JO’S JOURNAL
New York, November
Dear Marmee and Beth,
I’m going to write you a regular
volume, for I’ve got heaps to tell, though I’m
not a fine young lady traveling on the continent.
When I lost sight of Father’s dear old face,
I felt a trifle blue, and might have shed a briny
drop or two, if an Irish lady with four small children,
all crying more or less, hadn’t diverted my
mind, for I amused myself by dropping gingerbread
nuts over the seat every time they opened their mouths
to roar.
Soon the sun came out, and taking it as a good omen,
I
cleared up likewise and enjoyed my journey with all
my heart.
Mrs. Kirke welcomed me so kindly I
felt at home at once, even in that big house full
of strangers. She gave me a funny little sky
parlor—all she had, but there is a stove
in it, and a nice table in a sunny window, so I can
sit here and write whenever I like. A fine view
and a church tower opposite atone for the many stairs,
and I took a fancy to my den on the spot. The
nursery, where I am to teach and sew, is a pleasant
room next Mrs. Kirke’s private parlor, and the
two little girls are pretty children, rather spoiled,
I fancy, but they took to me after telling them The
Seven Bad Pigs, and I’ve no doubt I shall make
a model governess.
I am to have my meals with the children,
if I prefer it to the great table, and for the present
I do, for I am bashful, though no one will believe
it.
“Now, my dear, make yourself
at home,” said Mrs. K. in her motherly way,
“I’m on the drive from morning to night,
as you may suppose with such a family, but a great
anxiety will be off my mind if I know the children
are safe with you. My rooms are always open
to you, and your own shall be as comfortable as I
can make it. There are some pleasant people in
the house if you feel sociable, and your evenings
are always free. Come to me if anything goes
wrong, and be as happy as you can. There’s
the tea bell, I must run and change my cap.”
And off she bustled, leaving me to settle myself
in my new nest.
As I went downstairs soon after, I
saw something I liked. The flights are very long
in this tall house, and as I stood waiting at the
head of the third one for a little servant girl to
lumber up, I saw a gentleman come along behind her,
take the heavy hod of coal out of her hand, carry
it all the way up, put it down at a door near by,
and walk away, saying, with a kind nod and a foreign
accent, “It goes better so. The little
back is too young to haf such heaviness.”
Wasn’t it good of him?
I like such things, for as Father says, trifles show
character. When I mentioned it to Mrs. K., that
evening, she laughed, and said, “That must have
been Professor Bhaer, he’s always doing things
of that sort.”
Mrs. K. told me he was from Berlin,
very learned and good, but poor as a church mouse,
and gives lessons to support himself and two little
orphan nephews whom he is educating here, according
to the wishes of his sister, who married an American.
Not a very romantic story, but it interested me,
and I was glad to hear that Mrs. K. lends him her
parlor for some of his scholars. There is a glass
door between it and the nursery, and I mean to peep
at him, and then I’ll tell you how he looks.
He’s almost forty, so it’s no harm, Marmee.
After tea and a go-to-bed romp with
the little girls, I attacked the big workbasket, and
had a quiet evening chatting with my new friend.
I shall keep a journal-letter, and send it once a
week, so goodnight, and more tomorrow.
Tuesday Eve
Had a lively time in my seminary this
morning, for the children acted like Sancho, and at
one time I really thought I should shake them all
round. Some good angel inspired me to try gymnastics,
and I kept it up till they were glad to sit down and
keep still. After luncheon, the girl took them
out for a walk, and I went to my needlework like little
Mabel ’with a willing mind’. I was
thanking my stars that I’d learned to make nice
buttonholes, when the parlor door opened and shut,
and someone began to hum, Kennst Du Das Land, like
a big bumblebee. It was dreadfully improper,
I know, but I couldn’t resist the temptation,
and lifting one end of the curtain before the glass
door, I peeped in. Professor Bhaer was there,
and while he arranged his books, I took a good look
at him. A regular German—rather stout,
with brown hair tumbled all over his head, a bushy
beard, good nose, the kindest eyes I ever saw, and
a splendid big voice that does one’s ears good,
after our sharp or slipshod American gabble.
