ALL ALONE
It was easy to promise self-abnegation
when self was wrapped up in another, and heart and
soul were purified by a sweet example. But when
the helpful voice was silent, the daily lesson over,
the beloved presence gone, and nothing remained but
loneliness and grief, then Jo found her promise very
hard to keep. How could she ‘comfort Father
and Mother’ when her own heart ached with a
ceaseless longing for her sister, how could she ‘make
the house cheerful’ when all its light and warmth
and beauty seemed to have deserted it when Beth left
the old home for the new, and where in all the world
could she ’find some useful, happy work to do’,
that would take the place of the loving service which
had been its own reward? She tried in a blind,
hopeless way to do her duty, secretly rebelling against
it all the while, for it seemed unjust that her few
joys should be lessened, her burdens made heavier,
and life get harder and harder as she toiled along.
Some people seemed to get all sunshine, and some
all shadow. It was not fair, for she tried more
than Amy to be good, but never got any reward, only
disappointment, trouble and hard work.
Poor Jo, these were dark days to her,
for something like despair came over her when she
thought of spending all her life in that quiet house,
devoted to humdrum cares, a few small pleasures, and
the duty that never seemed to grow any easier.
“I can’t do it. I wasn’t meant
for a life like this, and I know I shall break away
and do something desperate if somebody doesn’t
come and help me,” she said to herself, when
her first efforts failed and she fell into the moody,
miserable state of mind which often comes when strong
wills have to yield to the inevitable.
But someone did come and help her,
though Jo did not recognize her good angels at once
because they wore familiar shapes and used the simple
spells best fitted to poor humanity. Often she
started up at night, thinking Beth called her, and
when the sight of the little empty bed made her cry
with the bitter cry of unsubmissive sorrow, “Oh,
Beth, come back! Come back!” she did not
stretch out her yearning arms in vain. For,
as quick to hear her sobbing as she had been to hear
her sister’s faintest whisper, her mother came
to comfort her, not with words only, but the patient
tenderness that soothes by a touch, tears that were
mute reminders of a greater grief than Jo’s,
and broken whispers, more eloquent than prayers, because
hopeful resignation went hand-in-hand with natural
sorrow. Sacred moments, when heart talked to
heart in the silence of the night, turning affliction
to a blessing, which chastened grief and strengthned
love. Feeling this, Jo’s burden seemed
easier to bear, duty grew sweeter, and life looked
more endurable, seen from the safe shelter of her
mother’s arms.
When aching heart was a little comforted,
troubled mind likewise found help, for one day she
went to the study, and leaning over the good gray
head lifted to welcome her with a tranquil smile,
she said very humbly, “Father, talk to me as
you did to Beth. I need it more than she did,
for I’m all wrong.”
“My dear, nothing can comfort
me like this,” he answered, with a falter in
his voice, and both arms round her, as if he too,
needed help, and did not fear to ask for it.
Then, sitting in Beth’s little
chair close beside him, Jo told her troubles, the
resentful sorrow for her loss, the fruitless efforts
that discouraged her, the want of faith that made life
look so dark, and all the sad bewilderment which we
call despair. She gave him entire confidence,
he gave her the help she needed, and both found consolation
in the act. For the time had come when they
could talk together not only as father and daughter,
but as man and woman, able and glad to serve each
other with mutual sympathy as well as mutual love.
Happy, thoughtful times there in the old study which
Jo called ‘the church of one member’, and
from which she came with fresh courage, recovered
cheerfulness, and a more submissive spirit. For
the parents who had taught one child to meet death
without fear, were trying now to teach another to
accept life without despondency or distrust, and to
use its beautiful opportunities with gratitude and
power.
Other helps had Jo—humble,
wholesome duties and delights that would not be denied
their part in serving her, and which she slowly learned
to see and value. Brooms and dishcloths never
could be as distasteful as they once had been, for
Beth had presided over both, and something of her
housewifely spirit seemed to linger around the little
mop and the old brush, never thrown away. As
she used them, Jo found herself humming the songs
Beth used to hum, imitating Beth’s orderly ways,
and giving the little touches here and there that
kept everything fresh and cozy, which was the first
step toward making home happy, though she didn’t
know it till Hannah said with an approving squeeze
of the hand . . .
“You thoughtful creeter, you’re
determined we shan’t miss that dear lamb ef
you can help it. We don’t say much, but
we see it, and the Lord will bless you for’t,
see ef He don’t.”
As they sat sewing together, Jo discovered
how much improved her sister Meg was, how well she
could talk, how much she knew about good, womanly
impulses, thoughts, and feelings, how happy she was
in husband and children, and how much they were all
doing for each other.
“Marriage is an excellent thing,
after all. I wonder if I should blossom out
half as well as you have, if I tried it?, always ’perwisin’
I could,” said Jo, as she constructed a kite
for Demi in the topsy-turvy nursery.
