<h2><SPAN name="chap34"></SPAN>CHAPTER THIRTY-FOUR<br/> FRIEND</h2>
<p>Though very happy in the social atmosphere about her, and very busy with the
daily work that earned her bread and made it sweeter for the effort, Jo still
found time for literary labors. The purpose which now took possession of her
was a natural one to a poor and ambitious girl, but the means she took to gain
her end were not the best. She saw that money conferred power, money and power,
therefore, she resolved to have, not to be used for herself alone, but for
those whom she loved more than life. The dream of filling home with comforts,
giving Beth everything she wanted, from strawberries in winter to an organ in
her bedroom, going abroad herself, and always having more than enough, so that
she might indulge in the luxury of charity, had been for years Jo’s most
cherished castle in the air.</p>
<p>The prize-story experience had seemed to open a way which might, after long
traveling and much uphill work, lead to this delightful chateau en Espagne. But
the novel disaster quenched her courage for a time, for public opinion is a
giant which has frightened stouter-hearted Jacks on bigger beanstalks than
hers. Like that immortal hero, she reposed awhile after the first attempt,
which resulted in a tumble and the least lovely of the giant’s treasures,
if I remember rightly. But the ‘up again and take another’ spirit
was as strong in Jo as in Jack, so she scrambled up on the shady side this time
and got more booty, but nearly left behind her what was far more precious than
the moneybags.</p>
<p>She took to writing sensation stories, for in those dark ages, even all-perfect
America read rubbish. She told no one, but concocted a ‘thrilling
tale’, and boldly carried it herself to Mr. Dashwood, editor of the
Weekly Volcano. She had never read Sartor Resartus, but she had a womanly
instinct that clothes possess an influence more powerful over many than the
worth of character or the magic of manners. So she dressed herself in her best,
and trying to persuade herself that she was neither excited nor nervous,
bravely climbed two pairs of dark and dirty stairs to find herself in a
disorderly room, a cloud of cigar smoke, and the presence of three gentlemen,
sitting with their heels rather higher than their hats, which articles of dress
none of them took the trouble to remove on her appearance. Somewhat daunted by
this reception, Jo hesitated on the threshold, murmuring in much
embarrassment...</p>
<p>“Excuse me, I was looking for the Weekly Volcano office. I wished to see
Mr. Dashwood.”</p>
<p>Down went the highest pair of heels, up rose the smokiest gentleman, and
carefully cherishing his cigar between his fingers, he advanced with a nod and
a countenance expressive of nothing but sleep. Feeling that she must get
through the matter somehow, Jo produced her manuscript and, blushing redder and
redder with each sentence, blundered out fragments of the little speech
carefully prepared for the occasion.</p>
<p>“A friend of mine desired me to offer—a story—just as an
experiment—would like your opinion—be glad to write more if this
suits.”</p>
<p>While she blushed and blundered, Mr. Dashwood had taken the manuscript, and was
turning over the leaves with a pair of rather dirty fingers, and casting
critical glances up and down the neat pages.</p>
<p>“Not a first attempt, I take it?” observing that the pages were
numbered, covered only on one side, and not tied up with a ribbon—sure
sign of a novice.</p>
<p>“No, sir. She has had some experience, and got a prize for a tale in the
<i>Blarneystone Banner</i>.”</p>
<p>“Oh, did she?” and Mr. Dashwood gave Jo a quick look, which seemed
to take note of everything she had on, from the bow in her bonnet to the
buttons on her boots. “Well, you can leave it, if you like. We’ve
more of this sort of thing on hand than we know what to do with at present, but
I’ll run my eye over it, and give you an answer next week.”</p>
<p>Now, Jo did <i>not</i> like to leave it, for Mr. Dashwood didn’t suit her
at all, but, under the circumstances, there was nothing for her to do but bow
and walk away, looking particularly tall and dignified, as she was apt to do
when nettled or abashed. Just then she was both, for it was perfectly evident
from the knowing glances exchanged among the gentlemen that her little fiction
of ‘my friend’ was considered a good joke, and a laugh, produced by
some inaudible remark of the editor, as he closed the door, completed her
discomfiture. Half resolving never to return, she went home, and worked off her
irritation by stitching pinafores vigorously, and in an hour or two was cool
