<h2>A FOREWORD BY MEG.</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">In</span> the good old times, when "Little Women"
worked and played together, the big garret
was the scene of many dramatic revels. After
a long day of teaching, sewing, and "helping
mother," the greatest delight of the girls was
to transform themselves into queens, knights,
and cavaliers of high degree, and ascend into a
world of fancy and romance. Cinderella's godmother
waved her wand, and the dismal room
became a fairy-land. Flowers bloomed, forests
arose, music sounded, and lovers exchanged
their vows by moonlight. Nothing was too
ambitious to attempt; armor, gondolas, harps,
towers, and palaces grew as if by magic, and
wonderful scenes of valor and devotion were
enacted before admiring audiences.</p>
<p>Jo, of course, played the villains, ghosts,
bandits, and disdainful queens; for her tragedy-loving
soul delighted in the lurid parts, and no
drama was perfect in her eyes without a touch
of the demonic or supernatural. Meg loved the
sentimental r�les, the tender maiden with the
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 8]</span>
airy robes and flowing locks, who made impossible
sacrifices for ideal lovers, or the cavalier,
singing soft serenades and performing lofty acts
of gallantry and prowess. Amy was the fairy
sprite, while Beth enacted the page or messenger
when the scene required their aid.</p>
<p>But the most surprising part of the performance
was the length of the cast and the size
of the company; for Jo and Meg usually acted
the whole play, each often assuming five or six
characters, and with rapid change of dress becoming,
in one scene, a witch, a soldier, a beauteous
lady, and a haughty noble. This peculiar
arrangement accounts for many queer devices,
and the somewhat singular fact that each scene
offers but two actors, who vanish and reappear
at most inopportune moments, and in a great
variety of costume. Long speeches were introduced
to allow a ruffian to become a priest, or
a lovely damsel to disguise herself in the garb
of a sorceress; while great skill was required to
preserve the illusion, and astonish the audience
by these wonderful transformations.</p>
<p>The young amateur of to-day, who can easily
call to her aid all the arts of the costumer
and scene-maker, will find it hard to understand
the difficulties of this little company; for not
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 9]</span>
only did they compose their plays, but they
were also their own carpenters, scene-painters,
property-men, dress-makers, and managers. In
place of a well-appointed stage, with the brilliant
lights and inspiring accessories of a mimic
theatre, the "Little Women" had a gloomy
garret or empty barn, and were obliged to
exercise all their ingenuity to present the scenes
of their ambitious dramas.</p>
<p>But it is surprising what fine effects can be
produced with old sheets, bright draperies, and
a judicious arrangement of lights, garlands, and
picturesque properties; and Jo's dramatic taste
made her an admirable stage-manager. Meg
was especially handy with saw and hammer, and
acted as stage-carpenter,—building balconies,
thrones, boats, and towers after peculiar designs
of her own. Bureaus, tables, and chairs,
piled aloft and arched with dark shawls, made
dungeon walls and witch's cave, or formed a
background for haunted forest and lonely glen.
Screens of white cloth furnished canvas on
which little Amy's skilful hand depicted palace
halls, or romantic scene for lovers' tryst; and
Beth's deft fingers were most apt in constructing
properties for stage adornment, and
transforming the frailest material into dazzling
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 10]</span>
raiment. For the costumes were a serious consideration.
No money could be spared from the
slender purse to supply the wardrobes of these
aspiring actors, and many were the devices to
clothe the little company.</p>
<p>Thus a robe in one scene became a cloak
in the next, and the drapery of a couch in the
third; while a bit of lace served as mantle, veil,
or turban, as best suited the turn of the play.
