GOSSIP
In order that we may start afresh
and go to Meg’s wedding with free minds, it
will be well to begin with a little gossip about the
Marches. And here let me premise that if any
of the elders think there is too much ‘lovering’
in the story, as I fear they may (I’m not afraid
the young folks will make that objection), I can only
say with Mrs. March, “What can you expect when
I have four gay girls in the house, and a dashing
young neighbor over the way?”
The three years that have passed have
brought but few changes to the quiet family.
The war is over, and Mr. March safely at home, busy
with his books and the small parish which found in
him a minister by nature as by grace, a quiet, studious
man, rich in the wisdom that is better than learning,
the charity which calls all mankind ‘brother’,
the piety that blossoms into character, making it
august and lovely.
These attributes, in spite of poverty
and the strict integrity which shut him out from the
more worldly successes, attracted to him many admirable
persons, as naturally as sweet herbs draw bees, and
as naturally he gave them the honey into which fifty
years of hard experience had distilled no bitter drop.
Earnest young men found the gray-headed scholar as
young at heart as they; thoughtful or troubled women
instinctively brought their doubts to him, sure of
finding the gentlest sympathy, the wisest counsel.
Sinners told their sins to the pure-hearted old man
and were both rebuked and saved. Gifted men
found a companion in him. Ambitious men caught
glimpses of nobler ambitions than their own, and even
worldlings confessed that his beliefs were beautiful
and true, although ’they wouldn’t pay’.
To outsiders the five energetic women
seemed to rule the house, and so they did in many
things, but the quiet scholar, sitting among his books,
was still the head of the family, the household conscience,
anchor, and comforter, for to him the busy, anxious
women always turned in troublous times, finding him,
in the truest sense of those sacred words, husband
and father.
The girls gave their hearts into their
mother’s keeping, their souls into their father’s,
and to both parents, who lived and labored so faithfully
for them, they gave a love that grew with their growth
and bound them tenderly together by the sweetest tie
which blesses life and outlives death.
Mrs. March is as brisk and cheery,
though rather grayer, than when we saw her last, and
just now so absorbed in Meg’s affairs that the
hospitals and homes still full of wounded ‘boys’
and soldiers’ widows, decidedly miss the motherly
missionary’s visits.
John Brooke did his duty manfully
for a year, got wounded, was sent home, and not allowed
to return. He received no stars or bars, but
he deserved them, for he cheerfully risked all he had,
and life and love are very precious when both are
in full bloom. Perfectly resigned to his discharge,
he devoted himself to getting well, preparing for
business, and earning a home for Meg. With the
good sense and sturdy independence that characterized
him, he refused Mr. Laurence’s more generous
offers, and accepted the place of bookkeeper, feeling
better satisfied to begin with an honestly earned
salary than by running any risks with borrowed money.
Meg had spent the time in working
as well as waiting, growing womanly in character,
wise in housewifely arts, and prettier than ever,
for love is a great beautifier. She had her girlish
ambitions and hopes, and felt some disappointment
at the humble way in which the new life must begin.
Ned Moffat had just married Sallie Gardiner, and
Meg couldn’t help contrasting their fine house
and carriage, many gifts, and splendid outfit with
her own, and secretly wishing she could have the same.
But somehow envy and discontent soon vanished when
she thought of all the patient love and labor John
had put into the little home awaiting her, and when
they sat together in the twilight, talking over their
small plans, the future always grew so beautiful and
bright that she forgot Sallie’s splendor and
felt herself the richest, happiest girl in Christendom.
Jo never went back to Aunt March,
for the old lady took such a fancy to Amy that she
bribed her with the offer of drawing lessons from
one of the best teachers going, and for the sake of
this advantage, Amy would have served a far harder
mistress. So she gave her mornings to duty,
her afternoons to pleasure, and prospered finely.
Jo meantime devoted herself to literature and Beth,
who remained delicate long after the fever was a thing
of the past. Not an invalid exactly, but never
again the rosy, healthy creature she had been, yet
always hopeful, happy, and serene, and busy with the
quiet duties she loved, everyone’s friend, and
an angel in the house, long before those who loved
her most had learned to know it.
As long as The Spread Eagle
paid her a dollar a column for her ‘rubbish’,
as she called it, Jo felt herself a woman of means,
and spun her little romances diligently. But
great plans fermented in her busy brain and ambitious
mind, and the old tin kitchen in the garret held a
slowly increasing pile of blotted manuscript, which
was one day to place the name of March upon the roll
of fame.