enough to laugh over the scene and long for next week.</p>
<p>When she went again, Mr. Dashwood was alone, whereat she rejoiced. Mr. Dashwood
was much wider awake than before, which was agreeable, and Mr. Dashwood was not
too deeply absorbed in a cigar to remember his manners, so the second interview
was much more comfortable than the first.</p>
<p>“We’ll take this (editors never say I), if you don’t object
to a few alterations. It’s too long, but omitting the passages I’ve
marked will make it just the right length,” he said, in a businesslike
tone.</p>
<p>Jo hardly knew her own MS. again, so crumpled and underscored were its pages
and paragraphs, but feeling as a tender parent might on being asked to cut off
her baby’s legs in order that it might fit into a new cradle, she looked
at the marked passages and was surprised to find that all the moral
reflections—which she had carefully put in as ballast for much
romance—had been stricken out.</p>
<p>“But, Sir, I thought every story should have some sort of a moral, so I
took care to have a few of my sinners repent.”</p>
<p>Mr. Dashwoods’s editorial gravity relaxed into a smile, for Jo had
forgotten her ‘friend’, and spoken as only an author could.</p>
<p>“People want to be amused, not preached at, you know. Morals don’t
sell nowadays.” Which was not quite a correct statement, by the way.</p>
<p>“You think it would do with these alterations, then?”</p>
<p>“Yes, it’s a new plot, and pretty well worked up—language
good, and so on,” was Mr. Dashwood’s affable reply.</p>
<p>“What do you—that is, what compensation—” began Jo, not
exactly knowing how to express herself.</p>
<p>“Oh, yes, well, we give from twenty-five to thirty for things of this
sort. Pay when it comes out,” returned Mr. Dashwood, as if that point had
escaped him. Such trifles do escape the editorial mind, it is said.</p>
<p>“Very well, you can have it,” said Jo, handing back the story with
a satisfied air, for after the dollar-a-column work, even twenty-five seemed
good pay.</p>
<p>“Shall I tell my friend you will take another if she has one better than
this?” asked Jo, unconscious of her little slip of the tongue, and
emboldened by her success.</p>
<p>“Well, we’ll look at it. Can’t promise to take it. Tell her
to make it short and spicy, and never mind the moral. What name would your
friend like to put on it?” in a careless tone.</p>
<p>“None at all, if you please, she doesn’t wish her name to appear
and has no nom de plume,” said Jo, blushing in spite of herself.</p>
<p>“Just as she likes, of course. The tale will be out next week. Will you
call for the money, or shall I send it?” asked Mr. Dashwood, who felt a
natural desire to know who his new contributor might be.</p>
<p>“I’ll call. Good morning, Sir.”</p>
<p>As she departed, Mr. Dashwood put up his feet, with the graceful remark,
“Poor and proud, as usual, but she’ll do.”</p>
<p>Following Mr. Dashwood’s directions, and making Mrs. Northbury her model,
Jo rashly took a plunge into the frothy sea of sensational literature, but
thanks to the life preserver thrown her by a friend, she came up again not much
the worse for her ducking.</p>
<p>Like most young scribblers, she went abroad for her characters and scenery, and
banditti, counts, gypsies, nuns, and duchesses appeared upon her stage, and
played their parts with as much accuracy and spirit as could be expected. Her
readers were not particular about such trifles as grammar, punctuation, and
probability, and Mr. Dashwood graciously permitted her to fill his columns at
the lowest prices, not thinking it necessary to tell her that the real cause of
his hospitality was the fact that one of his hacks, on being offered higher
wages, had basely left him in the lurch.</p>
<p>She soon became interested in her work, for her emaciated purse grew stout, and
the little hoard she was making to take Beth to the mountains next summer grew
slowly but surely as the weeks passed. One thing disturbed her satisfaction,
and that was that she did not tell them at home. She had a feeling that Father
and Mother would not approve, and preferred to have her own way first, and beg
pardon afterward. It was easy to keep her secret, for no name appeared with her
stories. Mr. Dashwood had of course found it out very soon, but promised to be
dumb, and for a wonder kept his word.</p>
<p>She thought it would do her no harm, for she sincerely meant to write nothing
of which she would be ashamed, and quieted all pricks of conscience by
anticipations of the happy minute when she should show her earnings and laugh
over her well-kept secret.</p>
