It takes people a long time to learn
the difference between talent and genius, especially
ambitious young men and women. Amy was learning
this distinction through much tribulation, for mistaking
enthusiasm for inspiration, she attempted every branch
of art with youthful audacity. For a long time
there was a lull in the ‘mud-pie’ business,
and she devoted herself to the finest pen-and-ink
drawing, in which she showed such taste and skill
that her graceful handiwork proved both pleasant and
profitable. But over-strained eyes caused pen
and ink to be laid aside for a bold attempt at poker-sketching.
While this attack lasted, the family lived in constant
fear of a conflagration, for the odor of burning wood
pervaded the house at all hours, smoke issued from
attic and shed with alarming frequency, red-hot
pokers lay about promiscuously, and Hannah never
went to bed without a pail of water and the dinner
bell at her door in case of fire. Raphael’s
face was found boldly executed on the underside of
the moulding board, and Bacchus on the head of a beer
barrel. A chanting cherub adorned the cover of
the sugar bucket, and attempts to portray Romeo and
Juliet supplied kindling for some time.
From fire to oil was a natural transition
for burned fingers, and Amy fell to painting with
undiminished ardor. An artist friend fitted her
out with his castoff palettes, brushes, and colors,
and she daubed away, producing pastoral and marine
views such as were never seen on land or sea.
Her monstrosities in the way of cattle would have
taken prizes at an agricultural fair, and the perilous
pitching of her vessels would have produced seasickness
in the most nautical observer, if the utter disregard
to all known rules of shipbuilding and rigging had
not convulsed him with laughter at the first glance.
Swarthy boys and dark-eyed Madonnas, staring at you
from one corner of the studio, suggested Murillo;
oily brown shadows of faces with a lurid streak in
the wrong place, meant Rembrandt; buxom ladies and
dropiscal infants, Rubens; and Turner appeared in
tempests of blue thunder, orange lightning, brown
rain, and purple clouds, with a tomato-colored splash
in the middle, which might be the sun or a bouy, a
sailor’s shirt or a king’s robe, as the
spectator pleased.
Charcoal portraits came next, and
the entire family hung in a row, looking as wild and
crocky as if just evoked from a coalbin. Softened
into crayon sketches, they did better, for the likenesses
were good, and Amy’s hair, Jo’s nose,
Meg’s mouth, and Laurie’s eyes were pronounced
‘wonderfully fine’. A return to clay
and plaster followed, and ghostly casts of her acquaintances
haunted corners of the house, or tumbled off closet
shelves onto people’s heads. Children were
enticed in as models, till their incoherent accounts
of her mysterious doings caused Miss Amy to be regarded
in the light of a young ogress. Her efforts
in this line, however, were brought to an abrupt close
by an untoward accident, which quenched her ardor.
Other models failing her for a time, she undertook
to cast her own pretty foot, and the family were one
day alarmed by an unearthly bumping and screaming and
running to the rescue, found the young enthusiast
hopping wildly about the shed with her foot held fast
in a pan full of plaster, which had hardened with
unexpected rapidity. With much difficulty and
some danger she was dug out, for Jo was so overcome
with laughter while she excavated that her knife went
too far, cut the poor foot, and left a lasting memorial
of one artistic attempt, at least.
After this Amy subsided, till a mania
for sketching from nature set her to haunting river,
field, and wood, for picturesque studies, and sighing
for ruins to copy. She caught endless colds sitting
on damp grass to book ‘a delicious bit’,
composed of a stone, a stump, one mushroom, and a
broken mullein stalk, or ‘a heavenly mass of
clouds’, that looked like a choice display of
featherbeds when done. She sacrificed her complexion
floating on the river in the midsummer sun to study
light and shade, and got a wrinkle over her nose trying
after ‘points of sight’, or whatever the
squint-and-string performance is called.
If ‘genius is eternal patience’,
as Michelangelo affirms, Amy had some claim to the
divine attribute, for she persevered in spite of all
obstacles, failures, and discouragements, firmly believing
that in time she should do something worthy to be
called ‘high art’.