Laurie, having dutifully gone to college
to please his grandfather, was now getting through
it in the easiest possible manner to please himself.
A universal favorite, thanks to money, manners, much
talent, and the kindest heart that ever got its owner
into scrapes by trying to get other people out of
them, he stood in great danger of being spoiled, and
probably would have been, like many another promising
boy, if he had not possessed a talisman against evil
in the memory of the kind old man who was bound up
in his success, the motherly friend who watched over
him as if he were her son, and last, but not least
by any means, the knowledge that four innocent girls
loved, admired, and believed in him with all their
hearts.
Being only ‘a glorious human
boy’, of course he frolicked and flirted, grew
dandified, aquatic, sentimental, or gymnastic, as
college fashions ordained, hazed and was hazed, talked
slang, and more than once came perilously near suspension
and expulsion. But as high spirits and the love
of fun were the causes of these pranks, he always
managed to save himself by frank confession, honorable
atonement, or the irresistible power of persuasion
which he possessed in perfection. In fact, he
rather prided himself on his narrow escapes, and liked
to thrill the girls with graphic accounts of his triumphs
over wrathful tutors, dignified professors, and vanquished
enemies. The ‘men of my class’, were
heroes in the eyes of the girls, who never wearied
of the exploits of ‘our fellows’, and were
frequently allowed to bask in the smiles of these
great creatures, when Laurie brought them home with
him.
Amy especially enjoyed this high honor,
and became quite a belle among them, for her ladyship
early felt and learned to use the gift of fascination
with which she was endowed. Meg was too much
absorbed in her private and particular John to care
for any other lords of creation, and Beth too shy
to do more than peep at them and wonder how Amy dared
to order them about so, but Jo felt quite in her own
element, and found it very difficult to refrain from
imitating the gentlemanly attitudes, phrases, and
feats, which seemed more natural to her than the decorums
prescribed for young ladies. They all liked
Jo immensely, but never fell in love with her, though
very few escaped without paying the tribute of a sentimental
sigh or two at Amy’s shrine. And speaking
of sentiment brings us very naturally to the ‘Dovecote’.
That was the name of the little brown
house Mr. Brooke had prepared for Meg’s first
home. Laurie had christened it, saying it was
highly appropriate to the gentle lovers who ’went
on together like a pair of turtledoves, with first
a bill and then a coo’. It was a tiny
house, with a little garden behind and a lawn about
as big as a pocket handkerchief in the front.
Here Meg meant to have a fountain, shrubbery, and
a profusion of lovely flowers, though just at present
the fountain was represented by a weather-beaten urn,
very like a dilapidated slopbowl, the shrubbery consisted
of several young larches, undecided whether to live
or die, and the profusion of flowers was merely hinted
by regiments of sticks to show where seeds were planted.
But inside, it was altogether charming, and the happy
bride saw no fault from garret to cellar. To
be sure, the hall was so narrow it was fortunate that
they had no piano, for one never could have been got
in whole, the dining room was so small that six people
were a tight fit, and the kitchen stairs seemed built
for the express purpose of precipitating both servants
and china pell-mell into the coalbin. But once
get used to these slight blemishes and nothing could
be more complete, for good sense and good taste had
presided over the furnishing, and the result was highly
satisfactory. There were no marble-topped tables,
long mirrors, or lace curtains in the little parlor,
but simple furniture, plenty of books, a fine picture
or two, a stand of flowers in the bay window, and,
scattered all about, the pretty gifts which came from
friendly hands and were the fairer for the loving
messages they brought.
I don’t think the Parian Psyche
Laurie gave lost any of its beauty because John put
up the bracket it stood upon, that any upholsterer
could have draped the plain muslin curtains more gracefully
than Amy’s artistic hand, or that any store-room
was ever better provided with good wishes, merry words,
and happy hopes than that in which Jo and her mother
put away Meg’s few boxes, barrels, and bundles,
and I am morally certain that the spandy new kitchen
never could have looked so cozy and neat if Hannah
had not arranged every pot and pan a dozen times over,
and laid the fire all ready for lighting the minute
‘Mis. Brooke came home’. I
also doubt if any young matron ever began life with
so rich a supply of dusters, holders, and piece bags,
for Beth made enough to last till the silver wedding
came round, and invented three different kinds of
dishcloths for the express service of the bridal china.
