Beth was postmistress, for, being
most at home, she could attend to it regularly, and
dearly liked the daily task of unlocking the little
door and distributing the mail. One July day
she came in with her hands full, and went about the
house leaving letters and parcels like the penny post.
“Here’s your posy, Mother!
Laurie never forgets that,” she said, putting
the fresh nosegay in the vase that stood in ‘Marmee’s
corner’, and was kept supplied by the affectionate
boy.
“Miss Meg March, one letter
and a glove,” continued Beth, delivering the
articles to her sister, who sat near her mother, stitching
wristbands.
“Why, I left a pair over there,
and here is only one,” said Meg, looking at
the gray cotton glove. “Didn’t you
drop the other in the garden?”
“No, I’m sure I didn’t,
for there was only one in the office.”
“I hate to have odd gloves!
Never mind, the other may be found. My letter
is only a translation of the German song I wanted.
I think Mr. Brooke did it, for this isn’t Laurie’s
writing.”
Mrs. March glanced at Meg, who was
looking very pretty in her gingham morning gown, with
the little curls blowing about her forehead, and very
womanly, as she sat sewing at her little worktable,
full of tidy white rolls, so unconscious of the thought
in her mother’s mind as she sewed and sang,
while her fingers flew and her thoughts were busied
with girlish fancies as innocent and fresh as the pansies
in her belt, that Mrs. March smiled and was satisfied.
“Two letters for Doctor Jo,
a book, and a funny old hat, which covered the whole
post office and stuck outside,” said Beth, laughing
as she went into the study where Jo sat writing.
“What a sly fellow Laurie is!
I said I wished bigger hats were the fashion, because
I burn my face every hot day. He said, ’Why
mind the fashion? Wear a big hat, and be comfortable!’
I said I would if I had one, and he has sent me this,
to try me. I’ll wear it for fun, and show
him I don’t care for the fashion.”
And hanging the antique broad-brim on a bust of Plato,
Jo read her letters.
One from her mother made her cheeks
glow and her eyes fill, for it said to her...
My Dear:
I write a little word to tell you
with how much satisfaction I watch your efforts to
control your temper. You say nothing about your
trials, failures, or successes, and think, perhaps,
that no one sees them but the Friend whose help you
daily ask, if I may trust the well-worn cover of your
guidebook. I, too, have seen them all, and heartily
believe in the sincerity of your resolution, since
it begins to bear fruit. Go on, dear, patiently
and bravely, and always believe that no one sympathizes
more tenderly with you than your loving...
Mother
“That does me good! That’s
worth millions of money and pecks of praise.
Oh, Marmee, I do try! I will keep on trying,
and not get tired, since I have you to help me.”
Laying her head on her arms, Jo wet
her little romance with a few happy tears, for she
had thought that no one saw and appreciated her efforts
to be good, and this assurance was doubly precious,
doubly encouraging, because unexpected and from the
person whose commendation she most valued. Feeling
stronger than ever to meet and subdue her Apollyon,
she pinned the note inside her frock, as a shield and
a reminder, lest she be taken unaware, and proceeded
to open her other letter, quite ready for either good
or bad news. In a big, dashing hand, Laurie
wrote...
Dear Jo, What ho!
Some English girls and boys are coming
to see me tomorrow and I want to have a jolly time.
If it’s fine, I’m going to pitch my tent
in Longmeadow, and row up the whole crew to lunch
and croquet have a fire, make messes, gypsy
fashion, and all sorts of larks. They are nice
people, and like such things. Brooke will go
to keep us boys steady, and Kate Vaughn will play
propriety for the girls. I want you all to come,
can’t let Beth off at any price, and nobody shall
worry her. Don’t bother about rations,
I’ll see to that and everything else, only do
come, there’s a good fellow!
In a tearing hurry, Yours ever, Laurie.
“Here’s richness!” cried Jo, flying
in to tell the news to Meg.
“Of course we can go, Mother?
It will be such a help to Laurie, for I can row,
and Meg see to the lunch, and the children be useful
in some way.”
“I hope the Vaughns are not
fine grown-up people. Do you know anything about
them, Jo?” asked Meg.
“Only that there are four of
them. Kate is older than you, Fred and Frank
(twins) about my age, and a little girl (Grace), who
is nine or ten. Laurie knew them abroad, and
liked the boys. I fancied, from the way he primmed
up his mouth in speaking of her, that he didn’t
admire Kate much.”
“I’m so glad my French
print is clean, it’s just the thing and so becoming!”
observed Meg complacently. “Have you anything
decent, Jo?”
“Scarlet and gray boating suit,
good enough for me. I shall row and tramp about,
so I don’t want any starch to think of.
You’ll come, Betty?”
