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<h2> CHAPTER II. THE BOYS </h2>
<p>While Nat takes a good long sleep, I will tell my little readers something
about the boys, among whom he found himself when he woke up.</p>
<p>To begin with our old friends. Franz was a tall lad, of sixteen now, a
regular German, big, blond, and bookish, also very domestic, amiable, and
musical. His uncle was fitting him for college, and his aunt for a happy
home of his own hereafter, because she carefully fostered in him gentle
manners, love of children, respect for women, old and young, and helpful
ways about the house. He was her right-hand man on all occasions, steady,
kind, and patient; and he loved his merry aunt like a mother, for such she
had tried to be to him.</p>
<p>Emil was quite different, being quick-tempered, restless, and
enterprising, bent on going to sea, for the blood of the old vikings
stirred in his veins, and could not be tamed. His uncle promised that he
should go when he was sixteen, and set him to studying navigation, gave
him stories of good and famous admirals and heroes to read, and let him
lead the life of a frog in river, pond, and brook, when lessons were done.
His room looked like the cabin of a man-of-war, for every thing was
nautical, military, and shipshape. Captain Kyd was his delight, and his
favorite amusement was to rig up like that piratical gentleman, and roar
out sanguinary sea-songs at the top of his voice. He would dance nothing
but sailors' hornpipes, rolled in his gait, and was as nautical in
conversation to his uncle would permit. The boys called him “Commodore,”
and took great pride in his fleet, which whitened the pond and suffered
disasters that would have daunted any commander but a sea-struck boy.</p>
<p>Demi was one of the children who show plainly the effect of intelligent
love and care, for soul and body worked harmoniously together. The natural
refinement which nothing but home influence can teach, gave him sweet and
simple manners: his mother had cherished an innocent and loving heart in
him; his father had watched over the physical growth of his boy, and kept
the little body straight and strong on wholesome food and exercise and
sleep, while Grandpa March cultivated the little mind with the tender
wisdom of a modern Pythagoras, not tasking it with long, hard lessons,
parrot-learned, but helping it to unfold as naturally and beautifully as
sun and dew help roses bloom. He was not a perfect child, by any means,
but his faults were of the better sort; and being early taught the secret
of self-control, he was not left at the mercy of appetites and passions,
as some poor little mortals are, and then punished for yielding to the
temptations against which they have no armor. A quiet, quaint boy was
Demi, serious, yet cheery, quite unconscious that he was unusually bright
and beautiful, yet quick to see and love intelligence or beauty in other
children. Very fond of books, and full of lively fancies, born of a strong
imagination and a spiritual nature, these traits made his parents anxious
to balance them with useful knowledge and healthful society, lest they
should make him one of those pale precocious children who amaze and
delight a family sometimes, and fade away like hot-house flowers, because
the young soul blooms too soon, and has not a hearty body to root it
firmly in the wholesome soil of this world.</p>
<p>So Demi was transplanted to Plumfield, and took so kindly to the life
there, that Meg and John and Grandpa felt satisfied that they had done
well. Mixing with other boys brought out the practical side of him, roused
his spirit, and brushed away the pretty cobwebs he was so fond of spinning
in that little brain of his. To be sure, he rather shocked his mother when
he came home, by banging doors, saying “by George” emphatically, and
demanding tall thick boots “that clumped like papa's.” But John rejoiced
over him, laughed at his explosive remarks, got the boots, and said
contentedly,</p>
<p>“He is doing well; so let him clump. I want my son to be a manly boy, and
this temporary roughness won't hurt him. We can polish him up by and by;
and as for learning, he will pick that up as pigeons do peas. So don't
hurry him.”</p>
<p>Daisy was as sunshiny and charming as ever, with all sorts of
womanlinesses budding in her, for she was like her gentle mother, and
delighted in domestic things. She had a family of dolls, whom she brought
up in the most exemplary manner; she could not get on without her little
work-basket and bits of sewing, which she did so nicely, that Demi
frequently pulled out his handkerchief to display her neat stitches, and Baby
Josy had a flannel petticoat beautifully made by Sister Daisy. She like to
quiddle about the china-closet, prepare the salt-cellars, put the spoons
straight on the table; and every day went round the parlor with her brush,
dusting chairs and tables. Demi called her a “Betty,” but was very glad to
have her keep his things in order, lend him her nimble fingers in all
sorts of work, and help him with his lessons, for they kept abreast there,
and had no thought of rivalry.</p>
<p>The love between them was as strong as ever; and no one could laugh Demi
out of his affectionate ways with Daisy. He fought her battles valiantly,
and never could understand why boys should be ashamed to say “right out,”
that they loved their sisters. Daisy adored her twin, thought “my brother”
the most remarkable boy in the world, and every morning, in her little
wrapper, trotted to tap at his door with a motherly “Get up, my dear, it's
'most breakfast time; and here's your clean collar.”</p>
<p>Rob was an energetic morsel of a boy, who seemed to have discovered the
secret of perpetual motion, for he never was still. Fortunately, he was
not mischievous, nor very brave; so he kept out of trouble pretty well,
and vibrated between father and mother like an affectionate little
pendulum with a lively tick, for Rob was a chatterbox.</p>
<p>Teddy was too young to play a very important part in the affairs of
Plumfield, yet he had his little sphere, and filled it beautifully. Every
one felt the need of a pet at times, and Baby was always ready to
accommodate, for kissing and cuddling suited him excellently. Mrs. Jo
seldom stirred without him; so he had his little finger in all the
domestic pies, and every one found them all the better for it, for they
believed in babies at Plumfield.</p>
<p>Dick Brown, and Adolphus or Dolly Pettingill, were two eight year-olds.