People who hire all these things done
for them never know what they lose, for the homeliest
tasks get beautified if loving hands do them, and
Meg found so many proofs of this that everything in
her small nest, from the kitchen roller to the silver
vase on her parlor table, was eloquent of home love
and tender forethought.
What happy times they had planning
together, what solemn shopping excursions, what funny
mistakes they made, and what shouts of laughter arose
over Laurie’s ridiculous bargains. In his
love of jokes, this young gentleman, though nearly
through college, was a much of a boy as ever.
His last whim had been to bring with him on his weekly
visits some new, useful, and ingenious article for
the young housekeeper. Now a bag of remarkable
clothespins, next, a wonderful nutmeg grater which
fell to pieces at the first trial, a knife cleaner
that spoiled all the knives, or a sweeper that picked
the nap neatly off the carpet and left the dirt, labor-saving
soap that took the skin off one’s hands, infallible
cements which stuck firmly to nothing but the fingers
of the deluded buyer, and every kind of tinware, from
a toy savings bank for odd pennies, to a wonderful
boiler which would wash articles in its own steam with
every prospect of exploding in the process.
In vain Meg begged him to stop.
John laughed at him, and Jo called him ‘Mr.
Toodles’. He was possessed with a mania
for patronizing Yankee ingenuity, and seeing his friends
fitly furnished forth. So each week beheld some
fresh absurdity.
Everything was done at last, even
to Amy’s arranging different colored soaps to
match the different colored rooms, and Beth’s
setting the table for the first meal.
“Are you satisfied? Does
it seem like home, and do you feel as if you should
be happy here?” asked Mrs. March, as she and
her daughter went through the new kingdom arm in arm,
for just then they seemed to cling together more tenderly
than ever.
“Yes, Mother, perfectly satisfied,
thanks to you all, and so happy that I can’t
talk about it,” with a look that was far better
than words.
“If she only had a servant or
two it would be all right,” said Amy, coming
out of the parlor, where she had been trying to decide
whether the bronze Mercury looked best on the whatnot
or the mantlepiece.
“Mother and I have talked that
over, and I have made up my mind to try her way first.
There will be so little to do that with Lotty to
run my errands and help me here and there, I shall
only have enough work to keep me from getting lazy
or homesick,” answered Meg tranquilly.
“Sallie Moffat has four,” began Amy.
“If Meg had four, the house
wouldn’t hold them, and master and missis would
have to camp in the garden,” broke in Jo, who,
enveloped in a big blue pinafore, was giving the last
polish to the door handles.
“Sallie isn’t a poor man’s
wife, and many maids are in keeping with her fine
establishment. Meg and John begin humbly, but
I have a feeling that there will be quite as much
happiness in the little house as in the big one.
It’s a great mistake for young girls like Meg
to leave themselves nothing to do but dress, give orders,
and gossip. When I was first married, I used
to long for my new clothes to wear out or get torn,
so that I might have the pleasure of mending them,
for I got heartily sick of doing fancywork and tending
my pocket handkerchief.”
“Why didn’t you go into
the kitchen and make messes, as Sallie says she does
to amuse herself, though they never turn out well and
the servants laugh at her,” said Meg.
“I did after a while, not to
‘mess’ but to learn of Hannah how things
should be done, that my servants need not laugh at
me. It was play then, but there came a time
when I was truly grateful that I not only possessed
the will but the power to cook wholesome food for
my little girls, and help myself when I could no longer
afford to hire help. You begin at the other
end, Meg, dear, but the lessons you learn now will
be of use to you by-and-by when John is a richer man,
for the mistress of a house, however splendid, should
know how work ought to be done, if she wishes to be
well and honestly served.”
“Yes, Mother, I’m sure
of that,” said Meg, listening respectfully to
the little lecture, for the best of women will hold
forth upon the all absorbing subject of house keeping.
“Do you know I like this room most of all in
my baby house,” added Meg, a minute after, as
they went upstairs and she looked into her well-stored
linen closet.
Beth was there, laying the snowy piles
smoothly on the shelves and exulting over the goodly
array. All three laughed as Meg spoke, for that
linen closet was a joke. You see, having said
that if Meg married ‘that Brooke’ she
shouldn’t have a cent of her money, Aunt March
was rather in a quandary when time had appeased her
wrath and made her repent her vow. She never
broke her word, and was much exercised in her mind
how to get round it, and at last devised a plan whereby
she could satisfy herself. Mrs. Carrol, Florence’s
mamma, was ordered to buy, have made, and marked a
generous supply of house and table linen, and send
it as her present, all of which was faithfully done,
but the secret leaked out, and was greatly enjoyed
by the family, for Aunt March tried to look utterly
unconscious, and insisted that she could give nothing
but the old-fashioned pearls long promised to the
first bride.
