desk.”
Amy rose to comply with outward composure,
but a secret fear oppressed her, for the limes weighed
upon her conscience.
“Bring with you the limes you
have in your desk,” was the unexpected command
which arrested her before she got out of her seat.
“Don’t take all.”
whispered her neighbor, a young lady of great presence
of mind.
Amy hastily shook out half a dozen
and laid the rest down before Mr. Davis, feeling that
any man possessing a human heart would relent when
that delicious perfume met his nose. Unfortunately,
Mr. Davis particularly detested the odor of the fashionable
pickle, and disgust added to his wrath.
“Is that all?”
“Not quite,” stammered Amy.
“Bring the rest immediately.”
With a despairing glance at her set, she obeyed.
“You are sure there are no more?”
“I never lie, sir.”
“So I see. Now take these
disgusting things two by two, and throw them out of
the window.”
There was a simultaneous sigh, which
created quite a little gust, as the last hope fled,
and the treat was ravished from their longing lips.
Scarlet with shame and anger, Amy went to and fro six
dreadful times, and as each doomed couple, looking
oh, so plump and juicy, fell from her reluctant hands,
a shout from the street completed the anguish of the
girls, for it told them that their feast was being
exulted over by the little Irish children, who were
their sworn foes. This this was too
much. All flashed indignant or appealing glances
at the inexorable Davis, and one passionate lime lover
burst into tears.
As Amy returned from her last trip,
Mr. Davis gave a portentous “Hem!” and
said, in his most impressive manner...
“Young ladies, you remember
what I said to you a week ago. I am sorry this
has happened, but I never allow my rules to be infringed,
and I never break my word. Miss March, hold
out your hand.”
Amy started, and put both hands behind
her, turning on him an imploring look which pleaded
for her better than the words she could not utter.
She was rather a favorite with ‘old Davis’,
as, of course, he was called, and it’s my private
belief that he would have broken his word if the indignation
of one irrepressible young lady had not found vent
in a hiss. That hiss, faint as it was, irritated
the irascible gentleman, and sealed the culprit’s
fate.
“Your hand, Miss March!”
was the only answer her mute appeal received, and
too proud to cry or beseech, Amy set her teeth, threw
back her head defiantly, and bore without flinching
several tingling blows on her little palm. They
were neither many nor heavy, but that made no difference
to her. For the first time in her life she had
been struck, and the disgrace, in her eyes, was as
deep as if he had knocked her down.
“You will now stand on the platform
till recess,” said Mr. Davis, resolved to do
the thing thoroughly, since he had begun.
That was dreadful. It would
have been bad enough to go to her seat, and see the
pitying faces of her friends, or the satisfied ones
of her few enemies, but to face the whole school,
with that shame fresh upon her, seemed impossible,
and for a second she felt as if she could only drop
down where she stood, and break her heart with crying.
A bitter sense of wrong and the thought of Jenny
Snow helped her to bear it, and, taking the ignominious
place, she fixed her eyes on the stove funnel above
what now seemed a sea of faces, and stood there, so
motionless and white that the girls found it hard to
study with that pathetic figure before them.
During the fifteen minutes that followed,
the proud and sensitive little girl suffered a shame
and pain which she never forgot. To others it
might seem a ludicrous or trivial affair, but to her
it was a hard experience, for during the twelve years
of her life she had been governed by love alone, and
a blow of that sort had never touched her before.
The smart of her hand and the ache of her heart were
forgotten in the sting of the thought, “I shall
have to tell at home, and they will be so disappointed
in me!”
The fifteen minutes seemed an hour,
but they came to an end at last, and the word ‘Recess!’
had never seemed so welcome to her before.
“You can go, Miss March,”
said Mr. Davis, looking, as he felt, uncomfortable.
