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<h2> CHAPTER VIII. PRANKS AND PLAYS </h2>
<p>As there is no particular plan to this story, except to describe a few
scenes in the life at Plumfield for the amusement of certain little
persons, we will gently ramble along in this chapter and tell some of the
pastimes of Mrs. Jo's boys. I beg leave to assure my honored readers that
most of the incidents are taken from real life, and that the oddest are
the truest; for no person, no matter how vivid an imagination he may have,
can invent anything half so droll as the freaks and fancies that originate
in the lively brains of little people.</p>
<p>Daisy and Demi were full of these whims, and lived in a world of their
own, peopled with lovely or grotesque creatures, to whom they gave the
queerest names, and with whom they played the queerest games. One of these
nursery inventions was an invisible sprite called “The Naughty
Kitty-mouse,” whom the children had believed in, feared, and served for a
long time. They seldom spoke of it to any one else, kept their rites as
private as possible; and, as they never tried to describe it even to
themselves, this being had a vague mysterious charm very agreeable to
Demi, who delighted in elves and goblins. A most whimsical and tyrannical
imp was the Naughty Kitty-mouse, and Daisy found a fearful pleasure in its
service, blindly obeying its most absurd demands, which were usually
proclaimed from the lips of Demi, whose powers of invention were great.
Rob and Teddy sometimes joined in these ceremonies, and considered them
excellent fun, although they did not understand half that went on.</p>
<p>One day after school Demi whispered to his sister, with an ominous wag of
the head,</p>
<p>“The Kitty-mouse wants us this afternoon.”</p>
<p>“What for?” asked Daisy, anxiously.</p>
<p>“A sackerryfice,” answered Demi, solemnly. “There must be a fire behind
the big rock at two o'clock, and we must all bring the things we like
best, and burn them!” he added, with an awful emphasis on the last words.</p>
<p>“Oh, dear! I love the new paper dollies Aunt Amy painted for me best of
any thing; must I burn them up?” cried Daisy, who never thought of denying
the unseen tyrant any thing it demanded.</p>
<p>“Every one. I shall burn my boat, my best scrapbook, and all my soldiers,”
said Demi firmly.</p>
<p>“Well, I will; but it's too bad of Kitty-mouse to want our very nicest
things,” sighed Daisy.</p>
<p>“A sackerryfice means to give up what you are fond of, so we must,”
explained Demi, to whom the new idea had been suggested by hearing Uncle
Fritz describe the customs of the Greeks to the big boys who were reading
about them in school.</p>
<p>“Is Rob coming too,” asked Daisy.</p>
<p>“Yes, and he is going to bring his toy village; it is all made of wood,
you know, and will burn nicely. We'll have a grand bonfire, and see them
blaze up, won't we?”</p>
<p>This brilliant prospect consoled Daisy, and she ate her dinner with a row
of paper dolls before her, as a sort of farewell banquet.</p>
<p>At the appointed hour the sacrificial train set forth, each child bearing
the treasures demanded by the insatiable Kitty-mouse. Teddy insisted on
going also, and seeing that all the others had toys, he tucked a squeaking
lamb under one arm, and old Annabella under the other, little dreaming
what anguish the latter idol was to give him.</p>
<p>“Where are you going, my chickens?” asked Mrs. Jo, as the flock passed her
door.</p>
<p>“To play by the big rock; can't we?”</p>
<p>“Yes, only don't do near the pond, and take good care of baby.”</p>
<p>“I always do,” said Daisy, leading forth her charge with a capable air.</p>
<p>“Now, you must all sit round, and not move till I tell you. This flat
stone is an altar, and I am going to make a fire on it.”</p>
<p>Demi then proceeded to kindle up a small blaze, as he had seen the boys do
at picnics. When the flame burned well, he ordered the company to march
round it three times and then stand in a circle.</p>
<p>“I shall begin, and as fast as my things are burnt, you must bring yours.”</p>
<p>With that he solemnly laid on a little paper book full of pictures, pasted
in by himself; this was followed by a dilapidated boat, and then one by
one the unhappy leaden soldiers marched to death. Not one faltered or hung