His clothes were rusty, his hands were large, and
he hadn’t a really handsome feature in his face,
except his beautiful teeth, yet I liked him, for he
had a fine head, his linen was very nice, and he looked
like a gentleman, though two buttons were off his coat
and there was a patch on one shoe. He looked
sober in spite of his humming, till he went to the
window to turn the hyacinth bulbs toward the sun,
and stroke the cat, who received him like an old friend.
Then he smiled, and when a tap came at the door,
called out in a loud, brisk tone, “Herein!”
I was just going to run, when I caught
sight of a morsel of a child carrying a big book,
and stopped, to see what was going on.
“Me wants me Bhaer,” said
the mite, slamming down her book and running to meet
him.
“Thou shalt haf thy Bhaer.
Come, then, and take a goot hug from him, my Tina,”
said the Professor, catching her up with a laugh,
and holding her so high over his head that she had
to stoop her little face to kiss him.
“Now me mus tuddy my lessin,”
went on the funny little thing. So he put her
up at the table, opened the great dictionary she had
brought, and gave her a paper and pencil, and she
scribbled away, turning a leaf now and then, and passing
her little fat finger down the page, as if finding
a word, so soberly that I nearly betrayed myself by
a laugh, while Mr. Bhaer stood stroking her pretty
hair with a fatherly look that made me think she must
be his own, though she looked more French than German.
Another knock and the appearance of
two young ladies sent me back to my work, and there
I virtuously remained through all the noise and gabbling
that went on next door. One of the girls kept
laughing affectedly, and saying, “Now Professor,”
in a coquettish tone, and the other pronounced her
German with an accent that must have made it hard
for him to keep sober.
Both seemed to try his patience sorely,
for more than once I heard him say emphatically, “No,
no, it is not so, you haf not attend to what I say,”
and once there was a loud rap, as if he struck the
table with his book, followed by the despairing exclamation,
“Prut! It all goes bad this day.”
Poor man, I pitied him, and when the
girls were gone, took just one more peep to see if
he survived it. He seemed to have thrown himself
back in his chair, tired out, and sat there with his
eyes shut till the clock struck two, when he jumped
up, put his books in his pocket, as if ready for another
lesson, and taking little Tina who had fallen asleep
on the sofa in his arms, he carried her quietly away.
I fancy he has a hard life of it. Mrs. Kirke
asked me if I wouldn’t go down to the five o’clock
dinner, and feeling a little bit homesick, I thought
I would, just to see what sort of people are under
the same roof with me. So I made myself respectable
and tried to slip in behind Mrs. Kirke, but as she
is short and I’m tall, my efforts at concealment
were rather a failure. She gave me a seat by
her, and after my face cooled off, I plucked up courage
and looked about me. The long table was full,
and every one intent on getting their dinner, the
gentlemen especially, who seemed to be eating on time,
for they bolted in every sense of the word, vanishing
as soon as they were done. There was the usual
assortment of young men absorbed in themselves, young
couples absorbed in each other, married ladies in their
babies, and old gentlemen in politics. I don’t
think I shall care to have much to do with any of
them, except one sweetfaced maiden lady, who looks
as if she had something in her.
Cast away at the very bottom of the
table was the Professor, shouting answers to the questions
of a very inquisitive, deaf old gentleman on one side,
and talking philosophy with a Frenchman on the other.
If Amy had been here, she’d have turned her
back on him forever because, sad to relate, he had
a great appetite, and shoveled in his dinner in a manner
which would have horrified ‘her ladyship’.
I didn’t mind, for I like ‘to see folks
eat with a relish’, as Hannah says, and the poor
man must have needed a deal of food after teaching
idiots all day.
As I went upstairs after dinner, two
of the young men were settling their hats before the
hall mirror, and I heard one say low to the other,
“Who’s the new party?”
