Mrs. Chester’s fair was so very
elegant and select that it was considered a great
honor by the young ladies of the neighborhood to be
invited to take a table, and everyone was much interested
in the matter. Amy was asked, but Jo was not,
which was fortunate for all parties, as her elbows
were decidedly akimbo at this period of her life,
and it took a good many hard knocks to teach her how
to get on easily. The ‘haughty, uninteresting
creature’ was let severely alone, but Amy’s
talent and taste were duly complimented by the offer
of the art table, and she exerted herself to prepare
and secure appropriate and valuable contributions
to it.
Everything went on smoothly till the
day before the fair opened, then there occurred one
of the little skirmishes which it is almost impossible
to avoid, when some five-and-twenty women, old and
young, with all their private piqués and prejudices,
try to work together.
May Chester was rather jealous of
Amy because the latter was a greater favorite than
herself, and just at this time several trifling circumstances
occurred to increase the feeling. Amy’s
dainty pen-and-ink work entirely eclipsed May’s
painted vases that was one thorn.
Then the all conquering Tudor had danced four times
with Amy at a late party and only once with May that
was thorn number two. But the chief grievance
that rankled in her soul, and gave an excuse for her
unfriendly conduct, was a rumor which some obliging
gossip had whispered to her, that the March girls
had made fun of her at the Lambs’. All
the blame of this should have fallen upon Jo, for her
naughty imitation had been too lifelike to escape detection,
and the frolicsome Lambs had permitted the joke to
escape. No hint of this had reached the culprits,
however, and Amy’s dismay can be imagined, when,
the very evening before the fair, as she was putting
the last touches to her pretty table, Mrs. Chester,
who, of course, resented the supposed ridicule of
her daughter, said, in a bland tone, but with a cold
look...
“I find, dear, that there is
some feeling among the young ladies about my giving
this table to anyone but my girls. As this is
the most prominent, and some say the most attractive
table of all, and they are the chief getters-up of
the fair, it is thought best for them to take this
place. I’m sorry, but I know you are too
sincerely interested in the cause to mind a little
personal disappointment, and you shall have another
table if you like.”
Mrs. Chester fancied beforehand that
it would be easy to deliver this little speech, but
when the time came, she found it rather difficult to
utter it naturally, with Amy’s unsuspicious eyes
looking straight at her full of surprise and trouble.
Amy felt that there was something
behind this, but could not guess what, and said quietly,
feeling hurt, and showing that she did, “Perhaps
you had rather I took no table at all?”
“Now, my dear, don’t have
any ill feeling, I beg. It’s merely a matter
of expediency, you see, my girls will naturally take
the lead, and this table is considered their proper
place. I think it very appropriate to you, and
feel very grateful for your efforts to make it so pretty,
but we must give up our private wishes, of course,
and I will see that you have a good place elsewhere.
Wouldn’t you like the flower table? The
little girls undertook it, but they are discouraged.
You could make a charming thing of it, and the flower
table is always attractive you know.”
“Especially to gentlemen,”
added May, with a look which enlightened Amy as to
one cause of her sudden fall from favor. She
colored angrily, but took no other notice of that
girlish sarcasm, and answered with unexpected amiability...
“It shall be as you please,
Mrs. Chester. I’ll give up my place here
at once, and attend to the flowers, if you like.”
“You can put your own things
on your own table, if you prefer,” began May,
feeling a little conscience-stricken, as she looked
at the pretty racks, the painted shells, and quaint
illuminations Amy had so carefully made and so gracefully
arranged. She meant it kindly, but Amy mistook
her meaning, and said quickly...
“Oh, certainly, if they are
in your way,” and sweeping her contributions
into her apron, pell-mell, she walked off, feeling
that herself and her works of art had been insulted
past forgiveness.
“Now she’s mad.
Oh, dear, I wish I hadn’t asked you to speak,
Mama,” said May, looking disconsolately at
the empty spaces on her table.
“Girls’ quarrels are soon
over,” returned her mother, feeling a trifle
ashamed of her own part in this one, as well she might.
The little girls hailed Amy and her
treasures with delight, which cordial reception somewhat
soothed her perturbed spirit, and she fell to work,
determined to succeed florally, if she could not artistically.