Dolly stuttered badly, but was gradually getting over it, for no one was
allowed to mock him and Mr. Bhaer tried to cure it, by making him talk
slowly. Dolly was a good little lad, quite uninteresting and ordinary, but
he flourished here, and went through his daily duties and pleasures with
placid content and propriety.</p>
<p>Dick Brown's affliction was a crooked back, yet he bore his burden so
cheerfully, that Demi once asked in his queer way, “Do humps make people
good-natured? I'd like one if they do.” Dick was always merry, and did his
best to be like other boys, for a plucky spirit lived in the feeble little
body. When he first came, he was very sensitive about his misfortune, but
soon learned to forget it, for no one dared remind him of it, after Mr.
Bhaer had punished one boy for laughing at him.</p>
<p>“God don't care; for my soul is straight if my back isn't,” sobbed Dick to
his tormentor on that occasion; and, by cherishing this idea, the Bhaers
soon led him to believe that people also loved his soul, and did not mind
his body, except to pity and help him to bear it.</p>
<p>Playing menagerie once with the others, some one said,</p>
<p>“What animal will you be, Dick?”</p>
<p>“Oh, I'm the dromedary; don't you see the hump on my back?” was the
laughing answer.</p>
<p>“So you are, my nice little one that don't carry loads, but marches by the
elephant first in the procession,” said Demi, who was arranging the
spectacle.</p>
<p>“I hope others will be as kind to the poor dear as my boys have learned to
be,” said Mrs. Jo, quite satisfied with the success of her teaching, as
Dick ambled past her, looking like a very happy, but a very feeble little
dromedary, beside stout Stuffy, who did the elephant with ponderous
propriety.</p>
<p>Jack Ford was a sharp, rather a sly lad, who was sent to this school,
because it was cheap. Many men would have thought him a smart boy, but Mr.
Bhaer did not like his way of illustrating that Yankee word, and thought
his unboyish keenness and money-loving as much of an affliction as Dolly's
stutter, or Dick's hump.</p>
<p>Ned Barker was like a thousand other boys of fourteen, all legs, blunder,
and bluster. Indeed the family called him the “Blunderbuss,” and always
expected to see him tumble over the chairs, bump against the tables, and
knock down any small articles near him. He bragged a good deal about what
he could do, but seldom did any thing to prove it, was not brave, and a
little given to tale-telling. He was apt to bully the small boys, and
flatter the big ones, and without being at all bad, was just the sort of
fellow who could very easily be led astray.</p>
<p>George Cole had been spoilt by an over-indulgent mother, who stuffed him
with sweetmeats till he was sick, and then thought him too delicate to
study, so that at twelve years old, he was a pale, puffy boy, dull,
fretful, and lazy. A friend persuaded her to send him to Plumfield, and
there he soon got waked up, for sweet things were seldom allowed, much
exercise required, and study made so pleasant, that Stuffy was gently
lured along, till he quite amazed his anxious mamma by his improvement,
and convinced her that there was really something remarkable in Plumfield
air.</p>
<p>Billy Ward was what the Scotch tenderly call an “innocent,” for though
thirteen years old, he was like a child of six. He had been an unusually
intelligent boy, and his father had hurried him on too fast, giving him
all sorts of hard lessons, keeping at his books six hours a day, and
expecting him to absorb knowledge as a Strasburg goose does the food
crammed down its throat. He thought he was doing his duty, but he nearly
killed the boy, for a fever gave the poor child a sad holiday, and when he
recovered, the overtasked brain gave out, and Billy's mind was like a
slate over which a sponge has passed, leaving it blank.</p>
<p>It was a terrible lesson to his ambitious father; he could not bear the
sight of his promising child, changed to a feeble idiot, and he sent him
away to Plumfield, scarcely hoping that he could be helped, but sure that
he would be kindly treated. Quite docile and harmless was Billy, and it
was pitiful to see how hard he tried to learn, as if groping dimly after
the lost knowledge which had cost him so much.</p>
<p>Day after day, he pored over the alphabet, proudly said A and B, and
thought that he knew them, but on the morrow they were gone, and all the
work was to be done over again. Mr. Bhaer had infinite patience with him,
and kept on in spite of the apparent hopelessness of the task, not caring
for book lessons, but trying gently to clear away the mists from the
darkened mind, and give it back intelligence enough to make the boy less a
burden and an affliction.</p>