“It’s just what you need
to bring out the tender womanly half of your nature,
Jo. You are like a chestnut burr, prickly outside,
but silky-soft within, and a sweet kernal, if one can
only get at it. Love will make you show your
heart one day, and then the rough burr will fall off.”
“Frost opens chestnut burrs,
ma’am, and it takes a good shake to bring them
down. Boys go nutting, and I don’t care
to be bagged by them,” returned Jo, pasting
away at the kite which no wind that blows would ever
carry up, for Daisy had tied herself on as a bob.
Meg laughed, for she was glad to see
a glimmer of Jo’s old spirit, but she felt it
her duty to enforce her opinion by every argument in
her power, and the sisterly chats were not wasted,
especially as two of Meg’s most effective arguments
were the babies, whom Jo loved tenderly. Grief
is the best opener of some hearts, and Jo’s was
nearly ready for the bag. A little more sunshine
to ripen the nut, then, not a boy’s impatient
shake, but a man’s hand reached up to pick it
gently from the burr, and find the kernal sound and
sweet. If she suspected this, she would have
shut up tight, and been more prickly than ever, fortunately
she wasn’t thinking about herself, so when the
time came, down she dropped.
Now, if she had been the heroine of
a moral storybook, she ought at this period of her
life to have become quite saintly, renounced the world,
and gone about doing good in a mortified bonnet, with
tracts in her pocket. But, you see, Jo wasn’t
a heroine, she was only a struggling human girl like
hundreds of others, and she just acted out her nature,
being sad, cross, listless, or energetic, as the mood
suggested. It’s highly virtuous to say
we’ll be good, but we can’t do it all at
once, and it takes a long pull, a strong pull, and
a pull all together before some of us even get our
feet set in the right way. Jo had got so far,
she was learning to do her duty, and to feel unhappy
if she did not, but to do it cheerfully, ah, that
was another thing! She had often said she wanted
to do something splendid, no matter how hard, and
now she had her wish, for what could be more beautiful
than to devote her life to Father and Mother, trying
to make home as happy to them as they had to her?
And if difficulties were necessary to increase the
splendor of the effort, what could be harder for a
restless, ambitious girl than to give up her own hopes,
plans, and desires, and cheerfully live for others?
Providence had taken her at her word.
Here was the task, not what she had expected, but
better because self had no part in it. Now, could
she do it? She decided that she would try, and
in her first attempt she found the helps I have suggested.
Still another was given her, and she took it, not
as a reward, but as a comfort, as Christian took the
refreshment afforded by the little arbor where he
rested, as he climbed the hill called Difficulty.
“Why don’t you write?
That always used to make you happy,” said her
mother once, when the desponding fit over-shadowed
Jo.
“I’ve no heart to write,
and if I had, nobody cares for my things.”
“We do. Write something
for us, and never mind the rest of the world.
Try it, dear. I’m sure it would do you
good, and please us very much.”
“Don’t believe I can.”
But Jo got out her desk and began to overhaul her
half-finished manuscripts.
An hour afterward her mother peeped
in and there she was, scratching away, with her black
pinafore on, and an absorbed expression, which caused
Mrs. March to smile and slip away, well pleased with
the success of her suggestion. Jo never knew
how it happened, but something got into that story
that went straight to the hearts of those who read
it, for when her family had laughed and cried over
it, her father sent it, much against her will, to one
of the popular magazines, and to her utter surprise,
it was not only paid for, but others requested.
Letters from several persons, whose praise was honor,
followed the appearance of the little story, newspapers
copied it, and strangers as well as friends admired
it. For a small thing it was a great success,
and Jo was more astonished than when her novel was
commended and condemned all at once.
“I don’t understand it.
What can there be in a simple little story like that
to make people praise it so?” she said, quite
bewildered.
“There is truth in it, Jo, that’s
the secret. Humor and pathos make it alive,
and you have found your style at last. You wrote
with no thoughts of fame and money, and put your heart
into it, my daughter. You have had the bitter,
now comes the sweet. Do your best, and grow
as happy as we are in your success.”
“If there is anything good or
true in what I write, it isn’t mine. I
owe it all to you and Mother and Beth,” said
Jo, more touched by her father’s words than
by any amount of praise from the world.
So taught by love and sorrow, Jo wrote
her little stories, and sent them away to make friends
for themselves and her, finding it a very charitable
world to such humble wanderers, for they were kindly
welcomed, and sent home comfortable tokens to their
mother, like dutiful children whom good fortune overtakes.
When Amy and Laurie wrote of their
engagement, Mrs. March feared that Jo would find it
difficult to rejoice over it, but her fears were soon
set at rest, for though Jo looked grave at first,
she took it very quietly, and was full of hopes and
plans for ‘the children’ before she read
the letter twice. It was a sort of written duet,
wherein each glorified the other in loverlike fashion,
very pleasant to read and satisfactory to think of,
for no one had any objection to make.
“You like it, Mother?”
said Jo, as they laid down the closely written sheets
and looked at one another.