She was learning, doing, and enjoying
other things, meanwhile, for she had resolved to be
an attractive and accomplished woman, even if she
never became a great artist. Here she succeeded
better, for she was one of those happily created beings
who please without effort, make friends everywhere,
and take life so gracefully and easily that less fortunate
souls are tempted to believe that such are born under
a lucky star. Everybody liked her, for among
her good gifts was tact. She had an instinctive
sense of what was pleasing and proper, always said
the right thing to the right person, did just what
suited the time and place, and was so self-possessed
that her sisters used to say, “If Amy went to
court without any rehearsal beforehand, she’d
know exactly what to do.”
One of her weaknesses was a desire
to move in ‘our best society’, without
being quite sure what the best really was. Money,
position, fashionable accomplishments, and elegant
manners were most desirable things in her eyes, and
she liked to associate with those who possessed them,
often mistaking the false for the true, and admiring
what was not admirable. Never forgetting that
by birth she was a gentlewoman, she cultivated her
aristocratic tastes and feelings, so that when the
opportunity came she might be ready to take the place
from which poverty now excluded her.
“My lady,” as her friends
called her, sincerely desired to be a genuine lady,
and was so at heart, but had yet to learn that money
cannot buy refinement of nature, that rank does not
always confer nobility, and that true breeding makes
itself felt in spite of external drawbacks.
“I want to ask a favor of you,
Mamma,” Amy said, coming in with an important
air one day.
“Well, little girl, what is
it?” replied her mother, in whose eyes the stately
young lady still remained ‘the baby’.
“Our drawing class breaks up
next week, and before the girls separate for the summer,
I want to ask them out here for a day. They are
wild to see the river, sketch the broken bridge, and
copy some of the things they admire in my book.
They have been very kind to me in many ways, and
I am grateful, for they are all rich and I know I am
poor, yet they never made any difference.”
“Why should they?” and
Mrs. March put the question with what the girls called
her ‘Maria Theresa air’.
“You know as well as I that
it does make a difference with nearly everyone, so
don’t ruffle up like a dear, motherly hen, when
your chickens get pecked by smarter birds. The
ugly duckling turned out a swan, you know.”
and Amy smiled without bitterness, for she possessed
a happy temper and hopeful spirit.
Mrs. March laughed, and smoothed down
her maternal pride as she asked, “Well, my swan,
what is your plan?”
“I should like to ask the girls
out to lunch next week, to take them for a drive to
the places they want to see, a row on the river, perhaps,
and make a little artistic fête for them.”
“That looks feasible.
What do you want for lunch? Cake, sandwiches,
fruit, and coffee will be all that is necessary, I
suppose?”
“Oh, dear, no! We must
have cold tongue and chicken, French chocolate and
ice cream, besides. The girls are used to such
things, and I want my lunch to be proper and elegant,
though I do work for my living.”
“How many young ladies are there?”
asked her mother, beginning to look sober.
“Twelve or fourteen in the class,
but I dare say they won’t all come.”
“Bless me, child, you will have
to charter an omnibus to carry them about.”
“Why, Mother, how can you think
of such a thing? Not more than six or eight
will probably come, so I shall hire a beach wagon and
borrow Mr. Laurence’s cherry-bounce.”
(Hannah’s pronunciation of char-a-banc.)
“All of this will be expensive, Amy.”
“Not very. I’ve calculated the cost,
and I’ll pay for it myself.”
“Don’t you think, dear,
that as these girls are used to such things, and the
best we can do will be nothing new, that some simpler
plan would be pleasanter to them, as a change if nothing
more, and much better for us than buying or borrowing
what we don’t need, and attempting a style not
in keeping with our circumstances?”
“If I can’t have it as
I like, I don’t care to have it at all.