But everything seemed against her. It was late,
and she was tired. Everyone was too busy with
their own affairs to help her, and the little girls
were only hindrances, for the dears fussed and chattered
like so many magpies, making a great deal of confusion
in their artless efforts to preserve the most perfect
order. The evergreen arch wouldn’t stay
firm after she got it up, but wiggled and threatened
to tumble down on her head when the hanging baskets
were filled. Her best tile got a splash of water,
which left a sepia tear on the Cupid’s cheek.
She bruised her hands with hammering, and got cold
working in a draft, which last affliction filled her
with apprehensions for the morrow. Any girl
reader who has suffered like afflictions will sympathize
with poor Amy and wish her well through her task.
There was great indignation at home
when she told her story that evening. Her mother
said it was a shame, but told her she had done right.
Beth declared she wouldn’t go to the fair at
all, and Jo demanded why she didn’t take all
her pretty things and leave those mean people to get
on without her.
“Because they are mean is no
reason why I should be. I hate such things,
and though I think I’ve a right to be hurt, I
don’t intend to show it. They will feel
that more than angry speeches or huffy actions, won’t
they, Marmee?”
“That’s the right spirit,
my dear. A kiss for a blow is always best, though
it’s not very easy to give it sometimes,”
said her mother, with the air of one who had learned
the difference between preaching and practicing.
In spite of various very natural temptations
to resent and retaliate, Amy adhered to her resolution
all the next day, bent on conquering her enemy by
kindness. She began well, thanks to a silent
reminder that came to her unexpectedly, but most opportunely.
As she arranged her table that morning, while the
little girls were in the anteroom filling the baskets,
she took up her pet production, a little book, the
antique cover of which her father had found among
his treasures, and in which on leaves of vellum she
had beautifully illuminated different texts.
As she turned the pages rich in dainty devices with
very pardonable pride, her eye fell upon one verse
that made her stop and think. Framed in a brilliant
scrollwork of scarlet, blue and gold, with little
spirits of good will helping one another up and down
among the thorns and flowers, were the words, “Thou
shalt love thy neighbor as thyself.”
“I ought, but I don’t,”
thought Amy, as her eye went from the bright page
to May’s discontented face behind the big vases,
that could not hide the vacancies her pretty work
had once filled. Amy stood a minute, turning
the leaves in her hand, reading on each some sweet
rebuke for all heartburnings and uncharitableness of
spirit. Many wise and true sermons are preached
us every day by unconscious ministers in street, school,
office, or home. Even a fair table may become
a pulpit, if it can offer the good and helpful words
which are never out of season. Amy’s conscience
preached her a little sermon from that text, then
and there, and she did what many of us do not always
do, took the sermon to heart, and straightway put
it in practice.
A group of girls were standing about
May’s table, admiring the pretty things, and
talking over the change of saleswomen. They dropped
their voices, but Amy knew they were speaking of her,
hearing one side of the story and judging accordingly.
It was not pleasant, but a better spirit had come
over her, and presently a chance offered for proving
it. She heard May say sorrowfully...
“It’s too bad, for there
is no time to make other things, and I don’t
want to fill up with odds and ends. The table
was just complete then. Now it’s spoiled.”
“I dare say she’d put
them back if you asked her,” suggested someone.
“How could I after all the fuss?”
began May, but she did not finish, for Amy’s
voice came across the hall, saying pleasantly...
“You may have them, and welcome,
without asking, if you want them. I was just
thinking I’d offer to put them back, for they
belong to your table rather than mine. Here
they are, please take them, and forgive me if I was
hasty in carrying them away last night.”
As she spoke, Amy returned her contribution,
with a nod and a smile, and hurried away again, feeling
that it was easier to do a friendly thing than it
was to stay and be thanked for it.
“Now, I call that lovely of
her, don’t you?” cried one girl.
May’s answer was inaudible,
but another young lady, whose temper was evidently
a little soured by making lemonade, added, with a
disagreeable laugh, “Very lovely, for she knew
she wouldn’t sell them at her own table.”
Now, that was hard. When we
make little sacrifices we like to have them appreciated,
at least, and for a minute Amy was sorry she had done
it, feeling that virtue was not always its own reward.
But it is, as she presently discovered, for her spirits
began to rise, and her table to blossom under her
skillful hands, the girls were very kind, and that
one little act seemed to have cleared the atmosphere
amazingly.
It was a very long day and a hard
one for Amy, as she sat behind her table, often quite
alone, for the little girls deserted very soon.
Few cared to buy flowers in summer, and her bouquets
began to droop long before night.
