<h2><SPAN name="chap31"></SPAN>CHAPTER THIRTY-ONE<br/> OUR FOREIGN CORRESPONDENT</h2>
<p class="letter">
London</p>
<p class="letter">
Dearest People, Here I really sit at a front window of the Bath Hotel,
Piccadilly. It’s not a fashionable place, but Uncle stopped here years
ago, and won’t go anywhere else. However, we don’t mean to stay
long, so it’s no great matter. Oh, I can’t begin to tell you how I
enjoy it all! I never can, so I’ll only give you bits out of my notebook,
for I’ve done nothing but sketch and scribble since I started.</p>
<p class="letter">
I sent a line from Halifax, when I felt pretty miserable, but after that I got
on delightfully, seldom ill, on deck all day, with plenty of pleasant people to
amuse me. Everyone was very kind to me, especially the officers. Don’t
laugh, Jo, gentlemen really are very necessary aboard ship, to hold on to, or
to wait upon one, and as they have nothing to do, it’s a mercy to make
them useful, otherwise they would smoke themselves to death, I’m afraid.</p>
<p class="letter">
Aunt and Flo were poorly all the way, and liked to be let alone, so when I had
done what I could for them, I went and enjoyed myself. Such walks on deck, such
sunsets, such splendid air and waves! It was almost as exciting as riding a
fast horse, when we went rushing on so grandly. I wish Beth could have come, it
would have done her so much good. As for Jo, she would have gone up and sat on
the maintop jib, or whatever the high thing is called, made friends with the
engineers, and tooted on the captain’s speaking trumpet, she’d have
been in such a state of rapture.</p>
<p class="letter">
It was all heavenly, but I was glad to see the Irish coast, and found it very
lovely, so green and sunny, with brown cabins here and there, ruins on some of
the hills, and gentlemen’s countryseats in the valleys, with deer feeding
in the parks. It was early in the morning, but I didn’t regret getting up
to see it, for the bay was full of little boats, the shore so picturesque, and
a rosy sky overhead. I never shall forget it.</p>
<p class="letter">
At Queenstown one of my new acquaintances left us, Mr. Lennox, and when I said
something about the Lakes of Killarney, he sighed, and sung, with a look at
me...</p>
<p class="poem">
“Oh, have you e’er heard of Kate Kearney?<br/>
She lives on the banks of Killarney;<br/>
From the glance of her eye,<br/>
Shun danger and fly,<br/>
For fatal’s the glance of Kate Kearney.”</p>
<p class="letter">
Wasn’t that nonsensical?</p>
<p class="letter">
We only stopped at Liverpool a few hours. It’s a dirty, noisy place, and
I was glad to leave it. Uncle rushed out and bought a pair of dogskin gloves,
some ugly, thick shoes, and an umbrella, and got shaved <i>à la</i> mutton
chop, the first thing. Then he flattered himself that he looked like a true
Briton, but the first time he had the mud cleaned off his shoes, the little
bootblack knew that an American stood in them, and said, with a grin,
“There yer har, sir. I’ve given ’em the latest Yankee
shine.” It amused Uncle immensely. Oh, I must tell you what that absurd
Lennox did! He got his friend Ward, who came on with us, to order a bouquet for
me, and the first thing I saw in my room was a lovely one, with “Robert
Lennox’s compliments,” on the card. Wasn’t that fun, girls? I
like traveling.</p>
<p class="letter">
I never shall get to London if I don’t hurry. The trip was like riding
through a long picture gallery, full of lovely landscapes. The farmhouses were
my delight, with thatched roofs, ivy up to the eaves, latticed windows, and
stout women with rosy children at the doors. The very cattle looked more
tranquil than ours, as they stood knee-deep in clover, and the hens had a
contented cluck, as if they never got nervous like Yankee biddies. Such perfect
color I never saw, the grass so green, sky so blue, grain so yellow, woods so
dark, I was in a rapture all the way. So was Flo, and we kept bouncing from one
side to the other, trying to see everything while we were whisking along at the
rate of sixty miles an hour. Aunt was tired and went to sleep, but Uncle read
his guidebook, and wouldn’t be astonished at anything. This is the way we
went on. Amy, flying up—“Oh, that must be Kenilworth, that gray
place among the trees!” Flo, darting to my window—“How sweet!