<p>But Mr. Dashwood rejected any but thrilling tales, and as thrills could not be
produced except by harrowing up the souls of the readers, history and romance,
land and sea, science and art, police records and lunatic asylums, had to be
ransacked for the purpose. Jo soon found that her innocent experience had given
her but few glimpses of the tragic world which underlies society, so regarding
it in a business light, she set about supplying her deficiencies with
characteristic energy. Eager to find material for stories, and bent on making
them original in plot, if not masterly in execution, she searched newspapers
for accidents, incidents, and crimes. She excited the suspicions of public
librarians by asking for works on poisons. She studied faces in the street, and
characters, good, bad, and indifferent, all about her. She delved in the dust
of ancient times for facts or fictions so old that they were as good as new,
and introduced herself to folly, sin, and misery, as well as her limited
opportunities allowed. She thought she was prospering finely, but unconsciously
she was beginning to desecrate some of the womanliest attributes of a
woman’s character. She was living in bad society, and imaginary though it
was, its influence affected her, for she was feeding heart and fancy on
dangerous and unsubstantial food, and was fast brushing the innocent bloom from
her nature by a premature acquaintance with the darker side of life, which
comes soon enough to all of us.</p>
<p>She was beginning to feel rather than see this, for much describing of other
people’s passions and feelings set her to studying and speculating about
her own, a morbid amusement in which healthy young minds do not voluntarily
indulge. Wrongdoing always brings its own punishment, and when Jo most needed
hers, she got it.</p>
<p>I don’t know whether the study of Shakespeare helped her to read
character, or the natural instinct of a woman for what was honest, brave, and
strong, but while endowing her imaginary heroes with every perfection under the
sun, Jo was discovering a live hero, who interested her in spite of many human
imperfections. Mr. Bhaer, in one of their conversations, had advised her to
study simple, true, and lovely characters, wherever she found them, as good
training for a writer. Jo took him at his word, for she coolly turned round and
studied him—a proceeding which would have much surprised him, had he
known it, for the worthy Professor was very humble in his own conceit.</p>
<p>Why everybody liked him was what puzzled Jo, at first. He was neither rich nor
great, young nor handsome, in no respect what is called fascinating, imposing,
or brilliant, and yet he was as attractive as a genial fire, and people seemed
to gather about him as naturally as about a warm hearth. He was poor, yet
always appeared to be giving something away; a stranger, yet everyone was his
friend; no longer young, but as happy-hearted as a boy; plain and peculiar, yet
his face looked beautiful to many, and his oddities were freely forgiven for
his sake. Jo often watched him, trying to discover the charm, and at last
decided that it was benevolence which worked the miracle. If he had any sorrow,
‘it sat with its head under its wing’, and he turned only his sunny
side to the world. There were lines upon his forehead, but Time seemed to have
touched him gently, remembering how kind he was to others. The pleasant curves
about his mouth were the memorials of many friendly words and cheery laughs,
his eyes were never cold or hard, and his big hand had a warm, strong grasp
that was more expressive than words.</p>
<p>His very clothes seemed to partake of the hospitable nature of the wearer. They
looked as if they were at ease, and liked to make him comfortable. His
capacious waistcoat was suggestive of a large heart underneath. His rusty coat
had a social air, and the baggy pockets plainly proved that little hands often
went in empty and came out full. His very boots were benevolent, and his
collars never stiff and raspy like other people’s.</p>
<p>“That’s it!” said Jo to herself, when she at length
discovered that genuine good will toward one’s fellow men could beautify
and dignify even a stout German teacher, who shoveled in his dinner, darned his
own socks, and was burdened with the name of Bhaer.</p>
<p>Jo valued goodness highly, but she also possessed a most feminine respect for
intellect, and a little discovery which she made about the Professor added much
to her regard for him. He never spoke of himself, and no one ever knew that in
his native city he had been a man much honored and esteemed for learning and