back, from the splendid red and yellow captain to the small drummer who
had lost his legs; all vanished in the flames and mingled in one common
pool of melted lead.</p>
<p>“Now, Daisy!” called the high priest of Kitty-mouse, when his rich
offerings had been consumed, to the great satisfaction of the children.</p>
<p>“My dear dollies, how can I let them go?” moaned Daisy, hugging the entire
dozen with a face full of maternal woe.</p>
<p>“You must,” commanded Demi; and with a farewell kiss to each, Daisy laid
her blooming dolls upon the coals.</p>
<p>“Let me keep one, the dear blue thing, she is so sweet,” besought the poor
little mamma, clutching her last in despair.</p>
<p>“More! more!” growled an awful voice, and Demi cried, “that's the
Kitty-mouse! she must have every one, quick, or she will scratch us.”</p>
<p>In went the precious blue belle, flounces, rosy hat, and all, and nothing
but a few black flakes remained of that bright band.</p>
<p>“Stand the houses and trees round, and let them catch themselves; it will
be like a real fire then,” said Demi, who liked variety even in his
“sackerryfices.”</p>
<p>Charmed by this suggestion, the children arranged the doomed village, laid
a line of coals along the main street, and then sat down to watch the
conflagration. It was somewhat slow to kindle owing to the paint, but at
last one ambitious little cottage blazed up, fired a tree of the palm
species, which fell on to the roof of a large family mansion, and in a few
minutes the whole town was burning merrily. The wooden population stood
and stared at the destruction like blockheads, as they were, till they
also caught and blazed away without a cry. It took some time to reduce the
town to ashes, and the lookers-on enjoyed the spectacle immensely,
cheering as each house fell, dancing like wild Indians when the steeple
flamed aloft, and actually casting one wretched little churn-shaped lady,
who had escaped to the suburbs, into the very heart of the fire.</p>
<p>The superb success of this last offering excited Teddy to such a degree,
that he first threw his lamb into the conflagration, and before it had
time even to roast, he planted poor Annabella on the funeral pyre. Of
course she did not like it, and expressed her anguish and resentment in a
way that terrified her infant destroyer. Being covered with kid, she did
not blaze, but did what was worse, she squirmed. First one leg curled up,
then the other, in a very awful and lifelike manner; next she flung her
arms over her head as if in great agony; her head itself turned on her
shoulders, her glass eyes fell out, and with one final writhe of her whole
body, she sank down a blackened mass on the ruins of the town. This
unexpected demonstration startled every one and frightened Teddy half out
of his little wits. He looked, then screamed and fled toward the house,
roaring “Marmar” at the top of his voice.</p>
<p>Mrs. Bhaer heard the outcry and ran to the rescue, but Teddy could only
cling to her and pour out in his broken way something about “poor Bella
hurted,” “a dreat fire,” and “all the dollies dorn.” Fearing some dire
mishap, his mother caught him up and hurried to the scene of action, where
she found the blind worshippers of Kitty-mouse mourning over the charred
remains of the lost darling.</p>
<p>“What have you been at? Tell me all about it,” said Mrs. Jo, composing
herself to listen patiently, for the culprits looked so penitent, she
forgave them beforehand.</p>
<p>With some reluctance Demi explained their play, and Aunt Jo laughed till
the tears ran down her cheeks, the children were so solemn, and the play
was so absurd.</p>
<p>“I thought you were too sensible to play such a silly game as this. If<br/>
I had any Kitty-mouse I'd have a good one who liked you to play in safe<br/>
pleasant ways, and not destroy and frighten. Just see what a ruin you<br/>
have made; all Daisy's pretty dolls, Demi's soldiers, and Rob's new<br/>
village beside poor Teddy's pet lamb, and dear old Annabella. I shall<br/>
have to write up in the nursery the verse that used to come in the boxes<br/>
of toys,<br/>
<br/>
“The children of Holland take pleasure in making,<br/>
What the children of Boston take pleasure in breaking.”<br/></p>
<p>“Only I shall put Plumfield instead of Boston.”</p>
<p>“We never will again, truly, truly!” cried the repentant little sinners,