We must go there sometime, won’t we Papa?” Uncle, calmly admiring
his boots—“No, my dear, not unless you want beer, that’s a
brewery.”</p>
<p class="letter">
A pause—then Flo cried out, “Bless me, there’s a gallows and
a man going up.” “Where, where?” shrieks Amy, staring out at
two tall posts with a crossbeam and some dangling chains. “A
colliery,” remarks Uncle, with a twinkle of the eye. “Here’s
a lovely flock of lambs all lying down,” says Amy. “See, Papa,
aren’t they pretty?” added Flo sentimentally. “Geese, young
ladies,” returns Uncle, in a tone that keeps us quiet till Flo settles
down to enjoy the <i>Flirtations of Captain Cavendish</i>, and I have the
scenery all to myself.</p>
<p class="letter">
Of course it rained when we got to London, and there was nothing to be seen but
fog and umbrellas. We rested, unpacked, and shopped a little between the
showers. Aunt Mary got me some new things, for I came off in such a hurry I
wasn’t half ready. A white hat and blue feather, a muslin dress to match,
and the loveliest mantle you ever saw. Shopping in Regent Street is perfectly
splendid. Things seem so cheap, nice ribbons only sixpence a yard. I laid in a
stock, but shall get my gloves in Paris. Doesn’t that sound sort of
elegant and rich?</p>
<p class="letter">
Flo and I, for the fun of it, ordered a hansom cab, while Aunt and Uncle were
out, and went for a drive, though we learned afterward that it wasn’t the
thing for young ladies to ride in them alone. It was so droll! For when we were
shut in by the wooden apron, the man drove so fast that Flo was frightened, and
told me to stop him, but he was up outside behind somewhere, and I
couldn’t get at him. He didn’t hear me call, nor see me flap my
parasol in front, and there we were, quite helpless, rattling away, and
whirling around corners at a breakneck pace. At last, in my despair, I saw a
little door in the roof, and on poking it open, a red eye appeared, and a beery
voice said...</p>
<p class="letter">
“Now, then, mum?”</p>
<p class="letter">
I gave my order as soberly as I could, and slamming down the door, with an
“Aye, aye, mum,” the man made his horse walk, as if going to a
funeral. I poked again and said, “A little faster,” then off he
went, helter-skelter as before, and we resigned ourselves to our fate.</p>
<p class="letter">
Today was fair, and we went to Hyde Park, close by, for we are more
aristocratic than we look. The Duke of Devonshire lives near. I often see his
footmen lounging at the back gate, and the Duke of Wellington’s house is
not far off. Such sights as I saw, my dear! It was as good as Punch, for there
were fat dowagers rolling about in their red and yellow coaches, with gorgeous
Jeameses in silk stockings and velvet coats, up behind, and powdered coachmen
in front. Smart maids, with the rosiest children I ever saw, handsome girls,
looking half asleep, dandies in queer English hats and lavender kids lounging
about, and tall soldiers, in short red jackets and muffin caps stuck on one
side, looking so funny I longed to sketch them.</p>
<p class="letter">
Rotten Row means ‘Route de Roi’, or the king’s way, but now
it’s more like a riding school than anything else. The horses are
splendid, and the men, especially the grooms, ride well, but the women are
stiff, and bounce, which isn’t according to our rules. I longed to show
them a tearing American gallop, for they trotted solemnly up and down, in their
scant habits and high hats, looking like the women in a toy Noah’s Ark.