I know that I can carry it out perfectly well, if
you and the girls will help a little, and I don’t
see why I can’t if I’m willing to pay for
it,” said Amy, with the decision which opposition
was apt to change into obstinacy.
Mrs. March knew that experience was
an excellent teacher, and when it was possible she
left her children to learn alone the lessons which
she would gladly have made easier, if they had not
objected to taking advice as much as they did salts
and senna.
“Very well, Amy, if your heart
is set upon it, and you see your way through without
too great an outlay of money, time, and temper, I’ll
say no more. Talk it over with the girls, and
whichever way you decide, I’ll do my best to
help you.”
“Thanks, Mother, you are always
so kind.” and away went Amy to lay her plan
before her sisters.
Meg agreed at once, and promised her
aid, gladly offering anything she possessed, from
her little house itself to her very best saltspoons.
But Jo frowned upon the whole project and would have
nothing to do with it at first.
“Why in the world should you
spend your money, worry your family, and turn the
house upside down for a parcel of girls who don’t
care a sixpence for you? I thought you had too
much pride and sense to truckle to any mortal woman
just because she wears French boots and rides in a
coupe,” said Jo, who, being called from the tragic
climax of her novel, was not in the best mood for
social enterprises.
“I don’t truckle, and
I hate being patronized as much as you do!”
returned Amy indignantly, for the two still jangled
when such questions arose. “The girls do
care for me, and I for them, and there’s a great
deal of kindness and sense and talent among them, in
spite of what you call fashionable nonsense.
You don’t care to make people like you, to
go into good society, and cultivate your manners and
tastes. I do, and I mean to make the most of
every chance that comes. You can go through
the world with your elbows out and your nose in the
air, and call it independence, if you like.
That’s not my way.”
When Amy had whetted her tongue and
freed her mind she usually got the best of it, for
she seldom failed to have common sense on her side,
while Jo carried her love of liberty and hate of conventionalities
to such an unlimited extent that she naturally found
herself worsted in an argument. Amy’s
definition of Jo’s idea of independence was such
a good hit that both burst out laughing, and the discussion
took a more amiable turn. Much against her will,
Jo at length consented to sacrifice a day to Mrs.
Grundy, and help her sister through what she regarded
as ‘a nonsensical business’.
The invitations were sent, nearly
all accepted, and the following Monday was set apart
for the grand event. Hannah was out of humor
because her week’s work was deranged, and prophesied
that “ef the washin’ and ironin’
warn’t done reg’lar, nothin’ would
go well anywheres”. This hitch in the
mainspring of the domestic machinery had a bad effect
upon the whole concern, but Amy’s motto was ’Nil
desperandum’, and having made up her mind what
to do, she proceeded to do it in spite of all obstacles.
To begin with, Hannah’s cooking didn’t
turn out well. The chicken was tough, the tongue
too salty, and the chocolate wouldn’t froth
properly. Then the cake and ice cost more than
Amy expected, so did the wagon, and various other expenses,
which seemed trifling at the outset, counted up rather
alarmingly afterward. Beth got a cold and took
to her bed. Meg had an unusual number of callers
to keep her at home, and Jo was in such a divided state
of mind that her breakages, accidents, and mistakes
were uncommonly numerous, serious, and trying.
If it was not fair on Monday, the
young ladies were to come on Tuesday, an arrangement
which aggravated Jo and Hannah to the last degree.
On Monday morning the weather was in that undecided
state which is more exasperating than a steady pour.
It drizzled a little, shone a little, blew a little,
and didn’t make up its mind till it was too late
for anyone else to make up theirs. Amy was up
at dawn, hustling people out of their beds and through
their breakfasts, that the house might be got in order.
The parlor struck her as looking uncommonly shabby,
but without stopping to sigh for what she had not,
she skillfully made the best of what she had, arranging
chairs over the worn places in the carpet, covering
stains on the walls with homemade statuary, which gave
an artistic air to the room, as did the lovely vases
of flowers Jo scattered about.