<p>Mrs. Bhaer strengthened his health by every aid she could invent, and the
boys all pitied and were kind to him. He did not like their active plays,
but would sit for hours watching the doves, would dig holes for Teddy till
even that ardent grubber was satisfied, or follow Silas, the man, from
place to place seeing him work, for honest Si was very good to him, and
though he forgot his letters Billy remembered friendly faces.</p>
<p>Tommy Bangs was the scapegrace of the school, and the most trying
scapegrace that ever lived. As full of mischief as a monkey, yet so
good-hearted that one could not help forgiving his tricks; so
scatter-brained that words went by him like the wind, yet so penitent for
every misdeed, that it was impossible to keep sober when he vowed
tremendous vows of reformation, or proposed all sorts of queer punishments
to be inflicted upon himself. Mr. and Mrs. Bhaer lived in a state of
preparation for any mishap, from the breaking of Tommy's own neck, to the
blowing up of the entire family with gunpowder; and Nursey had a
particular drawer in which she kept bandages, plasters, and salves for his
especial use, for Tommy was always being brought in half dead; but nothing
ever killed him, and he arose from every downfall with redoubled vigor.</p>
<p>The first day he came, he chopped the top off one finger in the
hay-cutter, and during the week, fell from the shed roof, was chased by an
angry hen who tried to pick his out because he examined her chickens, got
run away with, and had his ears boxed violent by Asia, who caught him
luxuriously skimming a pan of cream with half a stolen pie. Undaunted,
however, by any failures or rebuffs, this indomitable youth went on
amusing himself with all sorts of tricks till no one felt safe. If he did
not know his lessons, he always had some droll excuse to offer, and as he
was usually clever at his books, and as bright as a button in composing
answers when he did not know them, he go on pretty well at school. But out
of school, Ye gods and little fishes! how Tommy did carouse!</p>
<p>He wound fat Asia up in her own clothes line against the post, and left
here there to fume and scold for half an hour one busy Monday morning. He
dropped a hot cent down Mary Ann's back as that pretty maid was waiting at
table one day when there were gentlemen to dinner, whereat the poor girl
upset the soup and rushed out of the room in dismay, leaving the family to
think that she had gone mad. He fixed a pail of water up in a tree, with a
bit of ribbon fastened to the handle, and when Daisy, attracted by the gay
streamer, tried to pull it down, she got a douche bath that spoiled her
clean frock and hurt her little feelings very much. He put rough white
pebbles in the sugar-bowl when his grandmother came to tea, and the poor
old lady wondered why they didn't melt in her cup, but was too polite to
say anything. He passed around snuff in church so that five of the boys
sneezed with such violence they had to go out. He dug paths in winter
time, and then privately watered them so that people should tumble down.
He drove poor Silas nearly wild by hanging his big boots in conspicuous
places, for his feet were enormous, and he was very much ashamed of them.
He persuaded confiding little Dolly to tie a thread to one of his loose
teeth, and leave the string hanging from his mouth when he went to sleep,
so that Tommy could pull it out without his feeling the dreaded operation.
But the tooth wouldn't come at the first tweak, and poor Dolly woke up in
great anguish of spirit, and lost all faith in Tommy from that day forth.</p>
<p>The last prank had been to give the hens bread soaked in rum, which made
them tipsy and scandalized all the other fowls, for the respectable old
biddies went staggering about, pecking and clucking in the most maudlin
manner, while the family were convulsed with laughter at their antics,
till Daisy took pity on them and shut them up in the hen-house to sleep
off their intoxication.</p>
<p>These were the boys and they lived together as happy as twelve lads could,
studying and playing, working and squabbling, fighting faults and
cultivating virtues in the good old-fashioned way. Boys at other schools
probably learned more from books, but less of that better wisdom which
makes good men. Latin, Greek, and mathematics were all very well, but in
Professor Bhaer's opinion, self knowledge, self-help, and self-control
were more important, and he tried to teach them carefully. People shook
their heads sometimes at his ideas, even while they owned that the boys
improved wonderfully in manners and morals. But then, as Mrs. Jo said to
Nat, “it was an odd school.”</p>
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