“Yes, I hoped it would be so,
ever since Amy wrote that she had refused Fred. I
felt sure then that something better than what you
call the ‘mercenary spirit’ had come over
her, and a hint here and there in her letters made
me suspect that love and Laurie would win the day.”
“How sharp you are, Marmee,
and how silent! You never said a word to me.”
“Mothers have need of sharp
eyes and discreet tongues when they have girls to
manage. I was half afraid to put the idea into
your head, lest you should write and congratulate them
before the thing was settled.”
“I’m not the scatterbrain
I was. You may trust me. I’m sober
and sensible enough for anyone’s confidante now.”
“So you are, my dear, and I
should have made you mine, only I fancied it might
pain you to learn that your Teddy loved someone else.”
“Now, Mother, did you really
think I could be so silly and selfish, after I’d
refused his love, when it was freshest, if not best?”
“I knew you were sincere then,
Jo, but lately I have thought that if he came back,
and asked again, you might perhaps, feel like giving
another answer. Forgive me, dear, I can’t
help seeing that you are very lonely, and sometimes
there is a hungry look in your eyes that goes to my
heart. So I fancied that your boy might fill
the empty place if he tried now.”
“No, Mother, it is better as
it is, and I’m glad Amy has learned to love
him. But you are right in one thing. I
am lonely, and perhaps if Teddy had tried again, I
might have said ‘Yes’, not because I love
him any more, but because I care more to be loved than
when he went away.”
“I’m glad of that, Jo,
for it shows that you are getting on. There are
plenty to love you, so try to be satisfied with Father
and Mother, sisters and brothers, friends and babies,
till the best lover of all comes to give you your
reward.”
“Mothers are the best lovers
in the world, but I don’t mind whispering to
Marmee that I’d like to try all kinds.
It’s very curious, but the more I try to satisfy
myself with all sorts of natural affections, the more
I seem to want. I’d no idea hearts could
take in so many. Mine is so elastic, it never
seems full now, and I used to be quite contented with
my family. I don’t understand it.”
“I do,” and Mrs. March
smiled her wise smile, as Jo turned back the leaves
to read what Amy said of Laurie.
“It is so beautiful to be loved
as Laurie loves me. He isn’t sentimental,
doesn’t say much about it, but I see and feel
it in all he says and does, and it makes me so happy
and so humble that I don’t seem to be the same
girl I was. I never knew how good and generous
and tender he was till now, for he lets me read his
heart, and I find it full of noble impulses and hopes
and purposes, and am so proud to know it’s mine.
He says he feels as if he ’could make a prosperous
voyage now with me aboard as mate, and lots of love
for ballast’. I pray he may, and try to
be all he believes me, for I love my gallant captain
with all my heart and soul and might, and never will
desert him, while God lets us be together. Oh,
Mother, I never knew how much like heaven this world
could be, when two people love and live for one another!”
“And that’s our cool,
reserved, and worldly Amy! Truly, love does
work miracles. How very, very happy they must
be!” and Jo laid the rustling sheets together
with a careful hand, as one might shut the covers
of a lovely romance, which holds the reader fast till
the end comes, and he finds himself alone in the workaday
world again.
By-and-by Jo roamed away upstairs,
for it was rainy, and she could not walk. A
restless spirit possessed her, and the old feeling
came again, not bitter as it once was, but a sorrowfully
patient wonder why one sister should have all she asked,
the other nothing. It was not true, she knew
that and tried to put it away, but the natural craving
for affection was strong, and Amy’s happiness
woke the hungry longing for someone to ’love
with heart and soul, and cling to while God let them
be together’. Up in the garret, where Jo’s
unquiet wanderings ended stood four little wooden
chests in a row, each marked with its owners name,
and each filled with relics of the childhood and girlhood
ended now for all. Jo glanced into them, and
when she came to her own, leaned her chin on the edge,
and stared absently at the chaotic collection, till
a bundle of old exercise books caught her eye.
She drew them out, turned them over, and relived that
pleasant winter at kind Mrs. Kirke’s. She
had smiled at first, then she looked thoughtful, next
sad, and when she came to a little message written
in the Professor’s hand, her lips began to tremble,
the books slid out of her lap, and she sat looking
at the friendly words, as they took a new meaning,
and touched a tender spot in her heart.
“Wait for me, my friend.
I may be a little late, but I shall surely come.”
“Oh, if he only would!
So kind, so good, so patient with me always, my dear
old Fritz. I didn’t value him half enough
when I had him, but now how I should love to see him,
for everyone seems going away from me, and I’m
all alone.”
And holding the little paper fast,
as if it were a promise yet to be fulfilled, Jo laid
her head down on a comfortable rag bag, and cried,
as if in opposition to the rain pattering on the roof.
Was it all self-pity, loneliness,
or low spirits? Or was it the waking up of a
sentiment which had bided its time as patiently as
its inspirer? Who shall say?