“If you won’t let any boys talk to me.”
“Not a boy!”
“I like to please Laurie, and
I’m not afraid of Mr. Brooke, he is so kind.
But I don’t want to play, or sing, or say anything.
I’ll work hard and not trouble anyone, and you’ll
take care of me, Jo, so I’ll go.”
“That’s my good girl.
You do try to fight off your shyness, and I love
you for it. Fighting faults isn’t easy,
as I know, and a cheery word kind of gives a lift.
Thank you, Mother,” And Jo gave the thin cheek
a grateful kiss, more precious to Mrs. March than
if it had given back the rosy roundness of her youth.
“I had a box of chocolate drops,
and the picture I wanted to copy,” said Amy,
showing her mail.
“And I got a note from Mr. Laurence,
asking me to come over and play to him tonight, before
the lamps are lighted, and I shall go,” added
Beth, whose friendship with the old gentleman prospered
finely.
“Now let’s fly round,
and do double duty today, so that we can play tomorrow
with free minds,” said Jo, preparing to replace
her pen with a broom.
When the sun peeped into the girls’
room early next morning to promise them a fine day,
he saw a comical sight. Each had made such preparation
for the fête as seemed necessary and proper. Meg
had an extra row of little curlpapers across her forehead,
Jo had copiously anointed her afflicted face with
cold cream, Beth had taken Joanna to bed with her
to atone for the approaching separation, and Amy had
capped the climax by putting a clothespin on her nose
to uplift the offending feature. It was one
of the kind artists use to hold the paper on their
drawing boards, therefore quite appropriate and effective
for the purpose it was now being put. This funny
spectacle appeared to amuse the sun, for he burst
out with such radiance that Jo woke up and roused
her sisters by a hearty laugh at Amy’s ornament.
Sunshine and laughter were good omens
for a pleasure party, and soon a lively bustle began
in both houses. Beth, who was ready first, kept
reporting what went on next door, and enlivened her
sisters’ toilets by frequent telegrams from
the window.
“There goes the man with the
tent! I see Mrs. Barker doing up the lunch in
a hamper and a great basket. Now Mr. Laurence
is looking up at the sky and the weathercock.
I wish he would go too. There’s Laurie,
looking like a sailor, nice boy! Oh, mercy me!
Here’s a carriage full of people, a tall lady,
a little girl, and two dreadful boys. One is
lame, poor thing, he’s got a crutch. Laurie
didn’t tell us that. Be quick, girls!
It’s getting late. Why, there is Ned Moffat,
I do declare. Meg, isn’t that the man who
bowed to you one day when we were shopping?”
“So it is. How queer that
he should come. I thought he was at the mountains.
There is Sallie. I’m glad she got back
in time. Am I all right, Jo?” cried Meg
in a flutter.
“A regular daisy. Hold
up your dress and put your hat on straight, it looks
sentimental tipped that way and will fly off at the
first puff. Now then, come on!”
“Oh, Jo, you are not going to
wear that awful hat? It’s too absurd!
You shall not make a guy of yourself,” remonstrated
Meg, as Jo tied down with a red ribbon the broad-brimmed,
old-fashioned leghorn Laurie had sent for a joke.
“I just will, though, for it’s
capital, so shady, light, and big. It will make
fun, and I don’t mind being a guy if I’m
comfortable.” With that Jo marched straight
away and the rest followed, a bright little band of
sisters, all looking their best in summer suits, with
happy faces under the jaunty hatbrims.
Laurie ran to meet and present them
to his friends in the most cordial manner. The
lawn was the reception room, and for several minutes
a lively scene was enacted there. Meg was grateful
to see that Miss Kate, though twenty, was dressed
with a simplicity which American girls would do well
to imitate, and who was much flattered by Mr. Ned’s
assurances that he came especially to see her.
Jo understood why Laurie ‘primmed up his mouth’
when speaking of Kate, for that young lady had a standoff-don’t-touch-me
air, which contrasted strongly with the free and easy
demeanor of the other girls. Beth took an observation
of the new boys and decided that the lame one was not
‘dreadful’, but gentle and feeble, and
she would be kind to him on that account. Amy
found Grace a well-mannered, merry, little person,
and after staring dumbly at one another for a few
minutes, they suddenly became very good friends.
Tents, lunch, and croquet utensils
having been sent on beforehand, the party was soon
embarked, and the two boats pushed off together, leaving
Mr. Laurence waving his hat on the shore. Laurie
and Jo rowed one boat, Mr. Brooke and Ned the other,
while Fred Vaughn, the riotous twin, did his best
to upset both by paddling about in a wherry like a
disturbed water bug. Jo’s funny hat deserved
a vote of thanks, for it was of general utility.