The art table was the most attractive
in the room. There was a crowd about it all
day long, and the tenders were constantly flying to
and fro with important faces and rattling money boxes.
Amy often looked wistfully across, longing to be
there, where she felt at home and happy, instead of
in a corner with nothing to do. It might seem
no hardship to some of us, but to a pretty, blithe
young girl, it was not only tedious, but very trying,
and the thought of Laurie and his friends made it
a real martyrdom.
She did not go home till night, and
then she looked so pale and quiet that they knew the
day had been a hard one, though she made no complaint,
and did not even tell what she had done. Her
mother gave her an extra cordial cup of tea.
Beth helped her dress, and made a charming little
wreath for her hair, while Jo astonished her family
by getting herself up with unusual care, and hinting
darkly that the tables were about to be turned.
“Don’t do anything rude,
pray Jo; I won’t have any fuss made, so let it
all pass and behave yourself,” begged Amy, as
she departed early, hoping to find a reinforcement
of flowers to refresh her poor little table.
“I merely intend to make myself
entrancingly agreeable to every one I know, and to
keep them in your corner as long as possible.
Teddy and his boys will lend a hand, and we’ll
have a good time yet.” returned Jo, leaning
over the gate to watch for Laurie. Presently
the familiar tramp was heard in the dusk, and she
ran out to meet him.
“Is that my boy?”
“As sure as this is my girl!”
and Laurie tucked her hand under his arm with the
air of a man whose every wish was gratified.
“Oh, Teddy, such doings!”
and Jo told Amy’s wrongs with sisterly zeal.
“A flock of our fellows are
going to drive over by-and-by, and I’ll be hanged
if I don’t make them buy every flower she’s
got, and camp down before her table afterward,”
said Laurie, espousing her cause with warmth.
“The flowers are not at all
nice, Amy says, and the fresh ones may not arrive
in time. I don’t wish to be unjust or suspicious,
but I shouldn’t wonder if they never came at
all. When people do one mean thing they are
very likely to do another,” observed Jo in a
disgusted tone.
“Didn’t Hayes give you
the best out of our gardens? I told him to.”
“I didn’t know that, he
forgot, I suppose, and, as your grandpa was poorly,
I didn’t like to worry him by asking, though
I did want some.”
“Now, Jo, how could you think
there was any need of asking? They are just as
much yours as mine. Don’t we always go
halves in everything?” began Laurie, in the
tone that always made Jo turn thorny.
“Gracious, I hope not!
Half of some of your things wouldn’t suit me
at all. But we mustn’t stand philandering
here. I’ve got to help Amy, so you go
and make yourself splendid, and if you’ll be
so very kind as to let Hayes take a few nice flowers
up to the Hall, I’ll bless you forever.”
“Couldn’t you do it now?”
asked Laurie, so suggestively that Jo shut the gate
in his face with inhospitable haste, and called through
the bars, “Go away, Teddy, I’m busy.”
Thanks to the conspirators, the tables
were turned that night, for Hayes sent up a wilderness
of flowers, with a loverly basket arranged in his
best manner for a centerpiece. Then the March
family turned out en masse, and Jo exerted
herself to some purpose, for people not only came,
but stayed, laughing at her nonsense, admiring Amy’s
taste, and apparently enjoying themselves very much.
Laurie and his friends gallantly threw themselves
into the breach, bought up the bouquets, encamped
before the table, and made that corner the liveliest
spot in the room. Amy was in her element now,
and out of gratitude, if nothing more, was as spritely
and gracious as possible, coming to the conclusion,
about that time, that virtue was its own reward, after
all.
Jo behaved herself with exemplary
propriety, and when Amy was happily surrounded by
her guard of honor, Jo circulated about the Hall, picking
up various bits of gossip, which enlightened her upon
the subject of the Chester change of base. She
reproached herself for her share of the ill feeling
and resolved to exonerate Amy as soon as possible.
She also discovered what Amy had done about the things
in the morning, and considered her a model of magnanimity.
As she passed the art table, she glanced over it
for her sister’s things, but saw no sign of them.
“Tucked away out of sight, I dare say,”
thought Jo, who could forgive her own wrongs, but
hotly resented any insult offered her family.
“Good evening, Miss Jo.
How does Amy get on?” asked May with a conciliatory
air, for she wanted to show that she also could be
generous.
