I cannot feel that I have done my
duty as humble historian of the March family, without
devoting at least one chapter to the two most precious
and important members of it. Daisy and Demi had
now arrived at years of discretion, for in this fast
age babies of three or four assert their rights, and
get them, too, which is more than many of their elders
do. If there ever were a pair of twins in danger
of being utterly spoiled by adoration, it was these
prattling Brookes. Of course they were the most
remarkable children ever born, as will be shown when
I mention that they walked at eight months, talked
fluently at twelve months, and at two years they took
their places at table, and behaved with a propriety
which charmed all beholders. At three, Daisy
demanded a ‘needler’, and actually made
a bag with four stitches in it. She likewise
set up housekeeping in the sideboard, and managed a
microscopic cooking stove with a skill that brought
tears of pride to Hannah’s eyes, while Demi
learned his letters with his grandfather, who invented
a new mode of teaching the alphabet by forming letters
with his arms and legs, thus uniting gymnastics for
head and heels. The boy early developed a mechanical
genius which delighted his father and distracted his
mother, for he tried to imitate every machine he saw,
and kept the nursery in a chaotic condition, with his
‘sewinsheen’, a mysterious structure of
string, chairs, clothespins, and spools, for wheels
to go ‘wound and wound’. Also a basket
hung over the back of a chair, in which he vainly
tried to hoist his too confiding sister, who, with
feminine devotion, allowed her little head to be bumped
till rescued, when the young inventor indignantly
remarked, “Why, Marmar, dat’s my lellywaiter,
and me’s trying to pull her up.”
Though utterly unlike in character,
the twins got on remarkably well together, and seldom
quarreled more than thrice a day. Of course,
Demi tyrannized over Daisy, and gallantly defended
her from every other aggressor, while Daisy made a
galley slave of herself, and adored her brother as
the one perfect being in the world. A rosy, chubby,
sunshiny little soul was Daisy, who found her way to
everybody’s heart, and nestled there.
One of the captivating children, who seem made to
be kissed and cuddled, adorned and adored like little
goddesses, and produced for general approval on all
festive occasions. Her small virtues were so
sweet that she would have been quite angelic if a few
small naughtinesses had not kept her delightfully human.
It was all fair weather in her world, and every morning
she scrambled up to the window in her little nightgown
to look out, and say, no matter whether it rained
or shone, “Oh, pitty day, oh, pitty day!”
Everyone was a friend, and she offered kisses to a
stranger so confidingly that the most inveterate bachelor
relented, and baby-lovers became faithful worshipers.
“Me loves evvybody,” she
once said, opening her arms, with her spoon in one
hand, and her mug in the other, as if eager to embrace
and nourish the whole world.
As she grew, her mother began to feel
that the Dovecote would be blessed by the presence
of an inmate as serene and loving as that which had
helped to make the old house home, and to pray that
she might be spared a loss like that which had lately
taught them how long they had entertained an angel
unawares. Her grandfather often called her ‘Beth’,
and her grandmother watched over her with untiring
devotion, as if trying to atone for some past mistake,
which no eye but her own could see.
Demi, like a true Yankee, was of an
inquiring turn, wanting to know everything, and often
getting much disturbed because he could not get satisfactory
answers to his perpetual “What for?”
He also possessed a philosophic bent,
to the great delight of his grandfather, who used
to hold Socratic conversations with him, in which
the precocious pupil occasionally posed his teacher,
to the undisguised satisfaction of the womenfolk.
“What makes my legs go, Dranpa?”
asked the young philosopher, surveying those active
portions of his frame with a meditative air, while
resting after a go-to-bed frolic one night.
“It’s your little mind,
Demi,” replied the sage, stroking the yellow
head respectfully.
“What is a little mine?”
“It is something which makes
your body move, as the spring made the wheels go in
my watch when I showed it to you.”
“Open me. I want to see it go wound.”
“I can’t do that any more
than you could open the watch. God winds you
up, and you go till He stops you.”
“Does I?” and Demi’s
brown eyes grew big and bright as he took in the new
thought. “Is I wounded up like the watch?”
“Yes, but I can’t show
you how, for it is done when we don’t see.”
Demi felt his back, as if expecting
to find it like that of the watch, and then gravely
remarked, “I dess Dod does it when I’s
asleep.”
A careful explanation followed, to
which he listened so attentively that his anxious
grandmother said, “My dear, do you think it wise
to talk about such things to that baby? He’s
getting great bumps over his eyes, and learning to
ask the most unanswerable questions.”
“If he is old enough to ask
the question he is old enough to receive true answers.
I am not putting the thoughts into his head, but helping
him unfold those already there. These children
are wiser than we are, and I have no doubt the boy
understands every word I have said to him. Now,
Demi, tell me where you keep your mind.”
If the boy had replied like Alcibiades,
“By the gods, Socrates, I cannot tell,”
his grandfather would not have been surprised, but
when, after standing a moment on one leg, like a meditative
young stork, he answered, in a tone of calm conviction,
“In my little belly,” the old gentleman
could only join in Grandma’s laugh, and dismiss
the class in metaphysics.
There might have been cause for maternal
anxiety, if Demi had not given convincing proofs that
he was a true boy, as well as a budding philosopher,
for often, after a discussion which caused Hannah to
prophesy, with ominous nods, “That child ain’t
long for this world,” he would turn about and
set her fears at rest by some of the pranks with which
dear, dirty, naughty little rascals distract and delight
their parent’s souls.
Meg made many moral rules, and tried
to keep them, but what mother was ever proof against
the winning wiles, the ingenious evasions, or the
tranquil audacity of the miniature men and women who
so early show themselves accomplished Artful Dodgers?
“No more raisins, Demi.