It broke the ice in the beginning by producing a
laugh, it created quite a refreshing breeze, flapping
to and fro as she rowed, and would make an excellent
umbrella for the whole party, if a shower came up,
she said. Miss Kate decided that she was ‘odd’,
but rather clever, and smiled upon her from afar.
Meg, in the other boat, was delightfully
situated, face to face with the rowers, who both admired
the prospect and feathered their oars with uncommon
‘skill and dexterity’. Mr. Brooke
was a grave, silent young man, with handsome brown
eyes and a pleasant voice. Meg liked his quiet
manners and considered him a walking encyclopedia of
useful knowledge. He never talked to her much,
but he looked at her a good deal, and she felt sure
that he did not regard her with aversion. Ned,
being in college, of course put on all the airs which
freshmen think it their bounden duty to assume.
He was not very wise, but very good-natured, and
altogether an excellent person to carry on a picnic.
Sallie Gardiner was absorbed in keeping her white pique
dress clean and chattering with the ubiquitous Fred,
who kept Beth in constant terror by his pranks.
It was not far to Longmeadow, but
the tent was pitched and the wickets down by the time
they arrived. A pleasant green field, with three
wide-spreading oaks in the middle and a smooth strip
of turf for croquet.
“Welcome to Camp Laurence!”
said the young host, as they landed with exclamations
of delight.
“Brooke is commander in chief,
I am commissary general, the other fellows are staff
officers, and you, ladies, are company. The tent
is for your especial benefit and that oak is your
drawing room, this is the messroom and the third is
the camp kitchen. Now, let’s have a game
before it gets hot, and then we’ll see about
dinner.”
Frank, Beth, Amy, and Grace sat down
to watch the game played by the other eight.
Mr. Brooke chose Meg, Kate, and Fred. Laurie took
Sallie, Jo, and Ned. The English played well,
but the Americans played better, and contested every
inch of the ground as strongly as if the spirit of
’76 inspired them. Jo and Fred had several
skirmishes and once narrowly escaped high words.
Jo was through the last wicket and had missed the
stroke, which failure ruffled her a good deal.
Fred was close behind her and his turn came before
hers. He gave a stroke, his ball hit the wicket,
and stopped an inch on the wrong side. No one
was very near, and running up to examine, he gave
it a sly nudge with his toe, which put it just an
inch on the right side.
“I’m through! Now,
Miss Jo, I’ll settle you, and get in first,”
cried the young gentleman, swinging his mallet for
another blow.
“You pushed it. I saw
you. It’s my turn now,” said Jo sharply.
“Upon my word, I didn’t
move it. It rolled a bit, perhaps, but that is
allowed. So, stand off please, and let me have
a go at the stake.”
“We don’t cheat in America,
but you can, if you choose,” said Jo angrily.
“Yankees are a deal the most
tricky, everybody knows. There you go!”
returned Fred, croqueting her ball far away.
Jo opened her lips to say something
rude, but checked herself in time, colored up to her
forehead and stood a minute, hammering down a wicket
with all her might, while Fred hit the stake and declared
himself out with much exultation. She went off
to get her ball, and was a long time finding it among
the bushes, but she came back, looking cool and quiet,
and waited her turn patiently. It took several
strokes to regain the place she had lost, and when
she got there, the other side had nearly won, for
Kate’s ball was the last but one and lay near
the stake.
“By George, it’s all up
with us! Goodbye, Kate. Miss Jo owes me
one, so you are finished,” cried Fred excitedly,
as they all drew near to see the finish.
“Yankees have a trick of being
generous to their enemies,” said Jo, with a
look that made the lad redden, “especially when
they beat them,” she added, as, leaving Kate’s
ball untouched, she won the game by a clever stroke.
Laurie threw up his hat, then remembered
that it wouldn’t do to exult over the defeat
of his guests, and stopped in the middle of the cheer
to whisper to his friend, “Good for you, Jo!
He did cheat, I saw him. We can’t tell
him so, but he won’t do it again, take my word
for it.”
Meg drew her aside, under pretense
of pinning up a loose braid, and said approvingly,
“It was dreadfully provoking, but you kept your
temper, and I’m so glad, Jo.”
“Don’t praise me, Meg,
for I could box his ears this minute. I should
certainly have boiled over if I hadn’t stayed
among the nettles till I got my rage under control
enough to hold my tongue. It’s simmering
now, so I hope he’ll keep out of my way,”
returned Jo, biting her lips as she glowered at Fred
from under her big hat.
“Time for lunch,” said
Mr. Brooke, looking at his watch. “Commissary
general, will you make the fire and get water, while
Miss March, Miss Sallie, and I spread the table?
Who can make good coffee?”
