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<h2> CHAPTER VII. NAUGHTY NAN </h2>
<p>“Fritz, I've got a new idea,” cried Mrs. Bhaer, as she met her husband one
day after school.</p>
<p>“Well, my dear, what is it?” and he waited willingly to hear the new plan,
for some of Mrs. Jo's ideas were so droll, it was impossible to help
laughing at them, though usually they were quite sensible, and he was glad
to carry them out.</p>
<p>“Daisy needs a companion, and the boys would be all the better for another
girl among them; you know we believe in bringing up little men and women
together, and it is high time we acted up to our belief. They pet and
tyrannize over Daisy by turns, and she is getting spoilt. Then they must
learn gentle ways, and improve their manners, and having girls about will
do it better than any thing else.”</p>
<p>“You are right, as usual. Now, who shall we have?” asked Mr. Bhaer, seeing
by the look in her eye that Mrs. Jo had some one all ready to propose.</p>
<p>“Little Annie Harding.”</p>
<p>“What! Naughty Nan, as the lads call her?” cried Mr. Bhaer, looking very
much amused.</p>
<p>“Yes, she is running wild at home since her mother died, and is too bright
a child to be spoilt by servants. I have had my eye on her for some time,
and when I met her father in town the other day I asked him why he did not
send her to school. He said he would gladly if he could find as good a
school for girls as ours was for boys. I know he would rejoice to have her
come; so suppose we drive over this afternoon and see about it.”</p>
<p>“Have not you cares enough now, my Jo, without this little gypsy to
torment you?” asked Mr. Bhaer, patting the hand that lay on his arm.</p>
<p>“Oh dear, no,” said Mother Bhaer, briskly. “I like it, and never was
happier than since I had my wilderness of boys. You see, Fritz, I feel a
great sympathy for Nan, because I was such a naughty child myself that I
know all about it. She is full of spirits, and only needs to be taught
what to do with them to be as nice a little girl as Daisy. Those quick
wits of hers would enjoy lessons if they were rightly directed, and what
is now a tricksy midget would soon become a busy, happy child. I know how
to manage her, for I remember how my blessed mother managed me, and—”</p>
<p>“And if you succeed half as well as she did, you will have done a
magnificent work,” interrupted Mr. Bhaer, who labored under the delusion
that Mrs. B. was the best and most charming woman alive.</p>
<p>“Now, if you make fun of my plan I'll give you bad coffee for a week, and
then where are you, sir?” cried Mrs. Jo, tweaking him by the ear just as
if he was one of the boys.</p>
<p>“Won't Daisy's hair stand erect with horror at Nan's wild ways?” asked Mr.
Bhaer, presently, when Teddy had swarmed up his waistcoat, and Rob up his
back, for they always flew at their father the minute school was done.</p>
<p>“At first, perhaps, but it will do Posy good. She is getting prim and
Bettyish, and needs stirring up a bit. She always has a good time when Nan
comes over to play, and the two will help each other without knowing it.
Dear me, half the science of teaching is knowing how much children do for
one another, and when to mix them.”</p>
<p>“I only hope she won't turn out another firebrand.”</p>
<p>“My poor Dan! I never can quite forgive myself for letting him go,” sighed
Mrs. Bhaer.</p>
<p>At the sound of the name, little Teddy, who had never forgotten his
friend, struggled down from his father's arms, and trotted to the door,
looked out over the sunny lawn with a wistful face, and then trotted back
again, saying, as he always did when disappointed of the longed-for sight,</p>
<p>“My Danny's tummin' soon.”</p>
<p>“I really think we ought to have kept him, if only for Teddy's sake, he
was so fond of him, and perhaps baby's love would have done for him what
we failed to do.”</p>
<p>“I've sometimes felt that myself; but after keeping the boys in a ferment,
and nearly burning up the whole family, I thought it safer to remove the
firebrand, for a time at least,” said Mr. Bhaer.</p>
<p>“Dinner's ready, let me ring the bell,” and Rob began a solo upon that
instrument which made it impossible to hear one's self speak.</p>
<p>“Then I may have Nan, may I?” asked Mrs. Jo.</p>
<p>“A dozen Nans if you want them, my dear,” answered Mr. Bhaer, who had room
in his fatherly heart for all the naughty neglected children in the world.</p>
<p>When Mrs. Bhaer returned from her drive that afternoon, before she could
unpack the load of little boys, without whom she seldom moved, a small