“Governess, or something of that sort.”
“What the deuce is she at our table for?”
“Friend of the old lady’s.”
“Handsome head, but no style.”
“Not a bit of it. Give us a light and
come on.”
I felt angry at first, and then I
didn’t care, for a governess is as good as a
clerk, and I’ve got sense, if I haven’t
style, which is more than some people have, judging
from the remarks of the elegant beings who clattered
away, smoking like bad chimneys. I hate ordinary
people!
Thursday
Yesterday was a quiet day spent in
teaching, sewing, and writing in my little room, which
is very cozy, with a light and fire. I picked
up a few bits of news and was introduced to the Professor.
It seems that Tina is the child of the Frenchwoman
who does the fine ironing in the laundry here.
The little thing has lost her heart to Mr. Bhaer,
and follows him about the house like a dog whenever
he is at home, which delights him, as he is very fond
of children, though a ‘bacheldore’.
Kitty and Minnie Kirke likewise regard him with affection,
and tell all sorts of stories about the plays he invents,
the presents he brings, and the splendid tales he
tells. The younger men quiz him, it seems, call
him Old Fritz, Lager Beer, Ursa Major, and make all
manner of jokes on his name. But he enjoys it
like a boy, Mrs. Kirke says, and takes it so good-naturedly
that they all like him in spite of his foreign ways.
The maiden lady is a Miss Norton,
rich, cultivated, and kind. She spoke to me
at dinner today (for I went to table again, it’s
such fun to watch people), and asked me to come and
see her at her room. She has fine books and pictures,
knows interesting persons, and seems friendly, so I
shall make myself agreeable, for I do want to get
into good society, only it isn’t the same sort
that Amy likes.
I was in our parlor last evening when
Mr. Bhaer came in with some newspapers for Mrs. Kirke.
She wasn’t there, but Minnie, who is a little
old woman, introduced me very prettily. “This
is Mamma’s friend, Miss March.”
“Yes, and she’s jolly
and we like her lots,” added Kitty, who is an
‘enfant terrible’.
We both bowed, and then we laughed,
for the prim introduction and the blunt addition were
rather a comical contrast.
“Ah, yes, I hear these naughty
ones go to vex you, Mees Marsch. If so again,
call at me and I come,” he said, with a threatening
frown that delighted the little wretches.
I promised I would, and he departed,
but it seems as if I was doomed to see a good deal
of him, for today as I passed his door on my way out,
by accident I knocked against it with my umbrella.
It flew open, and there he stood in his dressing
gown, with a big blue sock on one hand and a darning
needle in the other. He didn’t seem at
all ashamed of it, for when I explained and hurried
on, he waved his hand, sock and all, saying in his
loud, cheerful way . . .
“You haf a fine day to make
your walk. Bon voyage, Mademoiselle.”
I laughed all the way downstairs,
but it was a little pathetic, also to think of the
poor man having to mend his own clothes. The
German gentlemen embroider, I know, but darning hose
is another thing and not so pretty.
Saturday
Nothing has happened to write about,
except a call on Miss Norton, who has a room full
of pretty things, and who was very charming, for she
showed me all her treasures, and asked me if I would
sometimes go with her to lectures and concerts, as
her escort, if I enjoyed them. She put it as
a favor, but I’m sure Mrs. Kirke has told her
about us, and she does it out of kindness to me.
I’m as proud as Lucifer, but such favors from
such people don’t burden me, and I accepted
gratefully.
When I got back to the nursery there
was such an uproar in the parlor that I looked in,
and there was Mr. Bhaer down on his hands and knees,
with Tina on his back, Kitty leading him with a jump
rope, and Minnie feeding two small boys with seedcakes,
as they roared and ramped in cages built of chairs.
“We are playing nargerie,” explained Kitty.
“Dis is mine effalunt!” added Tina, holding
on by the
Professor’s hair.
“Mamma always allows us to do
what we like Saturday afternoon, when Franz and Emil
come, doesn’t she, Mr. Bhaer?” said Minnie.