integrity, till a countryman came to see him. He never spoke of himself, and in
a conversation with Miss Norton divulged the pleasing fact. From her Jo learned
it, and liked it all the better because Mr. Bhaer had never told it. She felt
proud to know that he was an honored Professor in Berlin, though only a poor
language-master in America, and his homely, hard-working life was much
beautified by the spice of romance which this discovery gave it. Another and a
better gift than intellect was shown her in a most unexpected manner. Miss
Norton had the entree into most society, which Jo would have had no chance of
seeing but for her. The solitary woman felt an interest in the ambitious girl,
and kindly conferred many favors of this sort both on Jo and the Professor. She
took them with her one night to a select symposium, held in honor of several
celebrities.</p>
<p>Jo went prepared to bow down and adore the mighty ones whom she had worshiped
with youthful enthusiasm afar off. But her reverence for genius received a
severe shock that night, and it took her some time to recover from the
discovery that the great creatures were only men and women after all. Imagine
her dismay, on stealing a glance of timid admiration at the poet whose lines
suggested an ethereal being fed on ‘spirit, fire, and dew’, to
behold him devouring his supper with an ardor which flushed his intellectual
countenance. Turning as from a fallen idol, she made other discoveries which
rapidly dispelled her romantic illusions. The great novelist vibrated between
two decanters with the regularity of a pendulum; the famous divine flirted
openly with one of the Madame de Staels of the age, who looked daggers at
another Corinne, who was amiably satirizing her, after outmaneuvering her in
efforts to absorb the profound philosopher, who imbibed tea Johnsonianly and
appeared to slumber, the loquacity of the lady rendering speech impossible. The
scientific celebrities, forgetting their mollusks and glacial periods, gossiped
about art, while devoting themselves to oysters and ices with characteristic
energy; the young musician, who was charming the city like a second Orpheus,
talked horses; and the specimen of the British nobility present happened to be
the most ordinary man of the party.</p>
<p>Before the evening was half over, Jo felt so completely disillusioned, that she
sat down in a corner to recover herself. Mr. Bhaer soon joined her, looking
rather out of his element, and presently several of the philosophers, each
mounted on his hobby, came ambling up to hold an intellectual tournament in the
recess. The conversations were miles beyond Jo’s comprehension, but she
enjoyed it, though Kant and Hegel were unknown gods, the Subjective and
Objective unintelligible terms, and the only thing ‘evolved from her
inner consciousness’ was a bad headache after it was all over. It dawned
upon her gradually that the world was being picked to pieces, and put together
on new and, according to the talkers, on infinitely better principles than
before, that religion was in a fair way to be reasoned into nothingness, and
intellect was to be the only God. Jo knew nothing about philosophy or
metaphysics of any sort, but a curious excitement, half pleasurable, half
painful, came over her as she listened with a sense of being turned adrift into
time and space, like a young balloon out on a holiday.</p>
<p>She looked round to see how the Professor liked it, and found him looking at
her with the grimmest expression she had ever seen him wear. He shook his head
and beckoned her to come away, but she was fascinated just then by the freedom
of Speculative Philosophy, and kept her seat, trying to find out what the wise
gentlemen intended to rely upon after they had annihilated all the old beliefs.</p>
<p>Now, Mr. Bhaer was a diffident man and slow to offer his own opinions, not
because they were unsettled, but too sincere and earnest to be lightly spoken.
As he glanced from Jo to several other young people, attracted by the
brilliancy of the philosophic pyrotechnics, he knit his brows and longed to
speak, fearing that some inflammable young soul would be led astray by the
rockets, to find when the display was over that they had only an empty stick or
a scorched hand.</p>
<p>He bore it as long as he could, but when he was appealed to for an opinion, he
blazed up with honest indignation and defended religion with all the eloquence
of truth—an eloquence which made his broken English musical and his plain
face beautiful. He had a hard fight, for the wise men argued well, but he
didn’t know when he was beaten and stood to his colors like a man.