They’ll make you sick,” says Mamma to
the young person who offers his services in the kitchen
with unfailing regularity on plum-pudding day.
“Me likes to be sick.”
“I don’t want to have you, so run away
and help Daisy make patty cakes.”
He reluctantly departs, but his wrongs
weigh upon his spirit, and by-and-by when an opportunity
comes to redress them, he outwits Mamma by a shrewd
bargain.
“Now you have been good children,
and I’ll play anything you like,” says
Meg, as she leads her assistant cooks upstairs, when
the pudding is safely bouncing in the pot.
“Truly, Marmar?” asks
Demi, with a brilliant idea in his well-powdered head.
“Yes, truly. Anything
you say,” replies the shortsighted parent, preparing
herself to sing, “The Three Little Kittens”
half a dozen times over, or to take her family to
“Buy a penny bun,” regardless of wind
or limb. But Demi corners her by the cool reply...
“Then we’ll go and eat up all the raisins.”
Aunt Dodo was chief playmate and confidante
of both children, and the trio turned the little house
topsy-turvy. Aunt Amy was as yet only a name
to them, Aunt Beth soon faded into a pleasantly vague
memory, but Aunt Dodo was a living reality, and they
made the most of her, for which compliment she was
deeply grateful. But when Mr. Bhaer came, Jo
neglected her playfellows, and dismay and desolation
fell upon their little souls. Daisy, who was
fond of going about peddling kisses, lost her best
customer and became bankrupt. Demi, with infantile
penetration, soon discovered that Dodo like to play
with ‘the bear-man’ better than she did
him, but though hurt, he concealed his anguish, for
he hadn’t the heart to insult a rival who kept
a mine of chocolate drops in his waistcoat pocket,
and a watch that could be taken out of its case and
freely shaken by ardent admirers.
Some persons might have considered
these pleasing liberties as bribes, but Demi didn’t
see it in that light, and continued to patronize the
‘the bear-man’ with pensive affability,
while Daisy bestowed her small affections upon him
at the third call, and considered his shoulder her
throne, his arm her refuge, his gifts treasures surpassing
worth.
Gentlemen are sometimes seized with
sudden fits of admiration for the young relatives
of ladies whom they honor with their regard, but this
counterfeit philoprogenitiveness sits uneasily upon
them, and does not deceive anybody a particle.
Mr. Bhaer’s devotion was sincere, however likewise
effective for honesty is the best policy
in love as in law. He was one of the men who
are at home with children, and looked particularly
well when little faces made a pleasant contrast with
his manly one. His business, whatever it was,
detained him from day to day, but evening seldom failed
to bring him out to see well, he always
asked for Mr. March, so I suppose he was the attraction.
The excellent papa labored under the delusion that
he was, and reveled in long discussions with the kindred
spirit, till a chance remark of his more observing
grandson suddenly enlightened him.
Mr. Bhaer came in one evening to pause
on the threshold of the study, astonished by the spectacle
that met his eye. Prone upon the floor lay Mr.
March, with his respectable legs in the air, and beside
him, likewise prone, was Demi, trying to imitate the
attitude with his own short, scarlet-stockinged legs,
both grovelers so seriously absorbed that they were
unconscious of spectators, till Mr. Bhaer laughed his
sonorous laugh, and Jo cried out, with a scandalized
face...
“Father, Father, here’s the Professor!”
Down went the black legs and up came
the gray head, as the preceptor said, with undisturbed
dignity, “Good evening, Mr. Bhaer. Excuse
me for a moment. We are just finishing our lesson.
Now, Demi, make the letter and tell its name.”
“I knows him!” and, after
a few convulsive efforts, the red legs took the shape
of a pair of compasses, and the intelligent pupil
triumphantly shouted, “It’s a We, Dranpa,
it’s a We!”
“He’s a born Weller,”
laughed Jo, as her parent gathered himself up, and
her nephew tried to stand on his head, as the only
mode of expressing his satisfaction that school was
over.
“What have you been at today,
bubchen?” asked Mr. Bhaer, picking up the gymnast.
“Me went to see little Mary.”
“And what did you there?”
“I kissed her,” began Demi, with artless
frankness.
“Prut! Thou beginnest
early. What did the little Mary say to that?”
asked Mr. Bhaer, continuing to confess the young sinner,
who stood upon the knee, exploring the waistcoat pocket.
“Oh, she liked it, and she kissed
me, and I liked it. Don’t little boys
like little girls?” asked Demi, with his mouth
full, and an air of bland satisfaction.
“You precocious chick!
Who put that into your head?” said Jo, enjoying
the innocent revelation as much as the Professor.
“’Tisn’t in mine
head, it’s in mine mouf,” answered literal
Demi, putting out his tongue, with a chocolate drop
on it, thinking she alluded to confectionery, not
ideas.
“Thou shouldst save some for
the little friend. Sweets to the sweet, mannling,”
and Mr. Bhaer offered Jo some, with a look that made
her wonder if chocolate was not the nectar drunk by
the gods. Demi also saw the smile, was impressed
by it, and artlessy inquired. ..
“Do great boys like great girls, to, ’Fessor?”
Like young Washington, Mr. Bhaer ‘couldn’t
tell a lie’, so he gave the somewhat vague reply
that he believed they did sometimes, in a tone that
made Mr. March put down his clothesbrush, glance at
Jo’s retiring face, and then sink into his chair,
looking as if the ’precocious chick’ had
put an idea into his head that was both sweet and sour.
Why Dodo, when she caught him in the
china closet half an hour afterward, nearly squeezed
the breath out of his little body with a tender embrace,
instead of shaking him for being there, and why she
followed up this novel performance by the unexpected
gift of a big slice of bread and jelly, remained one
of the problems over which Demi puzzled his small
wits, and was forced to leave unsolved forever.