Like sunshine after a storm were the
peaceful weeks which followed. The invalids improved
rapidly, and Mr. March began to talk of returning
early in the new year. Beth was soon able to
lie on the study sofa all day, amusing herself with
the well-beloved cats at first, and in time with doll’s
sewing, which had fallen sadly behind-hand. Her
once active limbs were so stiff and feeble that Jo
took her for a daily airing about the house in her
strong arms. Meg cheerfully blackened and burned
her white hands cooking delicate messes for ‘the
dear’, while Amy, a loyal slave of the ring,
celebrated her return by giving away as many of her
treasures as she could prevail on her sisters to accept.
As Christmas approached, the usual
mysteries began to haunt the house, and Jo frequently
convulsed the family by proposing utterly impossible
or magnificently absurd ceremonies, in honor of this
unusually merry Christmas. Laurie was equally
impracticable, and would have had bonfires, skyrockets,
and triumphal arches, if he had had his own way.
After many skirmishes and snubbings, the ambitious
pair were considered effectually quenched and went
about with forlorn faces, which were rather belied
by explosions of laughter when the two got together.
Several days of unusually mild weather
fitly ushered in a splendid Christmas Day. Hannah
‘felt in her bones’ that it was going to
be an unusually fine day, and she proved herself a
true prophetess, for everybody and everything seemed
bound to produce a grand success. To begin with,
Mr. March wrote that he should soon be with them, then
Beth felt uncommonly well that morning, and, being
dressed in her mother’s gift, a soft crimson
merino wrapper, was borne in high triumph to the window
to behold the offering of Jo and Laurie. The
Unquenchables had done their best to be worthy of
the name, for like elves they had worked by night
and conjured up a comical surprise. Out in the
garden stood a stately snow maiden, crowned with holly,
bearing a basket of fruit and flowers in one hand,
a great roll of music in the other, a perfect rainbow
of an Afghan round her chilly shoulders, and a Christmas
carol issuing from her lips on a pink paper streamer.
THE JUNGFRAU TO BETH
God bless you, dear Queen
Bess!
May nothing you dismay,
But health and peace and happiness
Be yours, this Christmas day.
Here’s fruit to feed
our busy bee,
And flowers for her nose.
Here’s music for her
pianee,
An afghan for her toes,
A portrait of Joanna, see,
By Raphael N,
Who laboured with great industry
To make it fair and true.
Accept a ribbon red, I beg,
For Madam Purrer’s tail,
And ice cream made by lovely
Peg,
A Mont Blanc in a pail.
Their dearest love my makers
laid
Within my breast of snow.
Accept it, and the Alpine
maid,
From Laurie and from Jo.
How Beth laughed when she saw it,
how Laurie ran up and down to bring in the gifts,
and what ridiculous speeches Jo made as she presented
them.
“I’m so full of happiness,
that if Father was only here, I couldn’t hold
one drop more,” said Beth, quite sighing with
contentment as Jo carried her off to the study to
rest after the excitement, and to refresh herself
with some of the delicious grapes the ‘Jungfrau’
had sent her.
“So am I,” added Jo, slapping
the pocket wherein reposed the long-desired Undine
and Sintram.
“I’m sure I am,”
echoed Amy, poring over the engraved copy of the Madonna
and Child, which her mother had given her in a pretty
frame.
“Of course I am!” cried
Meg, smoothing the silvery folds of her first silk
dress, for Mr. Laurence had insisted on giving it.
“How can I be otherwise?” said Mrs. March
gratefully, as her eyes went from her husband’s
letter to Beth’s smiling face, and her hand carressed
the brooch made of gray and golden, chestnut and dark
brown hair, which the girls had just fastened on her
breast.
Now and then, in this workaday world,
things do happen in the delightful storybook fashion,
and what a comfort it is. Half an hour after
everyone had said they were so happy they could only
hold one drop more, the drop came. Laurie opened
the parlor door and popped his head in very quietly.
He might just as well have turned a somersault and
uttered an Indian war whoop, for his face was so full
of suppressed excitement and his voice so treacherously
joyful that everyone jumped up, though he only said,
in a queer, breathless voice, “Here’s another
Christmas present for the March family.”