much abashed at this reproof.</p>
<p>“Demi told us to,” said Rob.</p>
<p>“Well, I heard Uncle tell about the Greece people, who had altars and
things, and so I wanted to be like them, only I hadn't any live creatures
to sackerryfice, so we burnt up our toys.”</p>
<p>“Dear me, that is something like the bean story,” said Aunt Jo, laughing
again.</p>
<p>“Tell about it,” suggested Daisy, to change the subject.</p>
<p>“Once there was a poor woman who had three or four little children, and
she used to lock them up in her room when she went out to work, to keep
them safe. On day when she was going away she said, 'Now, my dears, don't
let baby fall out of window, don't play with the matches, and don't put
beans up your noses.' Now the children had never dreamed of doing that
last thing, but she put it into their heads, and the minute she was gone,
they ran and stuffed their naughty little noses full of beans, just to see
how it felt, and she found them all crying when she came home.”</p>
<p>“Did it hurt?” asked Rob, with such intense interest that his mother
hastily added a warning sequel, lest a new edition of the bean story
should appear in her own family.</p>
<p>“Very much, as I know, for when my mother told me this story, I was so
silly that I went and tried it myself. I had no beans, so I took some
little pebbles, and poked several into my nose. I did not like it at all,
and wanted to take them out again very soon, but one would not come, and I
was so ashamed to tell what a goose I been that I went for hours with the
stone hurting me very much. At last the pain got so bad I had to tell, and
when my mother could not get it out the doctor came. Then I was put in a
chair and held tight, Rob, while he used his ugly little pincers till the
stone hopped out. Dear me! how my wretched little nose did ache, and how
people laughed at me!” and Mrs. Jo shook her head in a dismal way, as if
the memory of her sufferings was too much for her.</p>
<p>Rob looked deeply impressed and I am glad to say took the warning to
heart. Demi proposed that they should bury poor Annabella, and in the
interest of the funeral Teddy forgot his fright. Daisy was soon consoled
by another batch of dolls from Aunt Amy, and the Naughty Kitty-mouse
seemed to be appeased by the last offerings, for she tormented them no
more.</p>
<p>“Brops” was the name of a new and absorbing play, invented by Bangs. As
this interesting animal is not to be found in any Zoological Garden,
unless Du Chaillu has recently brought one from the wilds of Africa, I
will mention a few of its peculiar habits and traits, for the benefit of
inquiring minds. The Brop is a winged quadruped, with a human face of a
youthful and merry aspect. When it walks the earth it grunts, when it
soars it gives a shrill hoot, occasionally it goes erect, and talks good
English. Its body is usually covered with a substance much resembling a
shawl, sometimes red, sometimes blue, often plaid, and, strange to say,
they frequently change skins with one another. On their heads they have a
horn very like a stiff brown paper lamp-lighter. Wings of the same
substance flap upon their shoulders when they fly; this is never very far
from the ground, as they usually fall with violence if they attempt any
lofty flights. They browse over the earth, but can sit up and eat like the
squirrel. Their favorite nourishment is the seed-cake; apples also are
freely taken, and sometimes raw carrots are nibbled when food is scarce.
They live in dens, where they have a sort of nest, much like a
clothes-basket, in which the little Brops play till their wings are grown.
These singular animals quarrel at times, and it is on these occasions that
they burst into human speech, call each other names, cry, scold, and
sometimes tear off horns and skin, declaring fiercely that they “won't
play.” The few privileged persons who have studied them are inclined to
think them a remarkable mixture of the monkey, the sphinx, the roc, and
the queer creatures seen by the famous Peter Wilkins.</p>
<p>This game was a great favorite, and the younger children beguiled many a
rainy afternoon flapping or creeping about the nursery, acting like little
bedlamites and being as merry as little grigs. To be sure, it was rather
hard upon clothes, particularly trouser-knees, and jacket-elbows; but Mrs.