“Jo can,” said Meg, glad
to recommend her sister. So Jo, feeling that
her late lessons in cookery were to do her honor, went
to preside over the coffeepot, while the children
collected dry sticks, and the boys made a fire and
got water from a spring near by. Miss Kate sketched
and Frank talked to Beth, who was making little mats
of braided rushes to serve as plates.
The commander in chief and his aides
soon spread the tablecloth with an inviting array
of eatables and drinkables, prettily decorated with
green leaves. Jo announced that the coffee was
ready, and everyone settled themselves to a hearty
meal, for youth is seldom dyspeptic, and exercise
develops wholesome appetites. A very merry lunch
it was, for everything seemed fresh and funny, and
frequent peals of laughter startled a venerable horse
who fed near by. There was a pleasing inequality
in the table, which produced many mishaps to cups and
plates, acorns dropped in the milk, little black ants
partook of the refreshments without being invited,
and fuzzy caterpillars swung down from the tree to
see what was going on. Three white-headed children
peeped over the fence, and an objectionable dog barked
at them from the other side of the river with all
his might and main.
“There’s salt here,”
said Laurie, as he handed Jo a saucer of berries.
“Thank you, I prefer spiders,”
she replied, fishing up two unwary little ones who
had gone to a creamy death. “How dare you
remind me of that horrid dinner party, when yours
is so nice in every way?” added Jo, as they
both laughed and ate out of one plate, the china having
run short.
“I had an uncommonly good time
that day, and haven’t got over it yet.
This is no credit to me, you know, I don’t do
anything. It’s you and Meg and Brooke
who make it all go, and I’m no end obliged to
you. What shall we do when we can’t eat
anymore?” asked Laurie, feeling that his trump
card had been played when lunch was over.
“Have games till it’s
cooler. I brought Authors, and I dare say Miss
Kate knows something new and nice. Go and ask
her. She’s company, and you ought to stay
with her more.”
“Aren’t you company too?
I thought she’d suit Brooke, but he keeps talking
to Meg, and Kate just stares at them through that ridiculous
glass of hers. I’m going, so you needn’t
try to preach propriety, for you can’t do it,
Jo.”
Miss Kate did know several new games,
and as the girls would not, and the boys could not,
eat any more, they all adjourned to the drawing room
to play Rig-marole.
“One person begins a story,
any nonsense you like, and tells as long as he pleases,
only taking care to stop short at some exciting point,
when the next takes it up and does the same.
It’s very funny when well done, and makes a
perfect jumble of tragical comical stuff to laugh
over. Please start it, Mr. Brooke,” said
Kate, with a commanding air, which surprised Meg,
who treated the tutor with as much respect as any
other gentleman.
Lying on the grass at the feet of
the two young ladies, Mr. Brooke obediently began
the story, with the handsome brown eyes steadily fixed
upon the sunshiny river.
“Once on a time, a knight went
out into the world to seek his fortune, for he had
nothing but his sword and his shield. He traveled
a long while, nearly eight-and-twenty years, and had
a hard time of it, till he came to the palace of a
good old king, who had offered a reward to anyone
who could tame and train a fine but unbroken colt,
of which he was very fond. The knight agreed
to try, and got on slowly but surely, for the colt
was a gallant fellow, and soon learned to love his
new master, though he was freakish and wild.
Every day, when he gave his lessons to this pet of
the king’s, the knight rode him through the
city, and as he rode, he looked everywhere for a certain
beautiful face, which he had seen many times in his
dreams, but never found. One day, as he went
prancing down a quiet street, he saw at the window
of a ruinous castle the lovely face. He was
delighted, inquired who lived in this old castle,
and was told that several captive princesses were
kept there by a spell, and spun all day to lay up money
to buy their liberty. The knight wished intensely
that he could free them, but he was poor and could
only go by each day, watching for the sweet face and
longing to see it out in the sunshine. At last
he resolved to get into the castle and ask how he
could help them. He went and knocked. The
great door flew open, and he beheld...”
“A ravishingly lovely lady,
who exclaimed, with a cry of rapture, ’At last!
At last!’” continued Kate, who had read
French novels, and admired the style. “‘Tis
she!’ cried Count Gustave, and fell at her feet
in an ecstasy of joy. ‘Oh, rise!’
she said, extending a hand of marble fairness.
‘Never! Till you tell me how I may rescue
you,’ swore the knight, still kneeling.
’Alas, my cruel fate condemns me to remain here
till my tyrant is destroyed.’ ‘Where
is the villain?’ ’In the mauve salon.
Go, brave heart, and save me from despair.’
’I obey, and return victorious or dead!’
With these thrilling words he rushed away, and flinging
open the door of the mauve salon, was about to enter,
when he received...”