The ‘effalunt’ sat up,
looking as much in earnest as any of them, and said
soberly to me, “I gif you my wort it is so,
if we make too large a noise you shall say Hush! to
us, and we go more softly.”
I promised to do so, but left the
door open and enjoyed the fun as much as they did,
for a more glorious frolic I never witnessed.
They played tag and soldiers, danced and sang, and
when it began to grow dark they all piled onto the
sofa about the Professor, while he told charming fairy
stories of the storks on the chimney tops, and the
little ‘koblods’, who ride the snowflakes
as they fall. I wish Americans were as simple
and natural as Germans, don’t you?
I’m so fond of writing, I should
go spinning on forever if motives of economy didn’t
stop me, for though I’ve used thin paper and
written fine, I tremble to think of the stamps this
long letter will need. Pray forward Amy’s
as soon as you can spare them. My small news
will sound very flat after her splendors, but you
will like them, I know. Is Teddy studying so
hard that he can’t find time to write to his
friends? Take good care of him for me, Beth,
and tell me all about the babies, and give heaps of
love to everyone. From your faithful Jo.
P.S. On reading over my letter,
it strikes me as rather Bhaery, but I am always interested
in odd people, and I really had nothing else to write
about. Bless you!
DECEMBER
My Precious Betsey,
As this is to be a scribble-scrabble
letter, I direct it to you, for it may amuse you,
and give you some idea of my goings on, for though
quiet, they are rather amusing, for which, oh, be
joyful! After what Amy would call Herculaneum
efforts, in the way of mental and moral agriculture,
my young ideas begin to shoot and my little twigs
to bend as I could wish. They are not so interesting
to me as Tina and the boys, but I do my duty by them,
and they are fond of me. Franz and Emil are jolly
little lads, quite after my own heart, for the mixture
of German and American spirit in them produces a constant
state of effervescence. Saturday afternoons
are riotous times, whether spent in the house or out,
for on pleasant days they all go to walk, like a seminary,
with the Professor and myself to keep order, and then
such fun!
We are very good friends now, and
I’ve begun to take lessons. I really couldn’t
help it, and it all came about in such a droll way
that I must tell you. To begin at the beginning,
Mrs. Kirke called to me one day as I passed Mr. Bhaer’s
room where she was rummaging.
“Did you ever see such a den,
my dear? Just come and help me put these books
to rights, for I’ve turned everything upside
down, trying to discover what he has done with the
six new handkerchiefs I gave him not long ago.”
I went in, and while we worked I looked
about me, for it was ‘a den’ to be sure.
Books and papers everywhere, a broken meerschaum,
and an old flute over the mantlepiece as if done with,
a ragged bird without any tail chirped on one window
seat, and a box of white mice adorned the other.
Half-finished boats and bits of string lay among
the manuscripts. Dirty little boots stood drying
before the fire, and traces of the dearly beloved
boys, for whom he makes a slave of himself, were to
be seen all over the room. After a grand rummage
three of the missing articles were found, one over
the bird cage, one covered with ink, and a third burned
brown, having been used as a holder.
“Such a man!” laughed
good-natured Mrs. K., as she put the relics in the
rag bay. “I suppose the others are torn
up to rig ships, bandage cut fingers, or make kite
tails. It’s dreadful, but I can’t
scold him. He’s so absent-minded and goodnatured,
he lets those boys ride over him roughshod. I
agreed to do his washing and mending, but he forgets
to give out his things and I forget to look them over,
so he comes to a sad pass sometimes.”
“Let me mend them,” said
I. “I don’t mind it, and he needn’t
know. I’d like to, he’s so kind to
me about bringing my letters and lending books.”
So I have got his things in order,
and knit heels into two pairs of the socks, for they
were boggled out of shape with his queer darns.
Nothing was said, and I hoped he wouldn’t find
it out, but one day last week he caught me at it.