Somehow, as he talked, the world got right again to Jo. The old beliefs, that
had lasted so long, seemed better than the new. God was not a blind force, and
immortality was not a pretty fable, but a blessed fact. She felt as if she had
solid ground under her feet again, and when Mr. Bhaer paused, outtalked but not
one whit convinced, Jo wanted to clap her hands and thank him.</p>
<p>She did neither, but she remembered the scene, and gave the Professor her
heartiest respect, for she knew it cost him an effort to speak out then and
there, because his conscience would not let him be silent. She began to see
that character is a better possession than money, rank, intellect, or beauty,
and to feel that if greatness is what a wise man has defined it to be,
‘truth, reverence, and good will’, then her friend Friedrich Bhaer
was not only good, but great.</p>
<p>This belief strengthened daily. She valued his esteem, she coveted his respect,
she wanted to be worthy of his friendship, and just when the wish was
sincerest, she came near to losing everything. It all grew out of a cocked hat,
for one evening the Professor came in to give Jo her lesson with a paper
soldier cap on his head, which Tina had put there and he had forgotten to take
off.</p>
<p>“It’s evident he doesn’t look in his glass before coming
down,” thought Jo, with a smile, as he said “Goot efening,”
and sat soberly down, quite unconscious of the ludicrous contrast between his
subject and his headgear, for he was going to read her the Death of
Wallenstein.</p>
<p>She said nothing at first, for she liked to hear him laugh out his big, hearty
laugh when anything funny happened, so she left him to discover it for himself,
and presently forgot all about it, for to hear a German read Schiller is rather
an absorbing occupation. After the reading came the lesson, which was a lively
one, for Jo was in a gay mood that night, and the cocked hat kept her eyes
dancing with merriment. The Professor didn’t know what to make of her,
and stopped at last to ask with an air of mild surprise that was irresistible.
. .</p>
<p>“Mees Marsch, for what do you laugh in your master’s face? Haf you
no respect for me, that you go on so bad?”</p>
<p>“How can I be respectful, Sir, when you forget to take your hat
off?” said Jo.</p>
<p>Lifting his hand to his head, the absent-minded Professor gravely felt and
removed the little cocked hat, looked at it a minute, and then threw back his
head and laughed like a merry bass viol.</p>
<p>“Ah! I see him now, it is that imp Tina who makes me a fool with my cap.
Well, it is nothing, but see you, if this lesson goes not well, you too shall
wear him.”</p>
<p>But the lesson did not go at all for a few minutes because Mr. Bhaer caught
sight of a picture on the hat, and unfolding it, said with great disgust,
“I wish these papers did not come in the house. They are not for children
to see, nor young people to read. It is not well, and I haf no patience with
those who make this harm.”</p>
<p>Jo glanced at the sheet and saw a pleasing illustration composed of a lunatic,
a corpse, a villain, and a viper. She did not like it, but the impulse that
made her turn it over was not one of displeasure but fear, because for a minute
she fancied the paper was the Volcano. It was not, however, and her panic
subsided as she remembered that even if it had been and one of her own tales in
it, there would have been no name to betray her. She had betrayed herself,
however, by a look and a blush, for though an absent man, the Professor saw a
good deal more than people fancied. He knew that Jo wrote, and had met her down
among the newspaper offices more than once, but as she never spoke of it, he
asked no questions in spite of a strong desire to see her work. Now it occurred
to him that she was doing what she was ashamed to own, and it troubled him. He
did not say to himself, “It is none of my business. I’ve no right
to say anything,” as many people would have done. He only remembered that
she was young and poor, a girl far away from mother’s love and
father’s care, and he was moved to help her with an impulse as quick and
natural as that which would prompt him to put out his hand to save a baby from
a puddle. All this flashed through his mind in a minute, but not a trace of it
appeared in his face, and by the time the paper was turned, and Jo’s
needle threaded, he was ready to say quite naturally, but very gravely...</p>
<p>“Yes, you are right to put it from you. I do not think that good young