Before the words were well out of
his mouth, he was whisked away somehow, and in his
place appeared a tall man, muffled up to the eyes,
leaning on the arm of another tall man, who tried to
say something and couldn’t. Of course
there was a general stampede, and for several minutes
everybody seemed to lose their wits, for the strangest
things were done, and no one said a word.
Mr. March became invisible in the
embrace of four pairs of loving arms. Jo disgraced
herself by nearly fainting away, and had to be doctored
by Laurie in the china closet. Mr. Brooke kissed
Meg entirely by mistake, as he somewhat incoherently
explained. And Amy, the dignified, tumbled over
a stool, and never stopping to get up, hugged and cried
over her father’s boots in the most touching
manner. Mrs. March was the first to recover
herself, and held up her hand with a warning, “Hush!
Remember Beth.”
But it was too late. The study
door flew open, the little red wrapper appeared on
the threshold, joy put strength into the feeble limbs,
and Beth ran straight into her father’s arms.
Never mind what happened just after that, for the
full hearts overflowed, washing away the bitterness
of the past and leaving only the sweetness of the present.
It was not at all romantic, but a
hearty laugh set everybody straight again, for Hannah
was discovered behind the door, sobbing over the fat
turkey, which she had forgotten to put down when she
rushed up from the kitchen. As the laugh subsided,
Mrs. March began to thank Mr. Brooke for his faithful
care of her husband, at which Mr. Brooke suddenly
remembered that Mr. March needed rest, and seizing
Laurie, he precipitately retired. Then the two
invalids were ordered to repose, which they did, by
both sitting in one big chair and talking hard.
Mr. March told how he had longed to
surprise them, and how, when the fine weather came,
he had been allowed by his doctor to take advantage
of it, how devoted Brooke had been, and how he was
altogether a most estimable and upright young man.
Why Mr. March paused a minute just there, and after
a glance at Meg, who was violently poking the fire,
looked at his wife with an inquiring lift of the eyebrows,
I leave you to imagine. Also why Mrs. March
gently nodded her head and asked, rather abruptly,
if he wouldn’t like to have something to eat.
Jo saw and understood the look, and she stalked grimly
away to get wine and beef tea, muttering to herself
as she slammed the door, “I hate estimable young
men with brown eyes!”
There never was such a Christmas dinner
as they had that day. The fat turkey was a sight
to behold, when Hannah sent him up, stuffed, browned,
and decorated. So was the plum pudding, which
melted in one’s mouth, likewise the jellies,
in which Amy reveled like a fly in a honeypot.
Everything turned out well, which was a mercy, Hannah
said, “For my mind was that flustered, Mum,
that it’s a merrycle I didn’t roast the
pudding, and stuff the turkey with raisins, let alone
bilin’ of it in a cloth.”
Mr. Laurence and his grandson dined
with them, also Mr. Brooke, at whom Jo glowered darkly,
to Laurie’s infinite amusement. Two easy
chairs stood side by side at the head of the table,
in which sat Beth and her father, feasting modestly
on chicken and a little fruit. They drank healths,
told stories, sang songs, ‘reminisced’,
as the old folks say, and had a thoroughly good time.
A sleigh ride had been planned, but the girls would
not leave their father, so the guests departed early,
and as twilight gathered, the happy family sat together
round the fire.
“Just a year ago we were groaning
over the dismal Christmas we expected to have.
Do you remember?” asked Jo, breaking a short
pause which had followed a long conversation about
many things.
“Rather a pleasant year on the
whole!” said Meg, smiling at the fire, and congratulating
herself on having treated Mr. Brooke with dignity.
“I think it’s been a pretty
hard one,” observed Amy, watching the light
shine on her ring with thoughtful eyes.
“I’m glad it’s over,
because we’ve got you back,” whispered
Beth, who sat on her father’s knee.
“Rather a rough road for you
to travel, my little pilgrims, especially the latter
part of it. But you have got on bravely, and
I think the burdens are in a fair way to tumble off
very soon,” said Mr. March, looking with fatherly
satisfaction at the four young faces gathered round
him.
“How do you know? Did Mother tell you?”
asked Jo.
“Not much. Straws show
which way the wind blows, and I’ve made several
discoveries today.”
“Oh, tell us what they are!”
cried Meg, who sat beside him.