Hearing the lessons he gives to others has interested
and amused me so much that I took a fancy to learn,
for Tina runs in and out, leaving the door open, and
I can hear. I had been sitting near this door,
finishing off the last sock, and trying to understand
what he said to a new scholar, who is as stupid as
I am. The girl had gone, and I thought he had
also, it was so still, and I was busily gabbling over
a verb, and rocking to and fro in a most absurd way,
when a little crow made me look up, and there was
Mr. Bhaer looking and laughing quietly, while he made
signs to Tina not to betray him.
“So!” he said, as I stopped
and stared like a goose, “you peep at me, I
peep at you, and this is not bad, but see, I am not
pleasanting when I say, haf you a wish for German?”
“Yes, but you are too busy.
I am too stupid to learn,” I blundered out,
as red as a peony.
“Prut! We will make the
time, and we fail not to find the sense. At
efening I shall gif a little lesson with much gladness,
for look you, Mees Marsch, I haf this debt to pay.”
And he pointed to my work ‘Yes,’ they
say to one another, these so kind ladies, ’he
is a stupid old fellow, he will see not what we do,
he will never observe that his sock heels go not in
holes any more, he will think his buttons grow out
new when they fall, and believe that strings make
theirselves.’ “Ah! But I haf
an eye, and I see much. I haf a heart, and I
feel thanks for this. Come, a little lesson then
and now, or—no more good fairy works for
me and mine.”
Of course I couldn’t say anything
after that, and as it really is a splendid opportunity,
I made the bargain, and we began. I took four
lessons, and then I stuck fast in a grammatical bog.
The Professor was very patient with me, but it must
have been torment to him, and now and then he’d
look at me with such an expression of mild despair
that it was a toss-up with me whether to laugh or
cry. I tried both ways, and when it came to
a sniff or utter mortification and woe, he just threw
the grammar on to the floor and marched out of the
room. I felt myself disgraced and deserted forever,
but didn’t blame him a particle, and was scrambling
my papers together, meaning to rush upstairs and shake
myself hard, when in he came, as brisk and beaming
as if I’d covered myself in glory.
“Now we shall try a new way.
You and I will read these pleasant little marchen
together, and dig no more in that dry book, that goes
in the corner for making us trouble.”
He spoke so kindly, and opened Hans
Andersons’s fairy tales so invitingly before
me, that I was more ashamed than ever, and went at
my lesson in a neck-or-nothing style that seemed to
amuse him immensely. I forgot my bashfulness,
and pegged away (no other word will express it) with
all my might, tumbling over long words, pronouncing
according to inspiration of the minute, and doing
my very best. When I finished reading my first
page, and stopped for breath, he clapped his hands
and cried out in his hearty way, “Das ist gut!
Now we go well! My turn. I do him in German,
gif me your ear.” And away he went, rumbling
out the words with his strong voice and a relish which
was good to see as well as hear. Fortunately
the story was The Constant Tin Soldier, which
is droll, you know, so I could laugh, and I did, though
I didn’t understand half he read, for I couldn’t
help it, he was so earnest, I so excited, and the whole
thing so comical.
After that we got on better, and now
I read my lessons pretty well, for this way of studying
suits me, and I can see that the grammar gets tucked
into the tales and poetry as one gives pills in jelly.
I like it very much, and he doesn’t seem tired
of it yet, which is very good of him, isn’t it?
I mean to give him something on Christmas, for I
dare not offer money. Tell me something nice,
Marmee.
I’m glad Laurie seems so happy
and busy, that he has given up smoking and lets his
hair grow. You see Beth manages him better than
I did. I’m not jealous, dear, do your best,
only don’t make a saint of him. I’m
afraid I couldn’t like him without a spice of
human naughtiness. Read him bits of my letters.
I haven’t time to write much, and that will
do just as well. Thank Heaven Beth continues
so comfortable.
JANUARY
A Happy New Year to you all, my dearest
family, which of course includes Mr. L. and a young
man by the name of Teddy. I can’t tell
you how much I enjoyed your Christmas bundle, for
I didn’t get it till night and had given up hoping.