“A stunning blow from the big
Greek lexicon, which an old fellow in a black gown
fired at him,” said Ned. “Instantly,
Sir What’s-his-name recovered himself, pitched
the tyrant out of the window, and turned to join the
lady, victorious, but with a bump on his brow, found
the door locked, tore up the curtains, made a rope
ladder, got halfway down when the ladder broke, and
he went headfirst into the moat, sixty feet below.
Could swim like a duck, paddled round the castle till
he came to a little door guarded by two stout fellows,
knocked their heads together till they cracked like
a couple of nuts, then, by a trifling exertion of
his prodigious strength, he smashed in the door, went
up a pair of stone steps covered with dust a foot
thick, toads as big as your fist, and spiders that
would frighten you into hysterics, Miss March.
At the top of these steps he came plump upon a sight
that took his breath away and chilled his blood...”
“A tall figure, all in white
with a veil over its face and a lamp in its wasted
hand,” went on Meg. “It beckoned,
gliding noiselessly before him down a corridor as
dark and cold as any tomb. Shadowy effigies
in armor stood on either side, a dead silence reigned,
the lamp burned blue, and the ghostly figure ever
and anon turned its face toward him, showing the glitter
of awful eyes through its white veil. They reached
a curtained door, behind which sounded lovely music.
He sprang forward to enter, but the specter plucked
him back, and waved threateningly before him a...”
“Snuffbox,” said Jo, in
a sepulchral tone, which convulsed the audience.
“‘Thankee,’ said the knight politely,
as he took a pinch and sneezed seven times so violently
that his head fell off. ‘Ha! Ha!’
laughed the ghost, and having peeped through the keyhole
at the princesses spinning away for dear life, the
evil spirit picked up her victim and put him in a
large tin box, where there were eleven other knights
packed together without their heads, like sardines,
who all rose and began to...”
“Dance a hornpipe,” cut
in Fred, as Jo paused for breath, “and, as they
danced, the rubbishy old castle turned to a man-of-war
in full sail. ’Up with the jib, reef the
tops’l halliards, helm hard alee, and man the
guns!’ roared the captain, as a Portuguese pirate
hove in sight, with a flag black as ink flying from
her foremast. ’Go in and win, my hearties!’
says the captain, and a tremendous fight began.
Of course the British beat they always
do.”
“No, they don’t!” cried Jo, aside.
“Having taken the pirate captain
prisoner, sailed slap over the schooner, whose decks
were piled high with dead and whose lee scuppers ran
blood, for the order had been ‘Cutlasses, and
die hard!’ ’Bosun’s mate, take a
bight of the flying-jib sheet, and start this villain
if he doesn’t confess his sins double quick,’
said the British captain. The Portuguese held
his tongue like a brick, and walked the plank, while
the jolly tars cheered like mad. But the sly
dog dived, came up under the man-of-war, scuttled
her, and down she went, with all sail set, ‘To
the bottom of the sea, sea, sea’ where...”
“Oh, gracious! What shall
I say?” cried Sallie, as Fred ended his rigmarole,
in which he had jumbled together pell-mell nautical
phrases and facts out of one of his favorite books.
“Well, they went to the bottom, and a nice mermaid
welcomed them, but was much grieved on finding the
box of headless knights, and kindly pickled them in
brine, hoping to discover the mystery about them,
for being a woman, she was curious. By-and-by
a diver came down, and the mermaid said, ’I’ll
give you a box of pearls if you can take it up,’
for she wanted to restore the poor things to life,
and couldn’t raise the heavy load herself.
So the diver hoisted it up, and was much disappointed
on opening it to find no pearls. He left it
in a great lonely field, where it was found by a...”
“Little goose girl, who kept
a hundred fat geese in the field,” said Amy,
when Sallie’s invention gave out. “The
little girl was sorry for them, and asked an old woman
what she should do to help them. ’Your
geese will tell you, they know everything.’ said
the old woman. So she asked what she should
use for new heads, since the old ones were lost, and
all the geese opened their hundred mouths and screamed...”
“‘Cabbages!’”
continued Laurie promptly. “‘Just the
thing,’ said the girl, and ran to get twelve
fine ones from her garden. She put them on, the
knights revived at once, thanked her, and went on their
way rejoicing, never knowing the difference, for there
were so many other heads like them in the world that
no one thought anything of it. The knight in
whom I’m interested went back to find the pretty
face, and learned that the princesses had spun themselves
free and all gone and married, but one. He was
in a great state of mind at that, and mounting the
colt, who stood by him through thick and thin, rushed
to the castle to see which was left. Peeping
over the hedge, he saw the queen of his affections
picking flowers in her garden. ’Will you
give me a rose?’ said he. ’You must
come and get it. I can’t come to you,
it isn’t proper,’ said she, as sweet as
honey. He tried to climb over the hedge, but
it seemed to grow higher and higher. Then he
tried to push through, but it grew thicker and thicker,
and he was in despair. So he patiently broke
twig after twig till he had made a little hole through
which he peeped, saying imploringly, ‘Let me
in! Let me in!’ But the pretty princess
did not seem to understand, for she picked her roses
quietly, and left him to fight his way in. Whether
he did or not, Frank will tell you.”