Bhaer only said, as she patched and darned,</p>
<p>“We do things just as foolish, and not half so harmless. If I could get as
much happiness out of it as the little dears do, I'd be a Brop myself.”</p>
<p>Nat's favorite amusements were working in his garden, and sitting in the
willow-tree with his violin, for that green nest was a fairy world to him,
and there he loved to perch, making music like a happy bird. The lads
called him “Old Chirper,” because he was always humming, whistling, or
fiddling, and they often stopped a minute in their work or play to listen
to the soft tones of the violin, which seemed to lead a little orchestra
of summer sounds. The birds appeared to regard him as one of themselves,
and fearlessly sat on the fence or lit among the boughs to watch him with
their quick bright eyes. The robins in the apple-tree near by evidently
considered him a friend, for the father bird hunted insects close beside
him, and the little mother brooded as confidingly over her blue eggs as if
the boy was only a new sort of blackbird who cheered her patient watch
with his song. The brown brook babbled and sparkled below him, the bees
haunted the clover fields on either side, friendly faces peeped at him as
they passed, the old house stretched its wide wings hospitably toward him,
and with a blessed sense of rest and love and happiness, Nat dreamed for
hours in this nook, unconscious what healthful miracles were being wrought
upon him.</p>
<p>One listener he had who never tired, and to whom he was more than a mere
schoolmate. Poor Billy's chief delight was to lie beside the brook,
watching leaves and bits of foam dance by, listening dreamily to the music
in the willow-tree. He seemed to think Nat a sort of angel who sat aloft
and sang, for a few baby memories still lingered in his mind and seemed to
grow brighter at these times. Seeing the interest he took in Nat, Mr.
Bhaer begged him to help them lift the cloud from the feeble brain by this
gentle spell. Glad to do any thing to show his gratitude, Nat always
smiled on Billy when he followed him about, and let him listen undisturbed
to the music which seemed to speak a language he could understand. “Help
one another,” was a favorite Plumfield motto, and Nat learned how much
sweetness is added to life by trying to live up to it.</p>
<p>Jack Ford's peculiar pastime was buying and selling; and he bid fair to
follow in the footsteps of his uncle, a country merchant, who sold a
little of every thing and made money fast. Jack had seen the sugar sanded,
the molasses watered, the butter mixed with lard, and things of that kind,
and labored under the delusion that it was all a proper part of the
business. His stock in trade was of a different sort, but he made as much
as he could out of every worm he sold, and always got the best of the
bargain when he traded with the boys for string, knives, fish-hooks, or
whatever the article might be. The boys who all had nicknames, called him
“Skinflint,” but Jack did not care as long as the old tobacco-pouch in
which he kept his money grew heavier and heavier.</p>
<p>He established a sort of auction-room, and now and then sold off all the
odds and ends he had collected, or helped the lads exchange things with
one another. He got bats, balls, hockey-sticks, etc., cheap, from one set
of mates, furbished them up, and let them for a few cents a time to
another set, often extending his business beyond the gates of Plumfield in
spite of the rules. Mr. Bhaer put a stop to some of his speculations, and
tried to give him a better idea of business talent than mere sharpness in
overreaching his neighbors. Now and then Jack made a bad bargain, and felt
worse about it than about any failure in lessons or conduct, and took his
revenge on the next innocent customer who came along. His account-book was
a curiosity; and his quickness at figures quite remarkable. Mr. Bhaer
praised him for this, and tried to make his sense of honesty and honor as
quick; and, by and by, when Jack found that he could not get on without
these virtues, he owned that his teacher was right.</p>
<p>Cricket and football the boys had of course; but, after the stirring
accounts of these games in the immortal “Tom Brown at Rugby,” no feeble
female pen may venture to do more than respectfully allude to them.</p>
<p>Emil spent his holidays on the river or the pond, and drilled the elder
lads for a race with certain town boys, who now and then invaded their
territory. The race duly came off, but as it ended in a general shipwreck,
it was not mentioned in public; and the Commodore had serious thoughts of
retiring to a desert island, so disgusted was he with his kind for a time.