girls should see such things. They are made pleasant to some, but I would more
rather give my boys gunpowder to play with than this bad trash.”</p>
<p>“All may not be bad, only silly, you know, and if there is a demand for
it, I don’t see any harm in supplying it. Many very respectable people
make an honest living out of what are called sensation stories,” said Jo,
scratching gathers so energetically that a row of little slits followed her
pin.</p>
<p>“There is a demand for whisky, but I think you and I do not care to sell
it. If the respectable people knew what harm they did, they would not feel that
the living was honest. They haf no right to put poison in the sugarplum, and
let the small ones eat it. No, they should think a little, and sweep mud in the
street before they do this thing.”</p>
<p>Mr. Bhaer spoke warmly, and walked to the fire, crumpling the paper in his
hands. Jo sat still, looking as if the fire had come to her, for her cheeks
burned long after the cocked hat had turned to smoke and gone harmlessly up the
chimney.</p>
<p>“I should like much to send all the rest after him,” muttered the
Professor, coming back with a relieved air.</p>
<p>Jo thought what a blaze her pile of papers upstairs would make, and her
hard-earned money lay rather heavily on her conscience at that minute. Then she
thought consolingly to herself, “Mine are not like that, they are only
silly, never bad, so I won’t be worried,” and taking up her book,
she said, with a studious face, “Shall we go on, Sir? I’ll be very
good and proper now.”</p>
<p>“I shall hope so,” was all he said, but he meant more than she
imagined, and the grave, kind look he gave her made her feel as if the words
Weekly Volcano were printed in large type on her forehead.</p>
<p>As soon as she went to her room, she got out her papers, and carefully reread
every one of her stories. Being a little shortsighted, Mr. Bhaer sometimes used
eye glasses, and Jo had tried them once, smiling to see how they magnified the
fine print of her book. Now she seemed to have on the Professor’s mental
or moral spectacles also, for the faults of these poor stories glared at her
dreadfully and filled her with dismay.</p>
<p>“They are trash, and will soon be worse trash if I go on, for each is
more sensational than the last. I’ve gone blindly on, hurting myself and
other people, for the sake of money. I know it’s so, for I can’t
read this stuff in sober earnest without being horribly ashamed of it, and what
should I do if they were seen at home or Mr. Bhaer got hold of them?”</p>
<p>Jo turned hot at the bare idea, and stuffed the whole bundle into her stove,
nearly setting the chimney afire with the blaze.</p>
<p>“Yes, that’s the best place for such inflammable nonsense.
I’d better burn the house down, I suppose, than let other people blow
themselves up with my gunpowder,” she thought as she watched the Demon of
the Jura whisk away, a little black cinder with fiery eyes.</p>
<p>But when nothing remained of all her three month’s work except a heap of
ashes and the money in her lap, Jo looked sober, as she sat on the floor,
wondering what she ought to do about her wages.</p>
<p>“I think I haven’t done much harm yet, and may keep this to pay for
my time,” she said, after a long meditation, adding impatiently, “I
almost wish I hadn’t any conscience, it’s so inconvenient. If I
didn’t care about doing right, and didn’t feel uncomfortable when
doing wrong, I should get on capitally. I can’t help wishing sometimes,
that Mother and Father hadn’t been so particular about such
things.”</p>
<p>Ah, Jo, instead of wishing that, thank God that ‘Father and Mother were
particular’, and pity from your heart those who have no such guardians to
hedge them round with principles which may seem like prison walls to impatient
youth, but which will prove sure foundations to build character upon in
womanhood.</p>
<p>Jo wrote no more sensational stories, deciding that the money did not pay for
her share of the sensation, but going to the other extreme, as is the way with
people of her stamp, she took a course of Mrs. Sherwood, Miss Edgeworth, and
Hannah More, and then produced a tale which might have been more properly
called an essay or a sermon, so intensely moral was it. She had her doubts
about it from the beginning, for her lively fancy and girlish romance felt as
ill at ease in the new style as she would have done masquerading in the stiff
and cumbrous costume of the last century. She sent this didactic gem to several
markets, but it found no purchaser, and she was inclined to agree with Mr.