Everyone rides—old men, stout ladies, little children—and the young
folks do a deal of flirting here, I saw a pair exchange rose buds, for
it’s the thing to wear one in the button-hole, and I thought it rather a
nice little idea.</p>
<p class="letter">
In the P.M. to Westminster Abbey, but don’t expect me to describe it,
that’s impossible, so I’ll only say it was sublime! This evening we
are going to see Fechter, which will be an appropriate end to the happiest day
of my life.</p>
<p class="letter">
It’s very late, but I can’t let my letter go in the morning without
telling you what happened last evening. Who do you think came in, as we were at
tea? Laurie’s English friends, Fred and Frank Vaughn! I was so surprised,
for I shouldn’t have known them but for the cards. Both are tall fellows
with whiskers, Fred handsome in the English style, and Frank much better, for
he only limps slightly, and uses no crutches. They had heard from Laurie where
we were to be, and came to ask us to their house, but Uncle won’t go, so
we shall return the call, and see them as we can. They went to the theater with
us, and we did have such a good time, for Frank devoted himself to Flo, and
Fred and I talked over past, present, and future fun as if we had known each
other all our days. Tell Beth Frank asked for her, and was sorry to hear of her
ill health. Fred laughed when I spoke of Jo, and sent his ‘respectful
compliments to the big hat’. Neither of them had forgotten Camp Laurence,
or the fun we had there. What ages ago it seems, doesn’t it?</p>
<p class="letter">
Aunt is tapping on the wall for the third time, so I must stop. I really feel
like a dissipated London fine lady, writing here so late, with my room full of
pretty things, and my head a jumble of parks, theaters, new gowns, and gallant
creatures who say “Ah!” and twirl their blond mustaches with the
true English lordliness. I long to see you all, and in spite of my nonsense am,
as ever, your loving...</p>
<p class="letter">
AMY</p>
<p class="letter">
PARIS</p>
<p class="letter">
Dear girls,</p>
<p class="letter">
In my last I told you about our London visit, how kind the Vaughns were, and
what pleasant parties they made for us. I enjoyed the trips to Hampton Court
and the Kensington Museum more than anything else, for at Hampton I saw
Raphael’s cartoons, and at the Museum, rooms full of pictures by Turner,
Lawrence, Reynolds, Hogarth, and the other great creatures. The day in Richmond
Park was charming, for we had a regular English picnic, and I had more splendid
oaks and groups of deer than I could copy, also heard a nightingale, and saw
larks go up. We ‘did’ London to our heart’s content, thanks
to Fred and Frank, and were sorry to go away, for though English people are
slow to take you in, when they once make up their minds to do it they cannot be
outdone in hospitality, I think. The Vaughns hope to meet us in Rome next
winter, and I shall be dreadfully disappointed if they don’t, for Grace
and I are great friends, and the boys very nice fellows, especially Fred.</p>
<p class="letter">
Well, we were hardly settled here, when he turned up again, saying he had come
for a holiday, and was going to Switzerland. Aunt looked sober at first, but he
was so cool about it she couldn’t say a word. And now we get on nicely,
and are very glad he came, for he speaks French like a native, and I
don’t know what we should do without him. Uncle doesn’t know ten
words, and insists on talking English very loud, as if it would make people
understand him. Aunt’s pronunciation is old-fashioned, and Flo and I,
though we flattered ourselves that we knew a good deal, find we don’t,
and are very grateful to have Fred do the ‘<i>parley vooing</i>’,
as Uncle calls it.</p>
<p class="letter">
Such delightful times as we are having! Sight-seeing from morning till night,
stopping for nice lunches in the gay <i>cafes</i>, and meeting with all sorts
of droll adventures. Rainy days I spend in the Louvre, revelling in pictures.