Hats covered with old velvet, and adorned with
feathers plucked from the duster, made most
effective headgear for gay cavalier or tragic
villain. From colored cotton were manufactured
fine Greek tunics and flowing trains; and
remarkable court costumes were evolved from
an old sofa-covering, which had seen better days,
and boasted a little gold thread and embroidery.</p>
<p>Stars of tin, sewed upon dark cambric, made
a suit of shining armor. Sandals were cut from
old boots. Strips of wood and silver paper were
fashioned into daggers, swords, and spears,
while from cardboard were created helmets,
harps, guitars, and antique lamps, that were
considered masterpieces of stage art.</p>
<p>Everything available was pressed into service;
colored paper, odds and ends of ribbon, even
tin cans and their bright wrappings were treasures
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 11]</span>
to the young actors, and all reappeared as
splendid properties.</p>
<p>At first a store of red curtains, some faded
brocades, and ancient shawls comprised the
stage wardrobe; but as the fame of the performances
spread abroad, contributions were made
to the little stock, and the girls became the
proud possessors of a velvet robe, a plumed hat
adorned with silver, long yellow boots, and a
quantity of mock pearls and tinsel ornaments.</p>
<p>Such wealth determined them to write a play
which should surpass all former efforts, give Jo
a chance to stalk haughtily upon the stage in
the magnificent boots, and Meg to appear in
gorgeous train and diadem of jewels.</p>
<p>"The Witch's Curse" was the result, and it
was produced with astounding effect, quite paralyzing
the audience by its splendid gloom.
Jo called it the "lurid drama," and always
considered it her masterpiece. But it cost
hours of thought and labor; for to construct a
dungeon, a haunted chamber, a cavern, and a
lonely forest taxed to the uttermost the ingenuity
of the actors. To introduce into one short
scene a bandit, two cavaliers, a witch, and a
fairy spirit—all enacted by two people—required
some skill, and lightning change of
<span class="pagenum">[Pg 12]</span>
costume. To call up the ghostly visions and
mysterious voices which should appall the guilty
Count Rodolpho, was a task of no small difficulty.
But inspired by the desire to outshine themselves,
the children accomplished a play full
of revenge, jealousy, murder, and sorcery, of
all which indeed they knew nothing but the
name.</p>
<p>Hitherto their dramas had been of the most
sentimental description, given to the portrayal
of woman's devotion, filial affection, heroism,
and self-sacrifice. Indeed, these "Comic Tragedies"
with their highflown romance and fantastic
ideas of love and honor, are most characteristic
of the young girls whose lives were singularly
free from the experiences of many maidens of
their age.</p>
<p>Of the world they knew nothing; lovers
were ideal beings, clothed with all the beauty
of their innocent imaginations. Love was a
blissful dream; constancy, truth, courage, and
virtue quite every-day affairs of life. Their few
novels furnished the romantic element; the
favorite fairy-tales gave them material for the
supernatural; and their strong dramatic taste
enabled them to infuse both fire and pathos into
their absurd situations.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum">[Pg 13]</span>
Jo revelled in catastrophe, and the darker
scenes were her delight; but she usually required
Meg to "do the love-part," which she
considered quite beneath her pen. Thus their
productions were a queer mixture of sentiment
and adventure, with entire disregard of such
matters as grammar, history, and geography,—all
of which were deemed of no importance by
these aspiring dramatists.</p>
<p>From the little stage library, still extant, the
following plays have been selected as fair examples
of the work of these children of sixteen
and seventeen. With some slight changes and
omissions, they remain as written more than
forty years ago by Meg and Jo, so dear to the
hearts of many other "Little Women."</p>
<p><span class="smcap">Concord, Mass., 1893.</span></p>
<hr class="hr2"/>
<div class="figcenter"> <ANTIMG src="images/016.jpg" width-obs="587" height-obs="400" alt="THE THEATRE OF 1848." title="" /> <span class="caption">THE THEATRE OF 1848.</span></div>
<p>"Those Concord days were the happiest of my life. Plays in the barn were a favorite amusement."</p>
<p class="right"><i>L. M. Alcott.</i></p>
<hr class="hr2"/>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Pg_17" id="Pg_17"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />