<h2><SPAN name="chap47"></SPAN>CHAPTER FORTY-SEVEN<br/> HARVEST TIME</h2>
<p>For a year Jo and her Professor worked and waited, hoped and loved, met
occasionally, and wrote such voluminous letters that the rise in the price of
paper was accounted for, Laurie said. The second year began rather soberly, for
their prospects did not brighten, and Aunt March died suddenly. But when their
first sorrow was over—for they loved the old lady in spite of her sharp
tongue—they found they had cause for rejoicing, for she had left
Plumfield to Jo, which made all sorts of joyful things possible.</p>
<p>“It’s a fine old place, and will bring a handsome sum, for of
course you intend to sell it,” said Laurie, as they were all talking the
matter over some weeks later.</p>
<p>“No, I don’t,” was Jo’s decided answer, as she petted
the fat poodle, whom she had adopted, out of respect to his former mistress.</p>
<p>“You don’t mean to live there?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I do.”</p>
<p>“But, my dear girl, it’s an immense house, and will take a power of
money to keep it in order. The garden and orchard alone need two or three men,
and farming isn’t in Bhaer’s line, I take it.”</p>
<p>“He’ll try his hand at it there, if I propose it.”</p>
<p>“And you expect to live on the produce of the place? Well, that sounds
paradisiacal, but you’ll find it desperate hard work.”</p>
<p>“The crop we are going to raise is a profitable one,” and Jo
laughed.</p>
<p>“Of what is this fine crop to consist, ma’am?”</p>
<p>“Boys. I want to open a school for little lads—a good, happy,
homelike school, with me to take care of them and Fritz to teach them.”</p>
<p>“That’s a truly Joian plan for you! Isn’t that just like
her?” cried Laurie, appealing to the family, who looked as much surprised
as he.</p>
<p>“I like it,” said Mrs. March decidedly.</p>
<p>“So do I,” added her husband, who welcomed the thought of a chance
for trying the Socratic method of education on modern youth.</p>
<p>“It will be an immense care for Jo,” said Meg, stroking the head of
her one all-absorbing son.</p>
<p>“Jo can do it, and be happy in it. It’s a splendid idea. Tell us
all about it,” cried Mr. Laurence, who had been longing to lend the
lovers a hand, but knew that they would refuse his help.</p>
<p>“I knew you’d stand by me, sir. Amy does too—I see it in her
eyes, though she prudently waits to turn it over in her mind before she speaks.
Now, my dear people,” continued Jo earnestly, “just understand that
this isn’t a new idea of mine, but a long cherished plan. Before my Fritz
came, I used to think how, when I’d made my fortune, and no one needed me
at home, I’d hire a big house, and pick up some poor, forlorn little lads
who hadn’t any mothers, and take care of them, and make life jolly for
them before it was too late. I see so many going to ruin for want of help at
the right minute, I love so to do anything for them, I seem to feel their
wants, and sympathize with their troubles, and oh, I should so like to be a
mother to them!”</p>
<p>Mrs. March held out her hand to Jo, who took it, smiling, with tears in her
eyes, and went on in the old enthusiastic way, which they had not seen for a
long while.</p>
<p>“I told my plan to Fritz once, and he said it was just what he would
like, and agreed to try it when we got rich. Bless his dear heart, he’s
been doing it all his life—helping poor boys, I mean, not getting rich,
that he’ll never be. Money doesn’t stay in his pocket long enough
to lay up any. But now, thanks to my good old aunt, who loved me better than I
ever deserved, I’m rich, at least I feel so, and we can live at Plumfield
perfectly well, if we have a flourishing school. It’s just the place for
boys, the house is big, and the furniture strong and plain. There’s
plenty of room for dozens inside, and splendid grounds outside. They could help
in the garden and orchard. Such work is healthy, isn’t it, sir? Then
Fritz could train and teach in his own way, and Father will help him. I can
feed and nurse and pet and scold them, and Mother will be my stand-by.