“I can’t. I’m
not playing, I never do,” said Frank, dismayed
at the sentimental predicament out of which he was
to rescue the absurd couple. Beth had disappeared
behind Jo, and Grace was asleep.
“So the poor knight is to be
left sticking in the hedge, is he?” asked Mr.
Brooke, still watching the river, and playing with
the wild rose in his buttonhole.
“I guess the princess gave him
a posy, and opened the gate after a while,”
said Laurie, smiling to himself, as he threw acorns
at his tutor.
“What a piece of nonsense we
have made! With practice we might do something
quite clever. Do you know Truth?”
“I hope so,” said Meg soberly.
“The game, I mean?”
“What is it?” said Fred.
“Why, you pile up your hands,
choose a number, and draw out in turn, and the person
who draws at the number has to answer truly any question
put by the rest. It’s great fun.”
“Let’s try it,” said Jo, who liked
new experiments.
Miss Kate and Mr. Brooke, Meg, and
Ned declined, but Fred, Sallie, Jo, and Laurie piled
and drew, and the lot fell to Laurie.
“Who are your heroes?” asked Jo.
“Grandfather and Napoleon.”
“Which lady here do you think prettiest?”
said Sallie.
“Margaret.”
“Which do you like best?” from Fred.
“Jo, of course.”
“What silly questions you ask!”
And Jo gave a disdainful shrug as the rest laughed
at Laurie’s matter-of-fact tone.
“Try again. Truth isn’t a bad game,”
said Fred.
“It’s a very good one
for you,” retorted Jo in a low voice. Her
turn came next.
“What is your greatest fault?”
asked Fred, by way of testing in her the virtue he
lacked himself.
“A quick temper.”
“What do you most wish for?” said Laurie.
“A pair of boot lacings,”
returned Jo, guessing and defeating his purpose.
“Not a true answer. You must say what
you really do want most.”
“Genius. Don’t you
wish you could give it to me, Laurie?” And she
slyly smiled in his disappointed face.
“What virtues do you most admire in a man?”
asked Sallie.
“Courage and honesty.”
“Now my turn,” said Fred, as his hand
came last.
“Let’s give it to him,”
whispered Laurie to Jo, who nodded and asked at once...
“Didn’t you cheat at croquet?”
“Well, yes, a little bit.”
“Good! Didn’t you take your story
out of The Sea Lion?” said Laurie.
“Rather.”
“Don’t you think the English
nation perfect in every respect?” asked Sallie.
“I should be ashamed of myself if I didn’t.”
“He’s a true John Bull.
Now, Miss Sallie, you shall have a chance without
waiting to draw. I’ll harrrow up your feelings
first by asking if you don’t think you are something
of a flirt,” said Laurie, as Jo nodded to Fred
as a sign that peace was declared.
“You impertinent boy!
Of course I’m not,” exclaimed Sallie, with
an air that proved the contrary.
“What do you hate most?” asked Fred.
“Spiders and rice pudding.”
“What do you like best?” asked Jo.
“Dancing and French gloves.”
“Well, I think Truth is a very
silly play. Let’s have a sensible game
of Authors to refresh our minds,” proposed Jo.
Ned, Frank, and the little girls joined
in this, and while it went on, the three elders sat
apart, talking. Miss Kate took out her sketch
again, and Margaret watched her, while Mr. Brooke lay
on the grass with a book, which he did not read.
“How beautifully you do it!
I wish I could draw,” said Meg, with mingled
admiration and regret in her voice.
“Why don’t you learn?
I should think you had taste and talent for it,”
replied Miss Kate graciously.
“I haven’t time.”
“Your mamma prefers other accomplishments,
I fancy. So did mine, but I proved to her that
I had talent by taking a few lessons privately, and
then she was quite willing I should go on. Can’t
you do the same with your governess?”
“I have none.”
“I forgot young ladies in America
go to school more than with us. Very fine schools
they are, too, Papa says. You go to a private
one, I suppose?”
“I don’t go at all. I am a governess
myself.”
“Oh, indeed!” said Miss
Kate, but she might as well have said, “Dear
me, how dreadful!” for her tone implied it, and
something in her face made Meg color, and wish she
had not been so frank.