girl of ten skipped out at the back of the carry-all and ran into the
house, shouting,</p>
<p>“Hi, Daisy! where are you?”</p>
<p>Daisy came, and looked pleased to see her guest, but also a trifle
alarmed, when Nan said, still prancing, as if it was impossible to keep
still,</p>
<p>“I'm going to stay here always, papa says I may, and my box is coming
tomorrow, all my things had to be washed and mended, and your aunt came
and carried me off. Isn't it great fun?”</p>
<p>“Why, yes. Did you bring your big doll?” asked Daisy, hoping she had, for
on the last visit Nan had ravaged the baby house, and insisted on washing
Blanche Matilda's plaster face, which spoilt the poor dear's complexion
for ever.</p>
<p>“Yes, she's somewhere round,” returned Nan, with most unmaternal
carelessness. “I made you a ring coming along, and pulled the hairs out of
Dobbin's tail. Don't you want it?” and Nan presented a horse-hair ring in
token of friendship, as they had both vowed they would never speak to one
another again when they last parted.</p>
<p>Won by the beauty of the offering, Daisy grew more cordial, and proposed
retiring to the nursery, but Nan said, “No, I want to see the boys, and
the barn,” and ran off, swinging her hat by one string till it broke, when
she left it to its fate on the grass.</p>
<p>“Hullo! Nan!” cried the boys as she bounced in among them with the
announcement,</p>
<p>“I'm going to stay.”</p>
<p>“Hooray!” bawled Tommy from the wall on which he was perched, for Nan was
a kindred spirit, and he foresaw “larks” in the future.</p>
<p>“I can bat; let me play,” said Nan, who could turn her hand to any thing,
and did not mind hard knocks.</p>
<p>“We ain't playing now, and our side beat without you.”</p>
<p>“I can beat you in running, any way,” returned Nan, falling back on her
strong point.</p>
<p>“Can she?” asked Nat of Jack.</p>
<p>“She runs very well for a girl,” answered Jack, who looked down upon Nan
with condescending approval.</p>
<p>“Will you try?” said Nan, longing to display her powers.</p>
<p>“It's too hot,” and Tommy languished against the wall as if quite
exhausted.</p>
<p>“What's the matter with Stuffy?” asked Nan, whose quick eyes were roving
from face to face.</p>
<p>“Ball hurt his hand; he howls at every thing,” answered Jack scornfully.</p>
<p>“I don't, I never cry, no matter how I'm hurt; it's babyish,” said Nan,
loftily.</p>
<p>“Pooh! I could make you cry in two minutes,” returned Stuffy, rousing up.</p>
<p>“See if you can.”</p>
<p>“Go and pick that bunch of nettles, then,” and Stuffy pointed to a sturdy
specimen of that prickly plant growing by the wall.</p>
<p>Nan instantly “grasped the nettle,” pulled it up, and held it with a
defiant gesture, in spite of the almost unbearable sting.</p>
<p>“Good for you,” cried the boys, quick to acknowledge courage even in one
of the weaker sex.</p>
<p>More nettled than she was, Stuffy determined to get a cry out of her
somehow, and he said tauntingly, “You are used to poking your hands into
every thing, so that isn't fair. Now go and bump your head real hard
against the barn, and see if you don't howl then.”</p>
<p>“Don't do it,” said Nat, who hated cruelty.</p>
<p>But Nan was off, and running straight at the barn, she gave her head a
blow that knocked her flat, and sounded like a battering-ram. Dizzy, but
undaunted, she staggered up, saying stoutly, though her face was drawn
with pain,</p>
<p>“That hurt, but I don't cry.”</p>
<p>“Do it again,” said Stuffy angrily; and Nan would have done it, but Nat
held her; and Tommy, forgetting the heat, flew at Stuffy like a little
game-cock, roaring out,</p>
<p>“Stop it, or I'll throw you over the barn!” and so shook and hustled poor
Stuffy that for a minute he did not know whether he was on his head or his
heels.</p>
<p>“She told me to,” was all he could say, when Tommy let him alone.</p>
<p>“Never mind if she did; it is awfully mean to hurt a little girl,” said
Demi, reproachfully.</p>
<p>“Ho! I don't mind; I ain't a little girl, I'm older than you and Daisy; so
now,” cried Nan, ungratefully.</p>
<p>“Don't preach, Deacon, you bully Posy every day of your life,” called out
the Commodore, who just then hove in sight.</p>
<p>“I don't hurt her; do I, Daisy?” and Demi turned to his sister, who was
“pooring” Nan's tingling hands, and recommending water for the purple lump
rapidly developing itself on her forehead.</p>
<p>“You are the best boy in the world,” promptly answered Daisy; adding, as
truth compelled her to do, “You hurt me sometimes, but you don't mean to.”</p>
<p>“Put away the bats and things, and mind what you are about, my hearties.