The lunch looked charming, and as
she surveyed it, she sincerely hoped it would taste
well, and that the borrowed glass, china, and silver
would get safely home again. The carriages were
promised, Meg and Mother were all ready to do the
honors, Beth was able to help Hannah behind the scenes,
Jo had engaged to be as lively and amiable as an absent
mind, and aching head, and a very decided disapproval
of everybody and everything would allow, and as she
wearily dressed, Amy cheered herself with anticipations
of the happy moment when, lunch safely over, she should
drive away with her friends for an afternoon of artistic
delights, for the ‘cherry bounce’ and the
broken bridge were her strong points.
Then came the hours of suspense, during
which she vibrated from parlor to porch, while public
opinion varied like the weathercock. A smart
shower at eleven had evidently quenched the enthusiasm
of the young ladies who were to arrive at twelve,
for nobody came, and at two the exhausted family sat
down in a blaze of sunshine to consume the perishable
portions of the feast, that nothing might be lost.
“No doubt about the weather
today, they will certainly come, so we must fly round
and be ready for them,” said Amy, as the sun
woke her next morning. She spoke briskly, but
in her secret soul she wished she had said nothing
about Tuesday, for her interest like her cake was getting
a little stale.
“I can’t get any lobsters,
so you will have to do without salad today,”
said Mr. March, coming in half an hour later, with
an expression of placid despair.
“Use the chicken then, the toughness
won’t matter in a salad,” advised his
wife.
“Hannah left it on the kitchen
table a minute, and the kittens got at it. I’m
very sorry, Amy,” added Beth, who was still a
patroness of cats.
“Then I must have a lobster,
for tongue alone won’t do,” said Amy decidedly.
“Shall I rush into town and
demand one?” asked Jo, with the magnanimity
of a martyr.
“You’d come bringing it
home under your arm without any paper, just to try
me. I’ll go myself,” answered Amy,
whose temper was beginning to fail.
Shrouded in a thick veil and armed
with a genteel traveling basket, she departed, feeling
that a cool drive would soothe her ruffled spirit and
fit her for the labors of the day. After some
delay, the object of her desire was procured, likewise
a bottle of dressing to prevent further loss of time
at home, and off she drove again, well pleased with
her own forethought.
As the omnibus contained only one
other passenger, a sleepy old lady, Amy pocketed her
veil and beguiled the tedium of the way by trying to
find out where all her money had gone to. So
busy was she with her card full of refractory figures
that she did not observe a newcomer, who entered without
stopping the vehicle, till a masculine voice said,
“Good morning, Miss March,” and, looking
up, she beheld one of Laurie’s most elegant
college friends. Fervently hoping that he would
get out before she did, Amy utterly ignored the basket
at her feet, and congratulating herself that she had
on her new traveling dress, returned the young man’s
greeting with her usual suavity and spirit.
They got on excellently, for Amy’s
chief care was soon set at rest by learning that the
gentleman would leave first, and she was chatting
away in a peculiarly lofty strain, when the old lady
got out. In stumbling to the door, she upset
the basket, and oh horror! the
lobster, in all its vulgar size and brilliancy, was
revealed to the highborn eyes of a Tudor!
“By Jove, she’s forgotten
her dinner!” cried the unconscious youth, poking
the scarlet monster into its place with his cane, and
preparing to hand out the basket after the old lady.
“Please don’t it’s it’s
mine,” murmured Amy, with a face nearly as red
as her fish.
“Oh, really, I beg pardon.
It’s an uncommonly fine one, isn’t it?”
said Tudor, with great presence of mind, and an air
of sober interest that did credit to his breeding.
Amy recovered herself in a breath,
set her basket boldly on the seat, and said, laughing,
“Don’t you wish you were to have some of
the salad he’s going to make, and to see the
charming young ladies who are to eat it?”
Now that was tact, for two of the
ruling foibles of the masculine mind were touched.