He did not soon forget the reproachful
glance Amy gave him, as she went, without a word to
anyone, straight into the anteroom, snatched her things,
and left the place “forever,” as she passionately
declared to herself. She was in a sad state
when she got home, and when the older girls arrived,
some time later, an indignation meeting was held at
once. Mrs. March did not say much but looked
disturbed, and comforted her afflicted little daughter
in her tenderest manner. Meg bathed the insulted
hand with glycerine and tears, Beth felt that even
her beloved kittens would fail as a balm for griefs
like this, Jo wrathfully proposed that Mr. Davis be
arrested without delay, and Hannah shook her fist
at the ‘villain’ and pounded potatoes for
dinner as if she had him under her pestle.
No notice was taken of Amy’s
flight, except by her mates, but the sharp-eyed demoiselles
discovered that Mr. Davis was quite benignant in the
afternoon, also unusually nervous. Just before
school closed, Jo appeared, wearing a grim expression
as she stalked up to the desk, and delivered a letter
from her mother, then collected Amy’s property,
and departed, carefully scraping the mud from her
boots on the door mat, as if she shook the dust of
the place off her feet.
“Yes, you can have a vacation
from school, but I want you to study a little every
day with Beth,” said Mrs. March that evening.
“I don’t approve of corporal punishment,
especially for girls. I dislike Mr. Davis’s
manner of teaching and don’t think the girls
you associate with are doing you any good, so I shall
ask your father’s advice before I send you anywhere
else.”
“That’s good! I
wish all the girls would leave, and spoil his old
school. It’s perfectly maddening to think
of those lovely limes,” sighed Amy, with the
air of a martyr.
“I am not sorry you lost them,
for you broke the rules, and deserved some punishment
for disobedience,” was the severe reply, which
rather disappointed the young lady, who expected nothing
but sympathy.
“Do you mean you are glad I
was disgraced before the whole school?” cried
Amy.
“I should not have chosen that
way of mending a fault,” replied her mother,
“but I’m not sure that it won’t do
you more good than a bolder method. You are
getting to be rather conceited, my dear, and it is
quite time you set about correcting it. You have
a good many little gifts and virtues, but there is
no need of parading them, for conceit spoils the finest
genius. There is not much danger that real talent
or goodness will be overlooked long, even if it is,
the consciousness of possessing and using it well
should satisfy one, and the great charm of all power
is modesty.”
“So it is!” cried Laurie,
who was playing chess in a corner with Jo. “I
knew a girl once, who had a really remarkable talent
for music, and she didn’t know it, never guessed
what sweet little things she composed when she was
alone, and wouldn’t have believed it if anyone
had told her.”
“I wish I’d known that
nice girl. Maybe she would have helped me, I’m
so stupid,” said Beth, who stood beside him,
listening eagerly.
“You do know her, and she helps
you better than anyone else could,” answered
Laurie, looking at her with such mischievous meaning
in his merry black eyes that Beth suddenly turned
very red, and hid her face in the sofa cushion, quite
overcome by such an unexpected discovery.
Jo let Laurie win the game to pay
for that praise of her Beth, who could not be prevailed
upon to play for them after her compliment. So
Laurie did his best, and sang delightfully, being in
a particularly lively humor, for to the Marches he
seldom showed the moody side of his character.
When he was gone, Amy, who had been pensive all evening,
said suddenly, as if busy over some new idea, “Is
Laurie an accomplished boy?”
“Yes, he has had an excellent
education, and has much talent. He will make
a fine man, if not spoiled by petting,” replied
her mother.
“And he isn’t conceited, is he?”
asked Amy.
“Not in the least. That
is why he is so charming and we all like him so much.”
“I see. It’s nice
to have accomplishments and be elegant, but not to
show off or get perked up,” said Amy thoughtfully.
“These things are always seen
and felt in a person’s manner and conversations,
if modestly used, but it is not necessary to display
them,” said Mrs. March.
“Any more than it’s proper
to wear all your bonnets and gowns and ribbons at
once, that folks may know you’ve got them,”
added Jo, and the lecture ended in a laugh.