No fighting allowed aboard this ship,” said Emil, who rather lorded it
over the others.</p>
<p>“How do you do, Madge Wildfire?” said Mr. Bhaer, as Nan came in with the
rest to supper. “Give the right hand, little daughter, and mind thy
manners,” he added, as Nan offered him her left.</p>
<p>“The other hurts me.”</p>
<p>“The poor little hand! what has it been doing to get those blisters?” he
asked, drawing it from behind her back, where she had put it with a look
which made him think she had been in mischief.</p>
<p>Before Nan could think of any excuse, Daisy burst out with the whole
story, during which Stuffy tried to hide his face in a bowl of bread and
milk. When the tale was finished, Mr. Bhaer looked down the long table
towards his wife, and said with a laugh in his eyes,</p>
<p>“This rather belongs to your side of the house, so I won't meddle with it,
my dear.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Jo knew what he meant, but she liked her little black sheep all the
better for her pluck, though she only said in her soberest way,</p>
<p>“Do you know why I asked Nan to come here?”</p>
<p>“To plague me,” muttered Stuffy, with his mouth full.</p>
<p>“To help make little gentlemen of you, and I think you have shown that
some of you need it.”</p>
<p>Here Stuffy retired into his bowl again, and did not emerge till Demi made
them all laugh by saying, in his slow wondering way,</p>
<p>“How can she, when she's such a tomboy?”</p>
<p>“That's just it, she needs help as much as you, and I expect you set her
an example of good manners.”</p>
<p>“Is she going to be a little gentleman too?” asked Rob.</p>
<p>“She'd like it; wouldn't you, Nan?” added Tommy.</p>
<p>“No, I shouldn't; I hate boys!” said Nan fiercely, for her hand still
smarted, and she began to think that she might have shown her courage in
some wiser way.</p>
<p>“I am sorry you hate my boys, because they can be well-mannered, and most
agreeable when they choose. Kindness in looks and words and ways is true
politeness, and any one can have it if they only try to treat other people
as they like to be treated themselves.”</p>
<p>Mrs. Bhaer had addressed herself to Nan, but the boys nudged one another,
and appeared to take the hint, for that time at least, and passed the
butter; said “please,” and “thank you,” “yes, sir,” and “no, ma'am,” with
unusual elegance and respect. Nan said nothing, but kept herself quiet and
refrained from tickling Demi, though strongly tempted to do so, because of
the dignified airs he put on. She also appeared to have forgotten her
hatred of boys, and played “I spy” with them till dark. Stuffy was
observed to offer her frequent sucks on his candy-ball during the game,
which evidently sweetened her temper, for the last thing she said on going
to bed was,</p>
<p>“When my battledore and shuttle-cock comes, I'll let you all play with
'em.”</p>
<p>Her first remark in the morning was “Has my box come?” and when told that
it would arrive sometime during the day, she fretted and fumed, and
whipped her doll, till Daisy was shocked. She managed to exist, however,
till five o'clock, when she disappeared, and was not missed till
supper-time, because those at home thought she had gone to the hill with
Tommy and Demi.</p>
<p>“I saw her going down the avenue alone as hard as she could pelt,” said
Mary Ann, coming in with the hasty-pudding, and finding every one asking,
“Where is Nan?”</p>
<p>“She has run home, little gypsy!” cried Mrs. Bhaer, looking anxious.</p>
<p>“Perhaps she has gone to the station to look after her luggage,” suggested
Franz.</p>
<p>“That is impossible, she does not know the way, and if she found it, she
could never carry the box a mile,” said Mrs. Bhaer, beginning to think
that her new idea might be rather a hard one to carry out.</p>
<p>“It would be like her,” and Mr. Bhaer caught up his hat to go and find the
child, when a shout from Jack, who was at the window, made everyone hurry
to the door.</p>
<p>There was Miss Nan, to be sure, tugging along a very large band-box tied
up in linen bag. Very hot and dusty and tired did she look, but marched
stoutly along, and came puffing up to the steps, where she dropped her
load with a sigh of relief, and sat down upon it, observed as she crossed
her tired arms,</p>
<p>“I couldn't wait any longer, so I went and got it.”</p>
<p>“But you did not know the way,” said Tommy, while the rest stood round
enjoying the joke.</p>
<p>“Oh, I found it, I never get lost.”</p>
<p>“It's a mile, how could you go so far?”</p>
<p>“Well, it was pretty far, but I rested a good deal.”</p>
<p>“Wasn't that thing very heavy?”</p>
<p>“It's so round, I couldn't get hold of it good, and I thought my arms
would break right off.”</p>