The lobster was instantly surrounded by a halo of
pleasing reminiscences, and curiosity about ‘the
charming young ladies’ diverted his mind from
the comical mishap.
“I suppose he’ll laugh
and joke over it with Laurie, but I shan’t see
them, that’s a comfort,” thought Amy, as
Tudor bowed and departed.
She did not mention this meeting at
home (though she discovered that, thanks to the upset,
her new dress was much damaged by the rivulets of
dressing that meandered down the skirt), but went through
with the preparations which now seemed more irksome
than before, and at twelve o’clock all was ready
again. Feeling that the neighbors were interested
in her movements, she wished to efface the memory of
yesterday’s failure by a grand success today,
so she ordered the ‘cherry bounce’, and
drove away in state to meet and escort her guests
to the banquet.
“There’s the rumble, they’re
coming! I’ll go onto the porch and meet
them. It looks hospitable, and I want the poor
child to have a good time after all her trouble,”
said Mrs. March, suiting the action to the word.
But after one glance, she retired, with an indescribable
expression, for looking quite lost in the big carriage,
sat Amy and one young lady.
“Run, Beth, and help Hannah
clear half the things off the table. It will
be too absurd to put a luncheon for twelve before a
single girl,” cried Jo, hurrying away to the
lower regions, too excited to stop even for a laugh.
In came Amy, quite calm and delightfully
cordial to the one guest who had kept her promise.
The rest of the family, being of a dramatic turn,
played their parts equally well, and Miss Eliott found
them a most hilarious set, for it was impossible to
control entirely the merriment which possessed them.
The remodeled lunch being gaily partaken of, the
studio and garden visited, and art discussed with
enthusiasm, Amy ordered a buggy (alas for the elegant
cherry-bounce), and drove her friend quietly about
the neighborhood till sunset, when ‘the party
went out’.
As she came walking in, looking very
tired but as composed as ever, she observed that every
vestige of the unfortunate fête had disappeared, except
a suspicious pucker about the corners of Jo’s
mouth.
“You’ve had a loverly
afternoon for your drive, dear,” said her mother,
as respectfully as if the whole twelve had come.
“Miss Eliott is a very sweet
girl, and seemed to enjoy herself, I thought,”
observed Beth, with unusual warmth.
“Could you spare me some of
your cake? I really need some, I have so much
company, and I can’t make such delicious stuff
as yours,” asked Meg soberly.
“Take it all. I’m
the only one here who likes sweet things, and it will
mold before I can dispose of it,” answered Amy,
thinking with a sigh of the generous store she had
laid in for such an end as this.
“It’s a pity Laurie isn’t
here to help us,” began Jo, as they sat down
to ice cream and salad for the second time in two days.
A warning look from her mother checked
any further remarks, and the whole family ate in heroic
silence, till Mr. March mildly observed, “salad
was one of the favorite dishes of the ancients, and
Evelyn...” Here a general explosion of
laughter cut short the ‘history of salads’,
to the great surprise of the learned gentleman.
“Bundle everything into a basket
and send it to the Hummels. Germans like messes.
I’m sick of the sight of this, and there’s
no reason you should all die of a surfeit because
I’ve been a fool,” cried Amy, wiping her
eyes.
“I thought I should have died
when I saw you two girls rattling about in the what-you-call-it,
like two little kernels in a very big nutshell, and
Mother waiting in state to receive the throng,”
sighed Jo, quite spent with laughter.
“I’m very sorry you were
disappointed, dear, but we all did our best to satisfy
you,” said Mrs. March, in a tone full of motherly
regret.
“I am satisfied. I’ve
done what I undertook, and it’s not my fault
that it failed. I comfort myself with that,”
said Amy with a little quiver in her voice.
“I thank you all very much for helping me, and
I’ll thank you still more if you won’t
allude to it for a month, at least.”
No one did for several months, but
the word ‘fête’ always produced a general
smile, and Laurie’s birthday gift to Amy was
a tiny coral lobster in the shape of a charm for her
watch guard.