Mr. Brooke looked up and said quickly,
“Young ladies in America love independence as
much as their ancestors did, and are admired and respected
for supporting themselves.”
“Oh, yes, of course it’s
very nice and proper in them to do so. We have
many most respectable and worthy young women who do
the same and are employed by the nobility, because,
being the daughters of gentlemen, they are both well
bred and accomplished, you know,” said Miss
Kate in a patronizing tone that hurt Meg’s pride,
and made her work seem not only more distasteful,
but degrading.
“Did the German song suit, Miss
March?” inquired Mr. Brooke, breaking an awkward
pause.
“Oh, yes! It was very
sweet, and I’m much obliged to whoever translated
it for me.” And Meg’s downcast face
brightened as she spoke.
“Don’t you read German?”
asked Miss Kate with a look of surprise.
“Not very well. My father,
who taught me, is away, and I don’t get on very
fast alone, for I’ve no one to correct my pronunciation.”
“Try a little now. Here
is Schiller’s Mary Stuart and a tutor who loves
to teach.” And Mr. Brooke laid his book
on her lap with an inviting smile.
“It’s so hard I’m
afraid to try,” said Meg, grateful, but bashful
in the presence of the accomplished young lady beside
her.
“I’ll read a bit to encourage
you.” And Miss Kate read one of the most
beautiful passages in a perfectly correct but perfectly
expressionless manner.
Mr. Brooke made no comment as she
returned the book to Meg, who said innocently, “I
thought it was poetry.”
“Some of it is. Try this passage.”
There was a queer smile about Mr.
Brooke’s mouth as he opened at poor Mary’s
lament.
Meg obediently following the long
grass-blade which her new tutor used to point with,
read slowly and timidly, unconsciously making poetry
of the hard words by the soft intonation of her musical
voice. Down the page went the green guide, and
presently, forgetting her listener in the beauty of
the sad scene, Meg read as if alone, giving a little
touch of tragedy to the words of the unhappy queen.
If she had seen the brown eyes then, she would have
stopped short, but she never looked up, and the lesson
was not spoiled for her.
“Very well indeed!” said
Mr. Brooke, as she paused, quite ignoring her many
mistakes, and looking as if he did indeed love to teach.
Miss Kate put up her glass, and, having
taken a survey of the little tableau before her, shut
her sketch book, saying with condescension, “You’ve
a nice accent and in time will be a clever reader.
I advise you to learn, for German is a valuable accomplishment
to teachers. I must look after Grace, she is
romping.” And Miss Kate strolled away,
adding to herself with a shrug, “I didn’t
come to chaperone a governess, though she is young
and pretty. What odd people these Yankees are.
I’m afraid Laurie will be quite spoiled among
them.”
“I forgot that English people
rather turn up their noses at governesses and don’t
treat them as we do,” said Meg, looking after
the retreating figure with an annoyed expression.
“Tutors also have rather a hard
time of it there, as I know to my sorrow. There’s
no place like America for us workers, Miss Margaret.”
And Mr. Brooke looked so contented and cheerful that
Meg was ashamed to lament her hard lot.
“I’m glad I live in it
then. I don’t like my work, but I get a
good deal of satisfaction out of it after all, so
I won’t complain. I only wished I liked
teaching as you do.”
“I think you would if you had
Laurie for a pupil. I shall be very sorry to
lose him next year,” said Mr. Brooke, busily
punching holes in the turf.
“Going to college, I suppose?”
Meg’s lips asked the question, but her eyes
added, “And what becomes of you?”
“Yes, it’s high time he
went, for he is ready, and as soon as he is off, I
shall turn soldier. I am needed.”
“I am glad of that!” exclaimed
Meg. “I should think every young man would
want to go, though it is hard for the mothers and sisters
who stay at home,” she added sorrowfully.
“I have neither, and very few
friends to care whether I live or die,” said
Mr. Brooke rather bitterly as he absently put the dead
rose in the hole he had made and covered it up, like
a little grave.
“Laurie and his grandfather
would care a great deal, and we should all be very
sorry to have any harm happen to you,” said Meg
heartily.
“Thank you, that sounds pleasant,”
began Mr. Brooke, looking cheerful again, but before
he could finish his speech, Ned, mounted on the old
horse, came lumbering up to display his equestrian
skill before the young ladies, and there was no more
quiet that day.
“Don’t you love to ride?”
asked Grace of Amy, as they stood resting after a
race round the field with the others, led by Ned.
“I dote upon it. My sister,
Meg, used to ride when Papa was rich, but we don’t
keep any horses now, except Ellen Tree,” added
Amy, laughing.
“Tell me about Ellen Tree.