Your letter came in the morning, but you said nothing
about a parcel, meaning it for a surprise, so I was
disappointed, for I’d had a ‘kind of feeling’
that you wouldn’t forget me. I felt a little
low in my mind as I sat up in my room after tea, and
when the big, muddy, battered-looking bundle was brought
to me, I just hugged it and pranced. It was so
homey and refreshing that I sat down on the floor and
read and looked and ate and laughed and cried, in
my usual absurd way. The things were just what
I wanted, and all the better for being made instead
of bought. Beth’s new ‘ink bib’
was capital, and Hannah’s box of hard gingerbread
will be a treasure. I’ll be sure and wear
the nice flannels you sent, Marmee, and read carefully
the books Father has marked. Thank you all,
heaps and heaps!
Speaking of books reminds me that
I’m getting rich in that line, for on New Year’s
Day Mr. Bhaer gave me a fine Shakespeare. It
is one he values much, and I’ve often admired
it, set up in the place of honor with his German Bible,
Plato, Homer, and Milton, so you may imagine how I
felt when he brought it down, without its cover, and
showed me my own name in it, “from my friend
Friedrich Bhaer”.
“You say often you wish a library.
Here I gif you one, for between these lids (he meant
covers) is many books in one. Read him well,
and he will help you much, for the study of character
in this book will help you to read it in the world
and paint it with your pen.”
I thanked him as well as I could,
and talk now about ’my library’, as if
I had a hundred books. I never knew how much
there was in Shakespeare before, but then I never had
a Bhaer to explain it to me. Now don’t
laugh at his horrid name. It isn’t pronounced
either Bear or Beer, as people will say it, but something
between the two, as only Germans can give it.
I’m glad you both like what I tell you about
him, and hope you will know him some day. Mother
would admire his warm heart, Father his wise head.
I admire both, and feel rich in my new ‘friend
Friedrich Bhaer’.
Not having much money, or knowing
what he’d like, I got several little things,
and put them about the room, where he would find them
unexpectedly. They were useful, pretty, or funny,
a new standish on his table, a little vase for his
flower, he always has one, or a bit of green in a glass,
to keep him fresh, he says, and a holder for his blower,
so that he needn’t burn up what Amy calls ‘mouchoirs’.
I made it like those Beth invented, a big butterfly
with a fat body, and black and yellow wings, worsted
feelers, and bead eyes. It took his fancy immensely,
and he put it on his mantlepiece as an article of
virtue, so it was rather a failure after all.
Poor as he is, he didn’t forget a servant or
a child in the house, and not a soul here, from the
French laundrywoman to Miss Norton forgot him.
I was so glad of that.
They got up a masquerade, and had
a gay time New Year’s Eve. I didn’t
mean to go down, having no dress. But at the
last minute, Mrs. Kirke remembered some old brocades,
and Miss Norton lent me lace and feathers. So
I dressed up as Mrs. Malaprop, and sailed in with
a mask on. No one knew me, for I disguised my
voice, and no one dreamed of the silent, haughty Miss
March (for they think I am very stiff and cool, most
of them, and so I am to whippersnappers) could dance
and dress, and burst out into a ’nice derangement
of epitaphs, like an allegory on the banks of the
Nile’. I enjoyed it very much, and when
we unmasked it was fun to see them stare at me.
I heard one of the young men tell another that he
knew I’d been an actress, in fact, he thought
he remembered seeing me at one of the minor theaters.
Meg will relish that joke. Mr. Bhaer was Nick
Bottom, and Tina was Titania, a perfect little fairy
in his arms. To see them dance was ‘quite
a landscape’, to use a Teddyism.
I had a very happy New Year, after
all, and when I thought it over in my room, I felt
as if I was getting on a little in spite of my many
failures, for I’m cheerful all the time now,
work with a will, and take more interest in other people
than I used to, which is satisfactory. Bless
you all! Ever your loving . . . Jo