“That’s a housewifely
taste which I am glad to see. I had a young
friend who set up housekeeping with six sheets, but
she had finger bowls for company and that satisfied
her,” said Mrs. March, patting the damask tablecloths,
with a truly feminine appreciation of their fineness.
“I haven’t a single finger
bowl, but this is a setout that will last me all my
days, Hannah says.” And Meg looked quite
contented, as well she might.
A tall, broad-shouldered young fellow,
with a cropped head, a felt basin of a hat, and a
flyaway coat, came tramping down the road at a great
pace, walked over the low fence without stopping to
open the gate, straight up to Mrs. March, with both
hands out and a hearty . . .
“Here I am, Mother! Yes, it’s all
right.”
The last words were in answer to the
look the elder lady gave him, a kindly questioning
look which the handsome eyes met so frankly that the
little ceremony closed, as usual, with a motherly
kiss.
“For Mrs. John Brooke, with
the maker’s congratulations and compliments.
Bless you, Beth! What a refreshing spectacle
you are, Jo. Amy, you are getting altogether
too handsome for a single lady.”
As Laurie spoke, he delivered a brown
paper parcel to Meg, pulled Beth’s hair ribbon,
stared at Jo’s big pinafore, and fell into an
attitude of mock rapture before Amy, then shook hands
all round, and everyone began to talk.
“Where is John?” asked Meg anxiously.
“Stopped to get the license for tomorrow, ma’am.”
“Which side won the last match,
Teddy?” inquired Jo, who persisted in feeling
an interest in manly sports despite her nineteen years.
“Ours, of course. Wish you’d been
there to see.”
“How is the lovely Miss Randal?” asked
Amy with a significant smile.
“More cruel than ever.
Don’t you see how I’m pining away?”
and Laurie gave his broad chest a sounding slap and
heaved a melodramatic sigh.
“What’s the last joke?
Undo the bundle and see, Meg,” said Beth, eying
the knobby parcel with curiosity.
“It’s a useful thing to
have in the house in case of fire or thieves,”
observed Laurie, as a watchman’s rattle appeared,
amid the laughter of the girls.
“Any time when John is away
and you get frightened, Mrs. Meg, just swing that
out of the front window, and it will rouse the neighborhood
in a jiffy. Nice thing, isn’t it?”
and Laurie gave them a sample of its powers that made
them cover up their ears.
“There’s gratitude for
you! And speaking of gratitude reminds me to
mention that you may thank Hannah for saving your wedding
cake from destruction. I saw it going into your
house as I came by, and if she hadn’t defended
it manfully I’d have had a pick at it, for it
looked like a remarkably plummy one.”
“I wonder if you will ever grow
up, Laurie,” said Meg in a matronly tone.
“I’m doing my best, ma’am,
but can’t get much higher, I’m afraid,
as six feet is about all men can do in these degenerate
days,” responded the young gentleman, whose
head was about level with the little chandelier.
“I suppose it would be profanation
to eat anything in this spick-and-span bower, so as
I’m tremendously hungry, I propose an adjournment,”
he added presently.
“Mother and I are going to wait
for John. There are some last things to settle,”
said Meg, bustling away.
“Beth and I are going over to
Kitty Bryant’s to get more flowers for tomorrow,”
added Amy, tying a picturesque hat over her picturesque
curls, and enjoying the effect as much as anybody.
“Come, Jo, don’t desert
a fellow. I’m in such a state of exhaustion
I can’t get home without help. Don’t
take off your apron, whatever you do, it’s peculiarly
becoming,” said Laurie, as Jo bestowed his especial
aversion in her capacious pocket and offered her arm
to support his feeble steps.
“Now, Teddy, I want to talk
seriously to you about tomorrow,” began Jo,
as they strolled away together. “You must
promise to behave well, and not cut up any pranks,
and spoil our plans.”
“Not a prank.”
“And don’t say funny things when we ought
to be sober.”
“I never do. You are the one for that.”
“And I implore you not to look
at me during the ceremony. I shall certainly
laugh if you do.”