“She has sold everything she
had that was worth selling, and now she is enjoying
herself. The flower table is always attractive,
you know, ’especially to gentlemen’.”
Jo couldn’t resist giving that little slap,
but May took it so meekly she regretted it a minute
after, and fell to praising the great vases, which
still remained unsold.
“Is Amy’s illumination
anywhere about? I took a fancy to buy that for
Father,” said Jo, very anxious to learn the fate
of her sister’s work.
“Everything of Amy’s sold
long ago. I took care that the right people
saw them, and they made a nice little sum of money
for us,” returned May, who had overcome sundry
small temptations, as well as Amy had, that day.
Much gratified, Jo rushed back to
tell the good news, and Amy looked both touched and
surprised by the report of May’s word and manner.
“Now, gentlemen, I want you
to go and do your duty by the other tables as generously
as you have by mine, especially the art table,”
she said, ordering out ‘Teddy’s own’,
as the girls called the college friends.
“‘Charge, Chester, charge!’
is the motto for that table, but do your duty like
men, and you’ll get your money’s worth
of art in every sense of the word,” said the
irrepressible Jo, as the devoted phalanx prepared
to take the field.
“To hear is to obey, but March
is fairer far than May,” said little Parker,
making a frantic effort to be both witty and tender,
and getting promptly quenched by Laurie, who said...
“Very well, my son, for a small
boy!” and walked him off, with a paternal pat
on the head.
“Buy the vases,” whispered
Amy to Laurie, as a final heaping of coals of fire
on her enemy’s head.
To May’s great delight, Mr.
Laurence not only bought the vases, but pervaded the
hall with one under each arm. The other gentlemen
speculated with equal rashness in all sorts of frail
trifles, and wandered helplessly about afterward,
burdened with wax flowers, painted fans, filigree
portfolios, and other useful and appropriate purchases.
Aunt Carrol was there, heard the story,
looked pleased, and said something to Mrs. March in
a corner, which made the latter lady beam with satisfaction,
and watch Amy with a face full of mingled pride and
anxiety, though she did not betray the cause of her
pleasure till several days later.
The fair was pronounced a success,
and when May bade Amy goodnight, she did not gush
as usual, but gave her an affectionate kiss, and a
look which said ‘forgive and forget’.
That satisfied Amy, and when she got home she found
the vases paraded on the parlor chimney piece with
a great bouquet in each. “The reward of
merit for a magnanimous March,” as Laurie announced
with a flourish.
“You’ve a deal more principle
and generosity and nobleness of character than I ever
gave you credit for, Amy. You’ve behaved
sweetly, and I respect you with all my heart,”
said Jo warmly, as they brushed their hair together
late that night.
“Yes, we all do, and love her
for being so ready to forgive. It must have
been dreadfully hard, after working so long and setting
your heart on selling your own pretty things.
I don’t believe I could have done it as kindly
as you did,” added Beth from her pillow.
“Why, girls, you needn’t
praise me so. I only did as I’d be done
by. You laugh at me when I say I want to be a
lady, but I mean a true gentlewoman in mind and manners,
and I try to do it as far as I know how. I can’t
explain exactly, but I want to be above the little
meannesses and follies and faults that spoil so many
women. I’m far from it now, but I do my
best, and hope in time to be what Mother is.”
Amy spoke earnestly, and Jo said,
with a cordial hug, “I understand now what you
mean, and I’ll never laugh at you again.
You are getting on faster than you think, and I’ll
take lessons of you in true politeness, for you’ve
learned the secret, I believe. Try away, deary,
you’ll get your reward some day, and no one
will be more delighted than I shall.”
A week later Amy did get her reward,
and poor Jo found it hard to be delighted. A
letter came from Aunt Carrol, and Mrs. March’s
face was illuminated to such a degree when she read
it that Jo and Beth, who were with her, demanded what
the glad tidings were.
“Aunt Carrol is going abroad next month, and
wants...”
“Me to go with her!” burst
in Jo, flying out of her chair in an uncontrollable
rapture.
“No, dear, not you. It’s Amy.”
“Oh, Mother! She’s
too young, it’s my turn first. I’ve
wanted it so long. It would do me so much good,
and be so altogether splendid. I must go!”
“I’m afraid it’s
impossible, Jo. Aunt says Amy, decidedly, and
it is not for us to dictate when she offers such a
favor.”
“It’s always so.
Amy has all the fun and I have all the work.
It isn’t fair, oh, it isn’t fair!”
cried Jo passionately.