I’ve always longed for lots of boys, and never had enough, now I can fill
the house full and revel in the little dears to my heart’s content. Think
what luxury— Plumfield my own, and a wilderness of boys to enjoy it with
me.”</p>
<p>As Jo waved her hands and gave a sigh of rapture, the family went off into a
gale of merriment, and Mr. Laurence laughed till they thought he’d have
an apoplectic fit.</p>
<p>“I don’t see anything funny,” she said gravely, when she
could be heard. “Nothing could be more natural and proper than for my
Professor to open a school, and for me to prefer to reside in my own
estate.”</p>
<p>“She is putting on airs already,” said Laurie, who regarded the
idea in the light of a capital joke. “But may I inquire how you intend to
support the establishment? If all the pupils are little ragamuffins, I’m
afraid your crop won’t be profitable in a worldly sense, Mrs.
Bhaer.”</p>
<p>“Now don’t be a wet-blanket, Teddy. Of course I shall have rich
pupils, also—perhaps begin with such altogether. Then, when I’ve
got a start, I can take in a ragamuffin or two, just for a relish. Rich
people’s children often need care and comfort, as well as poor.
I’ve seen unfortunate little creatures left to servants, or backward ones
pushed forward, when it’s real cruelty. Some are naughty through
mismanagment or neglect, and some lose their mothers. Besides, the best have to
get through the hobbledehoy age, and that’s the very time they need most
patience and kindness. People laugh at them, and hustle them about, try to keep
them out of sight, and expect them to turn all at once from pretty children
into fine young men. They don’t complain much—plucky little
souls—but they feel it. I’ve been through something of it, and I
know all about it. I’ve a special interest in such young bears, and like
to show them that I see the warm, honest, well-meaning boys’ hearts, in
spite of the clumsy arms and legs and the topsy-turvy heads. I’ve had
experience, too, for haven’t I brought up one boy to be a pride and honor
to his family?”</p>
<p>“I’ll testify that you tried to do it,” said Laurie with a
grateful look.</p>
<p>“And I’ve succeeded beyond my hopes, for here you are, a steady,
sensible businessman, doing heaps of good with your money, and laying up the
blessings of the poor, instead of dollars. But you are not merely a
businessman, you love good and beautiful things, enjoy them yourself, and let
others go halves, as you always did in the old times. I am proud of you, Teddy,
for you get better every year, and everyone feels it, though you won’t
let them say so. Yes, and when I have my flock, I’ll just point to you,
and say ‘There’s your model, my lads’.”</p>
<p>Poor Laurie didn’t know where to look, for, man though he was, something
of the old bashfulness came over him as this burst of praise made all faces
turn approvingly upon him.</p>
<p>“I say, Jo, that’s rather too much,” he began, just in his
old boyish way. “You have all done more for me than I can ever thank you
for, except by doing my best not to disappoint you. You have rather cast me off
lately, Jo, but I’ve had the best of help, nevertheless. So, if
I’ve got on at all, you may thank these two for it,” and he laid
one hand gently on his grandfather’s head, and the other on Amy’s
golden one, for the three were never far apart.</p>
<p>“I do think that families are the most beautiful things in all the
world!” burst out Jo, who was in an unusually up-lifted frame of mind
just then. “When I have one of my own, I hope it will be as happy as the
three I know and love the best. If John and my Fritz were only here, it would
be quite a little heaven on earth,” she added more quietly. And that
night when she went to her room after a blissful evening of family counsels,
hopes, and plans, her heart was so full of happiness that she could only calm
it by kneeling beside the empty bed always near her own, and thinking tender
thoughts of Beth.</p>
<p>It was a very astonishing year altogether, for things seemed to happen in an
unusually rapid and delightful manner. Almost before she knew where she was, Jo
found herself married and settled at Plumfield. Then a family of six or seven
boys sprung up like mushrooms, and flourished surprisingly, poor boys as well
as rich, for Mr. Laurence was continually finding some touching case of
destitution, and begging the Bhaers to take pity on the child, and he would
gladly pay a trifle for its support. In this way, the sly old gentleman got
round proud Jo, and furnished her with the style of boy in which she most
delighted.</p>
<p>Of course it was uphill work at first, and Jo made queer mistakes, but the wise
Professor steered her safely into calmer waters, and the most rampant
ragamuffin was conquered in the end. How Jo did enjoy her ‘wilderness of
boys’, and how poor, dear Aunt March would have lamented had she been
there to see the sacred precincts of prim, well-ordered Plumfield overrun with
Toms, Dicks, and Harrys! There was a sort of poetic justice about it, after
all, for the old lady had been the terror of the boys for miles around, and now
the exiles feasted freely on forbidden plums, kicked up the gravel with profane
boots unreproved, and played cricket in the big field where the irritable
‘cow with a crumpled horn’ used to invite rash youths to come and
be tossed. It became a sort of boys’ paradise, and Laurie suggested that
it should be called the ‘Bhaer-garten’, as a compliment to its
master and appropriate to its inhabitants.</p>
<p>It never was a fashionable school, and the Professor did not lay up a fortune,
but it was just what Jo intended it to be—‘a happy, homelike place
for boys, who needed teaching, care, and kindness’. Every room in the big
house was soon full. Every little plot in the garden soon had its owner. A
regular menagerie appeared in barn and shed, for pet animals were allowed. And
three times a day, Jo smiled at her Fritz from the head of a long table lined
on either side with rows of happy young faces, which all turned to her with
affectionate eyes, confiding words, and grateful hearts, full of love for
‘Mother Bhaer’. She had boys enough now, and did not tire of them,
though they were not angels, by any means, and some of them caused both
Professor and Professorin much trouble and anxiety. But her faith in the good
spot which exists in the heart of the naughtiest, sauciest, most tantalizing
little ragamuffin gave her patience, skill, and in time success, for no mortal
boy could hold out long with Father Bhaer shining on him as benevolently as the
sun, and Mother Bhaer forgiving him seventy times seven. Very precious to Jo
was the friendship of the lads, their penitent sniffs and whispers after
wrongdoing, their droll or touching little confidences, their pleasant
enthusiasms, hopes, and plans, even their misfortunes, for they only endeared
them to her all the more. There were slow boys and bashful boys, feeble boys
and riotous boys, boys that lisped and boys that stuttered, one or two lame
ones, and a merry little quadroon, who could not be taken in elsewhere, but who
was welcome to the ‘Bhaer-garten’, though some people predicted
that his admission would ruin the school.</p>
<p>Yes, Jo was a very happy woman there, in spite of hard work, much anxiety, and
a perpetual racket. She enjoyed it heartily and found the applause of her boys
more satisfying than any praise of the world, for now she told no stories
except to her flock of enthusiastic believers and admirers. As the years went
on, two little lads of her own came to increase her happiness—Rob, named
for Grandpa, and Teddy, a happy-go-lucky baby, who seemed to have inherited his
papa’s sunshiny temper as well as his mother’s lively spirit. How
they ever grew up alive in that whirlpool of boys was a mystery to their
grandma and aunts, but they flourished like dandelions in spring, and their
rough nurses loved and served them well.</p>
<p>There were a great many holidays at Plumfield, and one of the most delightful
was the yearly apple-picking. For then the Marches, Laurences, Brookes and
Bhaers turned out in full force and made a day of it. Five years after
Jo’s wedding, one of these fruitful festivals occurred, a mellow October
day, when the air was full of an exhilarating freshness which made the spirits
rise and the blood dance healthily in the veins. The old orchard wore its
holiday attire. Goldenrod and asters fringed the mossy walls. Grasshoppers
skipped briskly in the sere grass, and crickets chirped like fairy pipers at a
feast. Squirrels were busy with their small harvesting. Birds twittered their
adieux from the alders in the lane, and every tree stood ready to send down its
shower of red or yellow apples at the first shake. Everybody was there.
Everybody laughed and sang, climbed up and tumbled down. Everybody declared
that there never had been such a perfect day or such a jolly set to enjoy it,
and everyone gave themselves up to the simple pleasures of the hour as freely
as if there were no such things as care or sorrow in the world.</p>
<p>Mr. March strolled placidly about, quoting Tusser, Cowley, and Columella to Mr.
Laurence, while enjoying...</p>
<p>The gentle apple’s winey juice.</p>
<p>The Professor charged up and down the green aisles like a stout Teutonic
knight, with a pole for a lance, leading on the boys, who made a hook and
ladder company of themselves, and performed wonders in the way of ground and
lofty tumbling. Laurie devoted himself to the little ones, rode his small
daughter in a bushel-basket, took Daisy up among the bird’s nests, and
kept adventurous Rob from breaking his neck. Mrs. March and Meg sat among the
apple piles like a pair of Pomonas, sorting the contributions that kept pouring
in, while Amy with a beautiful motherly expression in her face sketched the
various groups, and watched over one pale lad, who sat adoring her with his
little crutch beside him.</p>
<p>Jo was in her element that day, and rushed about, with her gown pinned up, and
her hat anywhere but on her head, and her baby tucked under her arm, ready for
any lively adventure which might turn up. Little Teddy bore a charmed life, for
nothing ever happened to him, and Jo never felt any anxiety when he was whisked
up into a tree by one lad, galloped off on the back of another, or supplied
with sour russets by his indulgent papa, who labored under the Germanic
delusion that babies could digest anything, from pickled cabbage to buttons,
nails, and their own small shoes. She knew that little Ted would turn up again
in time, safe and rosy, dirty and serene, and she always received him back with
a hearty welcome, for Jo loved her babies tenderly.</p>
<p>At four o’clock a lull took place, and baskets remained empty, while the
apple pickers rested and compared rents and bruises. Then Jo and Meg, with a
detachment of the bigger boys, set forth the supper on the grass, for an
out-of-door tea was always the crowning joy of the day. The land literally
flowed with milk and honey on such occasions, for the lads were not required to
sit at table, but allowed to partake of refreshment as they liked—freedom
being the sauce best beloved by the boyish soul. They availed themselves of the
rare privilege to the fullest extent, for some tried the pleasing experiment of
drinking milk while standing on their heads, others lent a charm to leapfrog by
eating pie in the pauses of the game, cookies were sown broadcast over the
field, and apple turnovers roosted in the trees like a new style of bird. The
little girls had a private tea party, and Ted roved among the edibles at his
own sweet will.</p>
<p>When no one could eat any more, the Professor proposed the first regular toast,
which was always drunk at such times—“Aunt March, God bless
her!” A toast heartily given by the good man, who never forgot how much
he owed her, and quietly drunk by the boys, who had been taught to keep her
memory green.</p>
<p>“Now, Grandma’s sixtieth birthday! Long life to her, with three
times three!”</p>
<p>That was given with a will, as you may well believe, and the cheering once
begun, it was hard to stop it. Everybody’s health was proposed, from Mr.
Laurence, who was considered their special patron, to the astonished guinea
pig, who had strayed from its proper sphere in search of its young master.
Demi, as the oldest grandchild, then presented the queen of the day with
various gifts, so numerous that they were transported to the festive scene in a
wheelbarrow. Funny presents, some of them, but what would have been defects to
other eyes were ornaments to Grandma’s—for the children’s
gifts were all their own. Every stitch Daisy’s patient little fingers had
put into the handkerchiefs she hemmed was better than embroidery to Mrs. March.
Demi’s miracle of mechanical skill, though the cover wouldn’t shut,
Rob’s footstool had a wiggle in its uneven legs that she declared was
soothing, and no page of the costly book Amy’s child gave her was so fair
as that on which appeared in tipsy capitals, the words—“To dear
Grandma, from her little Beth.”</p>
<p>During the ceremony the boys had mysteriously disappeared, and when Mrs. March
had tried to thank her children, and broken down, while Teddy wiped her eyes on
his pinafore, the Professor suddenly began to sing. Then, from above him, voice
after voice took up the words, and from tree to tree echoed the music of the
unseen choir, as the boys sang with all their hearts the little song that Jo
had written, Laurie set to music, and the Professor trained his lads to give
with the best effect. This was something altogether new, and it proved a grand
success, for Mrs. March couldn’t get over her surprise, and insisted on
shaking hands with every one of the featherless birds, from tall Franz and Emil
to the little quadroon, who had the sweetest voice of all.</p>
<p>After this, the boys dispersed for a final lark, leaving Mrs. March and her
daughters under the festival tree.</p>
<p>“I don’t think I ever ought to call myself ‘unlucky Jo’