Jo would turn up her naughty nose at some of the finest, because she has no
soul for art, but I have, and I’m cultivating eye and taste as fast as I
can. She would like the relics of great people better, for I’ve seen her
Napoleon’s cocked hat and gray coat, his baby’s cradle and his old
toothbrush, also Marie Antoinette’s little shoe, the ring of Saint Denis,
Charlemagne’s sword, and many other interesting things. I’ll talk
for hours about them when I come, but haven’t time to write.</p>
<p class="letter">
The Palais Royale is a heavenly place, so full of <i>bijouterie</i> and lovely
things that I’m nearly distracted because I can’t buy them. Fred
wanted to get me some, but of course I didn’t allow it. Then the Bois and
Champs Elysees are <i>tres magnifique</i>. I’ve seen the imperial family
several times, the emperor an ugly, hard-looking man, the empress pale and
pretty, but dressed in bad taste, I thought—purple dress, green hat, and
yellow gloves. Little Nap is a handsome boy, who sits chatting to his tutor,
and kisses his hand to the people as he passes in his four-horse barouche, with
postilions in red satin jackets and a mounted guard before and behind.</p>
<p class="letter">
We often walk in the Tuileries Gardens, for they are lovely, though the antique
Luxembourg Gardens suit me better. Pere la Chaise is very curious, for many of
the tombs are like small rooms, and looking in, one sees a table, with images
or pictures of the dead, and chairs for the mourners to sit in when they come
to lament. That is so Frenchy.</p>
<p class="letter">
Our rooms are on the Rue de Rivoli, and sitting on the balcony, we look up and
down the long, brilliant street. It is so pleasant that we spend our evenings
talking there when too tired with our day’s work to go out. Fred is very
entertaining, and is altogether the most agreeable young man I ever
knew—except Laurie, whose manners are more charming. I wish Fred was
dark, for I don’t fancy light men, however, the Vaughns are very rich and
come of an excellent family, so I won’t find fault with their yellow
hair, as my own is yellower.</p>
<p class="letter">
Next week we are off to Germany and Switzerland, and as we shall travel fast, I
shall only be able to give you hasty letters. I keep my diary, and try to
‘remember correctly and describe clearly all that I see and
admire’, as Father advised. It is good practice for me, and with my
sketchbook will give you a better idea of my tour than these scribbles.</p>
<p class="letter">
Adieu, I embrace you tenderly. <i>“Votre Amie.”</i></p>
<p class="letter">
HEIDELBERG</p>
<p class="letter">
My dear Mamma,</p>
<p class="letter">
Having a quiet hour before we leave for Berne, I’ll try to tell you what
has happened, for some of it is very important, as you will see.</p>
<p class="letter">
The sail up the Rhine was perfect, and I just sat and enjoyed it with all my
might. Get Father’s old guidebooks and read about it. I haven’t
words beautiful enough to describe it. At Coblentz we had a lovely time, for
some students from Bonn, with whom Fred got acquainted on the boat, gave us a
serenade. It was a moonlight night, and about one o’clock Flo and I were
waked by the most delicious music under our windows. We flew up, and hid behind
the curtains, but sly peeps showed us Fred and the students singing away down
below. It was the most romantic thing I ever saw—the river, the bridge of
boats, the great fortress opposite, moonlight everywhere, and music fit to melt
a heart of stone.</p>
<p class="letter">
When they were done we threw down some flowers, and saw them scramble for them,
kiss their hands to the invisible ladies, and go laughing away, to smoke and
drink beer, I suppose. Next morning Fred showed me one of the crumpled flowers
in his vest pocket, and looked very sentimental. I laughed at him, and said I
didn’t throw it, but Flo, which seemed to disgust him, for he tossed it
out of the window, and turned sensible again. I’m afraid I’m going
to have trouble with that boy, it begins to look like it.</p>
<p class="letter">
The baths at Nassau were very gay, so was Baden-Baden, where Fred lost some
money, and I scolded him. He needs someone to look after him when Frank is not
with him. Kate said once she hoped he’d marry soon, and I quite agree
with her that it would be well for him. Frankfurt was delightful. I saw
Goethe’s house, Schiller’s statue, and Dannecker’s famous
‘Ariadne.’ It was very lovely, but I should have enjoyed it more if
I had known the story better. I didn’t like to ask, as everyone knew it
or pretended they did. I wish Jo would tell me all about it. I ought to have
read more, for I find I don’t know anything, and it mortifies me.</p>
<p class="letter">
Now comes the serious part, for it happened here, and Fred has just gone. He
has been so kind and jolly that we all got quite fond of him. I never thought
of anything but a traveling friendship till the serenade night. Since then
I’ve begun to feel that the moonlight walks, balcony talks, and daily
adventures were something more to him than fun. I haven’t flirted,
Mother, truly, but remembered what you said to me, and have done my very best.