<p>“I don't see how the station-master let you have it,” said Tommy.</p>
<p>“I didn't say anything to him. He was in the little ticket place, and
didn't see me, so I just took it off the platform.”</p>
<p>“Run down and tell him it is all right, Franz, or old Dodd will think it
is stolen,” said Mr. Bhaer, joining in the shout of laughter at Nan's
coolness.</p>
<p>“I told you we would send for it if it did not come. Another time you must
wait, for you will get into trouble if you run away. Promise me this, or I
shall not dare to trust you out of my sight,” said Mrs. Bhaer, wiping the
dust off Nan's little hot face.</p>
<p>“Well, I won't, only papa tells me not to put off doing things, so I
don't.”</p>
<p>“That is rather a poser; I think you had better give her some supper now,
and a private lecture by and by,” said Mr. Bhaer, too much amused to be
angry at the young lady's exploit.</p>
<p>The boys thought it “great fun,” and Nan entertained them all supper-time
with an account of her adventures; for a big dog had barked at her, a man
had laughed at her, a woman had given her a doughnut, and her hat had
fallen into the brook when she stopped to drink, exhausted with her
exertion.</p>
<p>“I fancy you will have your hands full now, my dear; Tommy and Nan are
quite enough for one woman,” said Mr. Bhaer, half an hour later.</p>
<p>“I know it will take some time to tame the child, but she is such a
generous, warm-hearted little thing, I should love her even if she were
twice as naughty,” answered Mrs. Jo, pointing to the merry group, in the
middle of which stood Nan, giving away her things right and left, as
lavishly as if the big band-box had no bottom.</p>
<p>It was those good traits that soon made little “Giddygaddy,” as they
called her, a favorite with every one. Daisy never complained of being
dull again, for Nan invented the most delightful plays, and her pranks
rivalled Tommy's, to the amusement of the whole school. She buried her big
doll and forgot it for a week, and found it well mildewed when she dragged
it up. Daisy was in despair, but Nan took it to the painter who as at work
about the house, got him to paint it brick red, with staring black eyes,
then she dressed it up with feathers, and scarlet flannel, and one of
Ned's leaden hatchets; and in the character of an Indian chief, the late
Poppydilla tomahawked all the other dolls, and caused the nursery to run
red with imaginary gore. She gave away her new shoes to a beggar child,
hoping to be allowed to go barefoot, but found it impossible to combine
charity and comfort, and was ordered to ask leave before disposing of her
clothes. She delighted the boys by making a fire-ship out of a shingle
with two large sails wet with turpentine, which she lighted, and then sent
the little vessel floating down the brook at dusk. She harnessed the old
turkey-cock to a straw wagon, and made him trot round the house at a
tremendous pace. She gave her coral necklace for four unhappy kittens,
which had been tormented by some heartless lads, and tended them for days
as gently as a mother, dressing their wounds with cold cream, feeding them
with a doll's spoon, and mourning over them when they died, till she was
consoled by one of Demi's best turtles. She made Silas tattoo an anchor on
her arm like his, and begged hard to have a blue star on each cheek, but
he dared not do it, though she coaxed and scolded till the soft-hearted
fellow longed to give in. She rode every animal on the place, from the big
horse Andy to the cross pig, from whom she was rescued with difficulty.
Whatever the boys dared her to do she instantly attempted, no matter how
dangerous it might be, and they were never tired of testing her courage.</p>
<p>Mr. Bhaer suggested that they should see who would study best, and Nan
found as much pleasure in using her quick wits and fine memory as her
active feet and merry tongue, while the lads had to do their best to keep
their places, for Nan showed them that girls could do most things as well
as boys, and some things better. There were no rewards in school, but Mr.
Bhaer's “Well done!” and Mrs. Bhaer's good report on the conscience book,
taught them to love duty for its own sake, and try to do it faithfully,
sure sooner or later the recompense would come. Little Nan was quick to
feel the new atmosphere, to enjoy it, to show that it was what she needed;
for this little garden was full of sweet flowers, half hidden by the
weeds; and when kind hands gently began to cultivate it, all sorts of
green shoots sprung up, promising to blossom beautifully in the warmth of
love and care, the best climate for young hearts and souls all the world
over.</p>
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