again, when my greatest wish has been so beautifully gratified,” said
Mrs. Bhaer, taking Teddy’s little fist out of the milk pitcher, in which
he was rapturously churning.</p>
<p>“And yet your life is very different from the one you pictured so long
ago. Do you remember our castles in the air?” asked Amy, smiling as she
watched Laurie and John playing cricket with the boys.</p>
<p>“Dear fellows! It does my heart good to see them forget business and
frolic for a day,” answered Jo, who now spoke in a maternal way of all
mankind. “Yes, I remember, but the life I wanted then seems selfish,
lonely, and cold to me now. I haven’t given up the hope that I may write
a good book yet, but I can wait, and I’m sure it will be all the better
for such experiences and illustrations as these,” and Jo pointed from the
lively lads in the distance to her father, leaning on the Professor’s
arm, as they walked to and fro in the sunshine, deep in one of the
conversations which both enjoyed so much, and then to her mother, sitting
enthroned among her daughters, with their children in her lap and at her feet,
as if all found help and happiness in the face which never could grow old to
them.</p>
<p>“My castle was the most nearly realized of all. I asked for splendid
things, to be sure, but in my heart I knew I should be satisfied, if I had a
little home, and John, and some dear children like these. I’ve got them
all, thank God, and am the happiest woman in the world,” and Meg laid her
hand on her tall boy’s head, with a face full of tender and devout
content.</p>
<p>“My castle is very different from what I planned, but I would not alter
it, though, like Jo, I don’t relinquish all my artistic hopes, or confine
myself to helping others fulfill their dreams of beauty. I’ve begun to
model a figure of baby, and Laurie says it is the best thing I’ve ever
done. I think so, myself, and mean to do it in marble, so that, whatever
happens, I may at least keep the image of my little angel.”</p>
<p>As Amy spoke, a great tear dropped on the golden hair of the sleeping child in
her arms, for her one well-beloved daughter was a frail little creature and the
dread of losing her was the shadow over Amy’s sunshine. This cross was
doing much for both father and mother, for one love and sorrow bound them
closely together. Amy’s nature was growing sweeter, deeper, and more
tender. Laurie was growing more serious, strong, and firm, and both were
learning that beauty, youth, good fortune, even love itself, cannot keep care
and pain, loss and sorrow, from the most blessed for ...</p>
<p class="poem">
Into each life some rain must fall,<br/>
Some days must be dark and sad and dreary.</p>
<p>“She is growing better, I am sure of it, my dear. Don’t despond,
but hope and keep happy,” said Mrs. March, as tenderhearted Daisy stooped
from her knee to lay her rosy cheek against her little cousin’s pale one.</p>
<p>“I never ought to, while I have you to cheer me up, Marmee, and Laurie to
take more than half of every burden,” replied Amy warmly. “He never
lets me see his anxiety, but is so sweet and patient with me, so devoted to
Beth, and such a stay and comfort to me always that I can’t love him
enough. So, in spite of my one cross, I can say with Meg, ‘Thank God,
I’m a happy woman.’”</p>
<p>“There’s no need for me to say it, for everyone can see that
I’m far happier than I deserve,” added Jo, glancing from her good
husband to her chubby children, tumbling on the grass beside her. “Fritz
is getting gray and stout. I’m growing as thin as a shadow, and am
thirty. We never shall be rich, and Plumfield may burn up any night, for that
incorrigible Tommy Bangs will smoke sweet-fern cigars under the bed-clothes,
though he’s set himself afire three times already. But in spite of these
unromantic facts, I have nothing to complain of, and never was so jolly in my
life. Excuse the remark, but living among boys, I can’t help using their
expressions now and then.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Jo, I think your harvest will be a good one,” began Mrs.
March, frightening away a big black cricket that was staring Teddy out of
countenance.</p>
<p>“Not half so good as yours, Mother. Here it is, and we never can thank
you enough for the patient sowing and reaping you have done,” cried Jo,
with the loving impetuosity which she never would outgrow.</p>
<p>“I hope there will be more wheat and fewer tares every year,” said
Amy softly.</p>
<p>“A large sheaf, but I know there’s room in your heart for it,
Marmee dear,” added Meg’s tender voice.</p>
<p>Touched to the heart, Mrs. March could only stretch out her arms, as if to
gather children and grandchildren to herself, and say, with face and voice full
of motherly love, gratitude, and humility...</p>
<p>“Oh, my girls, however long you may live, I never can wish you a greater
happiness than this!”</p>
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