“I’m afraid it’s
partly your own fault, dear. When Aunt spoke
to me the other day, she regretted your blunt manners
and too independent spirit, and here she writes, as
if quoting something you had said ’I
planned at first to ask Jo, but as ‘favors burden
her’, and she ’hates French’, I
think I won’t venture to invite her. Amy
is more docile, will make a good companion for Flo,
and receive gratefully any help the trip may give
her.”
“Oh, my tongue, my abominable
tongue! Why can’t I learn to keep it quiet?”
groaned Jo, remembering words which had been her undoing.
When she had heard the explanation of the quoted
phrases, Mrs. March said sorrowfully...
“I wish you could have gone,
but there is no hope of it this time, so try to bear
it cheerfully, and don’t sadden Amy’s pleasure
by reproaches or regrets.”
“I’ll try,” said
Jo, winking hard as she knelt down to pick up the
basket she had joyfully upset. “I’ll
take a leaf out of her book, and try not only to seem
glad, but to be so, and not grudge her one minute
of happiness. But it won’t be easy, for
it is a dreadful disappointment,” and poor Jo
bedewed the little fat pincushion she held with several
very bitter tears.
“Jo, dear, I’m very selfish,
but I couldn’t spare you, and I’m glad
you are not going quite yet,” whispered Beth,
embracing her, basket and all, with such a clinging
touch and loving face that Jo felt comforted in spite
of the sharp regret that made her want to box her own
ears, and humbly beg Aunt Carrol to burden her with
this favor, and see how gratefully she would bear
it.
By the time Amy came in, Jo was able
to take her part in the family jubilation, not quite
as heartily as usual, perhaps, but without repinings
at Amy’s good fortune. The young lady herself
received the news as tidings of great joy, went about
in a solemn sort of rapture, and began to sort her
colors and pack her pencils that evening, leaving
such trifles as clothes, money, and passports to those
less absorbed in visions of art than herself.
“It isn’t a mere pleasure
trip to me, girls,” she said impressively, as
she scraped her best palette. “It will
decide my career, for if I have any genius, I shall
find it out in Rome, and will do something to prove
it.”
“Suppose you haven’t?”
said Jo, sewing away, with red eyes, at the new collars
which were to be handed over to Amy.
“Then I shall come home and
teach drawing for my living,” replied the aspirant
for fame, with philosophic composure. But she
made a wry face at the prospect, and scratched away
at her palette as if bent on vigorous measures before
she gave up her hopes.
“No, you won’t.
You hate hard work, and you’ll marry some rich
man, and come home to sit in the lap of luxury all
your days,” said Jo.
“Your predictions sometimes
come to pass, but I don’t believe that one will.
I’m sure I wish it would, for if I can’t
be an artist myself, I should like to be able to help
those who are,” said Amy, smiling, as if the
part of Lady Bountiful would suit her better than that
of a poor drawing teacher.
“Hum!” said Jo, with a
sigh. “If you wish it you’ll have
it, for your wishes are always granted mine
never.”
“Would you like to go?”
asked Amy, thoughtfully patting her nose with her
knife.
“Rather!”
“Well, in a year or two I’ll
send for you, and we’ll dig in the Forum for
relics, and carry out all the plans we’ve made
so many times.”
“Thank you. I’ll
remind you of your promise when that joyful day comes,
if it ever does,” returned Jo, accepting the
vague but magnificent offer as gratefully as she could.
There was not much time for preparation,
and the house was in a ferment till Amy was off.
Jo bore up very well till the last flutter of blue
ribbon vanished, when she retired to her refuge, the
garret, and cried till she couldn’t cry any
more. Amy likewise bore up stoutly till the steamer
sailed. Then just as the gangway was about to
be withdrawn, it suddenly came over her that a whole
ocean was soon to roll between her and those who loved
her best, and she clung to Laurie, the last lingerer,
saying with a sob...
“Oh, take care of them for me,
and if anything should happen...”
“I will, dear, I will, and if
anything happens, I’ll come and comfort you,”
whispered Laurie, little dreaming that he would be
called upon to keep his word.
So Amy sailed away to find the Old
World, which is always new and beautiful to young
eyes, while her father and friend watched her from
the shore, fervently hoping that none but gentle fortunes
would befall the happy-hearted girl, who waved her
hand to them till they could see nothing but the summer
sunshine dazzling on the sea.