Dashwood that morals didn’t sell.</p>
<p>Then she tried a child’s story, which she could easily have disposed of
if she had not been mercenary enough to demand filthy lucre for it. The only
person who offered enough to make it worth her while to try juvenile literature
was a worthy gentleman who felt it his mission to convert all the world to his
particular belief. But much as she liked to write for children, Jo could not
consent to depict all her naughty boys as being eaten by bears or tossed by mad
bulls because they did not go to a particular Sabbath school, nor all the good
infants who did go as rewarded by every kind of bliss, from gilded gingerbread
to escorts of angels when they departed this life with psalms or sermons on
their lisping tongues. So nothing came of these trials, and Jo corked up her
inkstand, and said in a fit of very wholesome humility...</p>
<p>“I don’t know anything. I’ll wait until I do before I try
again, and meantime, ‘sweep mud in the street’ if I can’t do
better, that’s honest, at least.” Which decision proved that her
second tumble down the beanstalk had done her some good.</p>
<p>While these internal revolutions were going on, her external life had been as
busy and uneventful as usual, and if she sometimes looked serious or a little
sad no one observed it but Professor Bhaer. He did it so quietly that Jo never
knew he was watching to see if she would accept and profit by his reproof, but
she stood the test, and he was satisfied, for though no words passed between
them, he knew that she had given up writing. Not only did he guess it by the
fact that the second finger of her right hand was no longer inky, but she spent
her evenings downstairs now, was met no more among newspaper offices, and
studied with a dogged patience, which assured him that she was bent on
occupying her mind with something useful, if not pleasant.</p>
<p>He helped her in many ways, proving himself a true friend, and Jo was happy,
for while her pen lay idle, she was learning other lessons besides German, and
laying a foundation for the sensation story of her own life.</p>
<p>It was a pleasant winter and a long one, for she did not leave Mrs. Kirke till
June. Everyone seemed sorry when the time came. The children were inconsolable,
and Mr. Bhaer’s hair stuck straight up all over his head, for he always
rumpled it wildly when disturbed in mind.</p>
<p>“Going home? Ah, you are happy that you haf a home to go in,” he
said, when she told him, and sat silently pulling his beard in the corner,
while she held a little levee on that last evening.</p>
<p>She was going early, so she bade them all goodbye overnight, and when his turn
came, she said warmly, “Now, Sir, you won’t forget to come and see
us, if you ever travel our way, will you? I’ll never forgive you if you
do, for I want them all to know my friend.”</p>
<p>“Do you? Shall I come?” he asked, looking down at her with an eager
expression which she did not see.</p>
<p>“Yes, come next month. Laurie graduates then, and you’d enjoy
commencement as something new.”</p>
<p>“That is your best friend, of whom you speak?” he said in an
altered tone.</p>
<p>“Yes, my boy Teddy. I’m very proud of him and should like you to
see him.”</p>
<p>Jo looked up then, quite unconscious of anything but her own pleasure in the
prospect of showing them to one another. Something in Mr. Bhaer’s face
suddenly recalled the fact that she might find Laurie more than a ‘best
friend’, and simply because she particularly wished not to look as if
anything was the matter, she involuntarily began to blush, and the more she
tried not to, the redder she grew. If it had not been for Tina on her knee. She
didn’t know what would have become of her. Fortunately the child was
moved to hug her, so she managed to hide her face an instant, hoping the
Professor did not see it. But he did, and his own changed again from that
momentary anxiety to its usual expression, as he said cordially...</p>
<p>“I fear I shall not make the time for that, but I wish the friend much
success, and you all happiness. Gott bless you!” And with that, he shook
hands warmly, shouldered Tina, and went away.</p>
<p>But after the boys were abed, he sat long before his fire with the tired look
on his face and the ‘heimweh’, or homesickness, lying heavy at his
heart. Once, when he remembered Jo as she sat with the little child in her lap
and that new softness in her face, he leaned his head on his hands a minute,
and then roamed about the room, as if in search of something that he could not
find.</p>
<p>“It is not for me, I must not hope it now,” he said to himself,
with a sigh that was almost a groan. Then, as if reproaching himself for the
longing that he could not repress, he went and kissed the two tousled heads
upon the pillow, took down his seldom-used meerschaum, and opened his Plato.</p>
<p>He did his best and did it manfully, but I don’t think he found that a
pair of rampant boys, a pipe, or even the divine Plato, were very satisfactory
substitutes for wife and child at home.</p>
<p>Early as it was, he was at the station next morning to see Jo off, and thanks
to him, she began her solitary journey with the pleasant memory of a familiar
face smiling its farewell, a bunch of violets to keep her company, and best of
all, the happy thought, “Well, the winter’s gone, and I’ve
written no books, earned no fortune, but I’ve made a friend worth having
and I’ll try to keep him all my life.”</p>
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