“You won’t see me, you’ll
be crying so hard that the thick fog round you will
obscure the prospect.”
“I never cry unless for some great affliction.”
“Such as fellows going to college,
hey?” cut in Laurie, with suggestive laugh.
“Don’t be a peacock.
I only moaned a trifle to keep the girls company.”
“Exactly. I say, Jo, how
is Grandpa this week? Pretty amiable?”
“Very. Why, have you got
into a scrape and want to know how he’ll take
it?” asked Jo rather sharply.
“Now, Jo, do you think I’d
look your mother in the face and say ‘All right’,
if it wasn’t?” and Laurie stopped short,
with an injured air.
“No, I don’t.”
“Then don’t go and be
suspicious. I only want some money,” said
Laurie, walking on again, appeased by her hearty tone.
“You spend a great deal, Teddy.”
“Bless you, I don’t spend
it, it spends itself somehow, and is gone before I
know it.”
“You are so generous and kind-hearted
that you let people borrow, and can’t say ‘No’
to anyone. We heard about Henshaw and all you
did for him. If you always spent money in that
way, no one would blame you,” said Jo warmly.
“Oh, he made a mountain out
of a molehill. You wouldn’t have me let
that fine fellow work himself to death just for want
of a little help, when he is worth a dozen of us lazy
chaps, would you?”
“Of course not, but I don’t
see the use of your having seventeen waistcoats, endless
neckties, and a new hat every time you come home.
I thought you’d got over the dandy period, but
every now and then it breaks out in a new spot.
Just now it’s the fashion to be hideous, to
make your head look like a scrubbing brush, wear a
strait jacket, orange gloves, and clumping square-toed
boots. If it was cheap ugliness, I’d say
nothing, but it costs as much as the other, and I
don’t get any satisfaction out of it.”
Laurie threw back his head, and laughed
so heartily at this attack, that the felt hat fell
off, and Jo walked on it, which insult only afforded
him an opportunity for expatiating on the advantages
of a rough-and-ready costume, as he folded up the
maltreated hat, and stuffed it into his pocket.
“Don’t lecture any more,
there’s a good soul! I have enough all
through the week, and like to enjoy myself when I come
home. I’ll get myself up regardless of
expense tomorrow and be a satisfaction to my friends.”
“I’ll leave you in peace
if you’ll only let your hair grow. I’m
not aristocratic, but I do object to being seen with
a person who looks like a young prize fighter,”
observed Jo severely.
“This unassuming style promotes
study, that’s why we adopt it,” returned
Laurie, who certainly could not be accused of vanity,
having voluntarily sacrificed a handsome curly crop
to the demand for quarter-inch-long stubble.
“By the way, Jo, I think that
little Parker is really getting desperate about Amy.
He talks of her constantly, writes poetry, and moons
about in a most suspicious manner. He’d
better nip his little passion in the bud, hadn’t
he?” added Laurie, in a confidential, elder
brotherly tone, after a minute’s silence.
“Of course he had. We
don’t want any more marrying in this family
for years to come. Mercy on us, what are the
children thinking of?” and Jo looked as much
scandalized as if Amy and little Parker were not yet
in their teens.
“It’s a fast age, and
I don’t know what we are coming to, ma’am.
You are a mere infant, but you’ll go next, Jo,
and we’ll be left lamenting,” said Laurie,
shaking his head over the degeneracy of the times.
“Don’t be alarmed.
I’m not one of the agreeable sort. Nobody
will want me, and it’s a mercy, for there should
always be one old maid in a family.”
“You won’t give anyone
a chance,” said Laurie, with a sidelong glance
and a little more color than before in his sunburned
face. “You won’t show the soft side
of your character, and if a fellow gets a peep at
it by accident and can’t help showing that he
likes it, you treat him as Mrs. Gummidge did her sweetheart,
throw cold water over him, and get so thorny no one
dares touch or look at you.”
“I don’t like that sort
of thing. I’m too busy to be worried with
nonsense, and I think it’s dreadful to break
up families so. Now don’t say any more
about it. Meg’s wedding has turned all
our heads, and we talk of nothing but lovers and such
absurdities. I don’t wish to get cross,
so let’s change the subject;” and Jo
looked quite ready to fling cold water on the slightest
provocation.
Whatever his feelings might have been,
Laurie found a vent for them in a long low whistle
and the fearful prediction as they parted at the gate,
“Mark my words, Jo, you’ll go next.”