No desert island being convenient, he was forced to remain among his
friends, and found consolation in building a boat-house.</p>
<p>The little girls indulged in the usual plays of their age, improving upon
them somewhat as their lively fancies suggested. The chief and most
absorbing play was called “Mrs. Shakespeare Smith;” the name was provided
by Aunt Jo, but the trials of the poor lady were quite original. Daisy was
Mrs. S. S., and Nan by turns her daughter or a neighbor, Mrs. Giddygaddy.</p>
<p>No pen can describe the adventures of these ladies, for in one short
afternoon their family was the scene of births, marriages, deaths, floods,
earthquakes, tea-parties, and balloon ascensions. Millions of miles did
these energetic women travel, dressed in hats and habits never seen before
by mortal eye, perched on the bed, driving the posts like mettlesome
steeds, and bouncing up and down till their heads spun. Fits and fires
were the pet afflictions, with a general massacre now and then by way of
change. Nan was never tired of inventing fresh combinations, and Daisy
followed her leader with blind admiration. Poor Teddy was a frequent
victim, and was often rescued from real danger, for the excited ladies
were apt to forget that he was not of the same stuff their longsuffering
dolls. Once he was shut into the closet for a dungeon, and forgotten by
the girls, who ran off to some out-of-door game. Another time he was half
drowned in the bath-tub, playing be a “cunning little whale.” And, worst
of all, he was cut down just in time after being hung up for a robber.</p>
<p>But the institution most patronized by all was the Club. It had no other
name, and it needed none, being the only one in the neighborhood. The
elder lads got it up, and the younger were occasionally admitted if they
behaved well. Tommy and Demi were honorary members, but were always
obliged to retire unpleasantly early, owing to circumstances over which
they had no control. The proceedings of this club were somewhat peculiar,
for it met at all sorts of places and hours, had all manner of queer
ceremonies and amusements, and now and then was broken up tempestuously,
only to be re-established, however, on a firmer basis.</p>
<p>Rainy evenings the members met in the schoolroom, and passed the time in
games: chess, morris, backgammon, fencing matches, recitations, debates,
or dramatic performances of a darkly tragical nature. In summer the barn
was the rendezvous, and what went on there no uninitiated mortal knows. On
sultry evenings the Club adjourned to the brook for aquatic exercises, and
the members sat about in airy attire, frog-like and cool. On such
occasions the speeches were unusually eloquent, quite flowing, as one
might say; and if any orator's remarks displeased the audience, cold water
was thrown upon him till his ardor was effectually quenched. Franz was
president, and maintained order admirably, considering the unruly nature
of the members. Mr. Bhaer never interfered with their affairs, and was
rewarded for this wise forbearance by being invited now and then to behold
the mysteries unveiled, which he appeared to enjoy much.</p>
<p>When Nan came she wished to join the Club, and caused great excitement and
division among the gentlemen by presenting endless petitions, both written
and spoken, disturbing their solemnities by insulting them through the
key-hole, performing vigorous solos on the door, and writing up derisive
remarks on walls and fences, for she belonged to the “Irrepressibles.”
Finding these appeals in vain, the girls, by the advice of Mrs. Jo, got up
an institution of their own, which they called the Cosy Club. To this they
magnanimously invited the gentlemen whose youth excluded them from the
other one, and entertained these favored beings so well with little
suppers, new games devised by Nan, and other pleasing festivities, that,
one by one, the elder boys confessed a desire to partake of these more
elegant enjoyments, and, after much consultation, finally decided to
propose an interchange of civilities.</p>
<p>The members of the Cosy Club were invited to adorn the rival establishment
on certain evenings, and to the surprise of the gentlemen their presence
was not found to be a restraint upon the conversation or amusement of the
regular frequenters; which could not be said of all Clubs, I fancy. The
ladies responded handsomely and hospitably to these overtures of peace,
and both institutions flourished long and happily.</p>
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