I can’t help it if people like me. I don’t try to make them, and it
worries me if I don’t care for them, though Jo says I haven’t got
any heart. Now I know Mother will shake her head, and the girls say, “Oh,
the mercenary little wretch!”, but I’ve made up my mind, and if
Fred asks me, I shall accept him, though I’m not madly in love. I like
him, and we get on comfortably together. He is handsome, young, clever enough,
and very rich—ever so much richer than the Laurences. I don’t think
his family would object, and I should be very happy, for they are all kind,
well-bred, generous people, and they like me. Fred, as the eldest twin, will
have the estate, I suppose, and such a splendid one it is! A city house in a
fashionable street, not so showy as our big houses, but twice as comfortable
and full of solid luxury, such as English people believe in. I like it, for
it’s genuine. I’ve seen the plate, the family jewels, the old
servants, and pictures of the country place, with its park, great house, lovely
grounds, and fine horses. Oh, it would be all I should ask! And I’d
rather have it than any title such as girls snap up so readily, and find
nothing behind. I may be mercenary, but I hate poverty, and don’t mean to
bear it a minute longer than I can help. One of us <i>must</i> marry well. Meg
didn’t, Jo won’t, Beth can’t yet, so I shall, and make
everything okay all round. I wouldn’t marry a man I hated or despised.
You may be sure of that, and though Fred is not my model hero, he does very
well, and in time I should get fond enough of him if he was very fond of me,
and let me do just as I liked. So I’ve been turning the matter over in my
mind the last week, for it was impossible to help seeing that Fred liked me. He
said nothing, but little things showed it. He never goes with Flo, always gets
on my side of the carriage, table, or promenade, looks sentimental when we are
alone, and frowns at anyone else who ventures to speak to me. Yesterday at
dinner, when an Austrian officer stared at us and then said something to his
friend, a rakish-looking baron, about ‘<i>ein wonderschones
Blondchen’</i>, Fred looked as fierce as a lion, and cut his meat so
savagely it nearly flew off his plate. He isn’t one of the cool, stiff
Englishmen, but is rather peppery, for he has Scotch blood in him, as one might
guess from his bonnie blue eyes.</p>
<p class="letter">
Well, last evening we went up to the castle about sunset, at least all of us
but Fred, who was to meet us there after going to the Post Restante for
letters. We had a charming time poking about the ruins, the vaults where the
monster tun is, and the beautiful gardens made by the elector long ago for his
English wife. I liked the great terrace best, for the view was divine, so while
the rest went to see the rooms inside, I sat there trying to sketch the gray
stone lion’s head on the wall, with scarlet woodbine sprays hanging round
it. I felt as if I’d got into a romance, sitting there, watching the
Neckar rolling through the valley, listening to the music of the Austrian band
below, and waiting for my lover, like a real storybook girl. I had a feeling
that something was going to happen and I was ready for it. I didn’t feel
blushy or quakey, but quite cool and only a little excited.</p>
<p class="letter">
By-and-by I heard Fred’s voice, and then he came hurrying through the
great arch to find me. He looked so troubled that I forgot all about myself,
and asked what the matter was. He said he’d just got a letter begging him
to come home, for Frank was very ill. So he was going at once on the night
train and only had time to say good-by. I was very sorry for him, and
disappointed for myself, but only for a minute because he said, as he shook
hands, and said it in a way that I could not mistake, “I shall soon come
back, you won’t forget me, Amy?”</p>
<p class="letter">
I didn’t promise, but I looked at him, and he seemed satisfied, and there
was no time for anything but messages and good-byes, for he was off in an hour,
and we all miss him very much. I know he wanted to speak, but I think, from
something he once hinted, that he had promised his father not to do anything of
the sort yet a while, for he is a rash boy, and the old gentleman dreads a
foreign daughter-in-law. We shall soon meet in Rome, and then, if I don’t
change my mind, I’ll say “Yes, thank you,” when he says
“Will you, please?”</p>
<p class="letter">
Of course this is all <i>very private</i>, but I wished you to know what was
going on. Don’t be anxious about me, remember I am your ‘prudent
Amy’, and be sure I will do nothing rashly. Send me as much advice as you
like. I’ll use it if I can. I wish I could see you for a good talk,
Marmee. Love and trust me.</p>
<p class="letter">
Ever your AMY</p>
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