“Here is one.” And
taking up the hand which lay on the arm of his chair,
he pointed to the roughened forefinger, a burn on the
back, and two or three little hard spots on the palm.
“I remember a time when this hand was white
and smooth, and your first care was to keep it so.
It was very pretty then, but to me it is much prettier
now, for in this seeming blemishes I read a little
history. A burnt offering has been made to vanity,
this hardened palm has earned something better than
blisters, and I’m sure the sewing done by these
pricked fingers will last a long time, so much good
will went into the stitches. Meg, my dear, I
value the womanly skill which keeps home happy more
than white hands or fashionable accomplishments.
I’m proud to shake this good, industrious little
hand, and hope I shall not soon be asked to give it
away.”
If Meg had wanted a reward for hours
of patient labor, she received it in the hearty pressure
of her father’s hand and the approving smile
he gave her.
“What about Jo? Please
say something nice, for she has tried so hard and
been so very, very good to me,” said Beth in
her father’s ear.
He laughed and looked across at the
tall girl who sat opposite, with an unusually mild
expression in her face.
“In spite of the curly crop,
I don’t see the ‘son Jo’ whom I left
a year ago,” said Mr. March. “I
see a young lady who pins her collar straight, laces
her boots neatly, and neither whistles, talks slang,
nor lies on the rug as she used to do. Her face
is rather thin and pale just now, with watching and
anxiety, but I like to look at it, for it has grown
gentler, and her voice is lower. She doesn’t
bounce, but moves quietly, and takes care of a certain
little person in a motherly way which delights me.
I rather miss my wild girl, but if I get a strong,
helpful, tenderhearted woman in her place, I shall
feel quite satisfied. I don’t know whether
the shearing sobered our black sheep, but I do know
that in all Washington I couldn’t find anything
beautiful enough to be bought with the five-and-twenty
dollars my good girl sent me.”
Jo’s keen eyes were rather dim
for a minute, and her thin face grew rosy in the firelight
as she received her father’s praise, feeling
that she did deserve a portion of it.
“Now, Beth,” said Amy,
longing for her turn, but ready to wait.
“There’s so little of
her, I’m afraid to say much, for fear she will
slip away altogether, though she is not so shy as she
used to be,” began their father cheerfully.
But recollecting how nearly he had lost her, he held
her close, saying tenderly, with her cheek against
his own, “I’ve got you safe, my Beth,
and I’ll keep you so, please God.”
After a minute’s silence, he
looked down at Amy, who sat on the cricket at his
feet, and said, with a caress of the shining hair...
“I observed that Amy took drumsticks
at dinner, ran errands for her mother all the afternoon,
gave Meg her place tonight, and has waited on every
one with patience and good humor. I also observe
that she does not fret much nor look in the glass,
and has not even mentioned a very pretty ring which
she wears, so I conclude that she has learned to think
of other people more and of herself less, and has decided
to try and mold her character as carefully as she
molds her little clay figures. I am glad of
this, for though I should be very proud of a graceful
statue made by her, I shall be infinitely prouder of
a lovable daughter with a talent for making life beautiful
to herself and others.”
“What are you thinking of, Beth?”
asked Jo, when Amy had thanked her father and told
about her ring.
“I read in Pilgrim’s
Progress today how, after many troubles, Christian
and Hopeful came to a pleasant green meadow where lilies
bloomed all year round, and there they rested happily,
as we do now, before they went on to their journey’s
end,” answered Beth, adding, as she slipped
out of her father’s arms and went to the instrument,
“It’s singing time now, and I want to
be in my old place. I’ll try to sing the
song of the shepherd boy which the Pilgrims heard.
I made the music for Father, because he likes the
verses.”
So, sitting at the dear little piano,
Beth softly touched the keys, and in the sweet voice
they had never thought to hear again, sang to her
own accompaniment the quaint hymn, which was a singularly
fitting song for her.
He that is down need fear
no fall,
He that is low no pride.
He that is humble ever shall
Have God to be his guide.
I am content with what I have,
Little be it, or much.
And, Lord! Contentment
still I crave,
Because Thou savest such.
Fulness to them a burden is,
That go on pilgrimage.
Here little, and hereafter
bliss,
Is best from age to age!