Is it a donkey?” asked Grace curiously.
“Why, you see, Jo is crazy about
horses and so am I, but we’ve only got an old
sidesaddle and no horse. Out in our garden is
an apple tree that has a nice low branch, so Jo put
the saddle on it, fixed some reins on the part that
turns up, and we bounce away on Ellen Tree whenever
we like.”
“How funny!” laughed Grace.
“I have a pony at home, and ride nearly every
day in the park with Fred and Kate. It’s
very nice, for my friends go too, and the Row is full
of ladies and gentlemen.”
“Dear, how charming! I
hope I shall go abroad some day, but I’d rather
go to Rome than the Row,” said Amy, who had not
the remotest idea what the Row was and wouldn’t
have asked for the world.
Frank, sitting just behind the little
girls, heard what they were saying, and pushed his
crutch away from him with an impatient gesture as
he watched the active lads going through all sorts
of comical gymnastics. Beth, who was collecting
the scattered Author cards, looked up and said, in
her shy yet friendly way, “I’m afraid you
are tired. Can I do anything for you?”
“Talk to me, please. It’s
dull, sitting by myself,” answered Frank, who
had evidently been used to being made much of at home.
If he asked her to deliver a Latin
oration, it would not have seemed a more impossible
task to bashful Beth, but there was no place to run
to, no Jo to hide behind now, and the poor boy looked
so wistfully at her that she bravely resolved to try.
“What do you like to talk about?”
she asked, fumbling over the cards and dropping half
as she tried to tie them up.
“Well, I like to hear about
cricket and boating and hunting,” said Frank,
who had not yet learned to suit his amusements to his
strength.
My heart! What shall I do?
I don’t know anything about them, thought Beth,
and forgetting the boy’s misfortune in her flurry,
she said, hoping to make him talk, “I never
saw any hunting, but I suppose you know all about
it.”
“I did once, but I can never
hunt again, for I got hurt leaping a confounded five-barred
gate, so there are no more horses and hounds for me,”
said Frank with a sigh that made Beth hate herself
for her innocent blunder.
“Your deer are much prettier
than our ugly buffaloes,” she said, turning
to the prairies for help and feeling glad that she
had read one of the boys’ books in which Jo
delighted.
Buffaloes proved soothing and satisfactory,
and in her eagerness to amuse another, Beth forgot
herself, and was quite unconscious of her sisters’
surprise and delight at the unusual spectacle of Beth
talking away to one of the dreadful boys, against
whom she had begged protection.
“Bless her heart! She
pities him, so she is good to him,” said Jo,
beaming at her from the croquet ground.
“I always said she was a little
saint,” added Meg, as if there could be no further
doubt of it.
“I haven’t heard Frank
laugh so much for ever so long,” said Grace to
Amy, as they sat discussing dolls and making tea sets
out of the acorn cups.
“My sister Beth is a very fastidious
girl, when she likes to be,” said Amy, well
pleased at Beth’s success. She meant ‘facinating’,
but as Grace didn’t know the exact meaning of
either word, fastidious sounded well and made a good
impression.
An impromptu circus, fox and geese,
and an amicable game of croquet finished the afternoon.
At sunset the tent was struck, hampers packed, wickets
pulled up, boats loaded, and the whole party floated
down the river, singing at the tops of their voices.
Ned, getting sentimental, warbled a serenade with
the pensive refrain...
Alone, alone, ah! Woe,
alone,
and at the lines...
We each are young, we each
have a heart,
Oh, why should we stand thus
coldly apart?
he looked at Meg with such a lackadiasical
expression that she laughed outright and spoiled his
song.
“How can you be so cruel to
me?” he whispered, under cover of a lively chorus.
“You’ve kept close to that starched-up
Englishwoman all day, and now you snub me.”
“I didn’t mean to, but
you looked so funny I really couldn’t help it,”
replied Meg, passing over the first part of his reproach,
for it was quite true that she had shunned him, remembering
the Moffat party and the talk after it.
Ned was offended and turned to Sallie
for consolation, saying to her rather pettishly, “There
isn’t a bit of flirt in that girl, is there?”
“Not a particle, but she’s
a dear,” returned Sallie, defending her friend
even while confessing her shortcomings.
“She’s not a stricken
deer anyway,” said Ned, trying to be witty, and
succeeding as well as very young gentlemen usually
do.
On the lawn where it had gathered,
the little party separated with cordial good nights
and good-byes, for the Vaughns were going to Canada.
As the four sisters went home through the garden, Miss
Kate looked after them, saying, without the patronizing
tone in her voice, “In spite of their demonstrative
manners, American girls are very nice when one knows
them.”
“I quite agree with you,” said Mr. Brooke.