<h2><SPAN name="chap29"></SPAN>CHAPTER TWENTY-NINE<br/> CALLS</h2>
<p>“Come, Jo, it’s time.”</p>
<p>“For what?”</p>
<p>“You don’t mean to say you have forgotten that you promised to make
half a dozen calls with me today?”</p>
<p>“I’ve done a good many rash and foolish things in my life, but I
don’t think I ever was mad enough to say I’d make six calls in one
day, when a single one upsets me for a week.”</p>
<p>“Yes, you did, it was a bargain between us. I was to finish the crayon of
Beth for you, and you were to go properly with me, and return our
neighbors’ visits.”</p>
<p>“If it was fair, that was in the bond, and I stand to the letter of my
bond, Shylock. There is a pile of clouds in the east, it’s not fair, and
I don’t go.”</p>
<p>“Now, that’s shirking. It’s a lovely day, no prospect of
rain, and you pride yourself on keeping promises, so be honorable, come and do
your duty, and then be at peace for another six months.”</p>
<p>At that minute Jo was particularly absorbed in dressmaking, for she was
mantua-maker general to the family, and took especial credit to herself because
she could use a needle as well as a pen. It was very provoking to be arrested
in the act of a first trying-on, and ordered out to make calls in her best
array on a warm July day. She hated calls of the formal sort, and never made
any till Amy compelled her with a bargain, bribe, or promise. In the present
instance there was no escape, and having clashed her scissors rebelliously,
while protesting that she smelled thunder, she gave in, put away her work, and
taking up her hat and gloves with an air of resignation, told Amy the victim
was ready.</p>
<p>“Jo March, you are perverse enough to provoke a saint! You don’t
intend to make calls in that state, I hope,” cried Amy, surveying her
with amazement.</p>
<p>“Why not? I’m neat and cool and comfortable, quite proper for a
dusty walk on a warm day. If people care more for my clothes than they do for
me, I don’t wish to see them. You can dress for both, and be as elegant
as you please. It pays for you to be fine. It doesn’t for me, and
furbelows only worry me.”</p>
<p>“Oh, dear!” sighed Amy, “now she’s in a contrary fit,
and will drive me distracted before I can get her properly ready. I’m
sure it’s no pleasure to me to go today, but it’s a debt we owe
society, and there’s no one to pay it but you and me. I’ll do
anything for you, Jo, if you’ll only dress yourself nicely, and come and
help me do the civil. You can talk so well, look so aristocratic in your best
things, and behave so beautifully, if you try, that I’m proud of you.
I’m afraid to go alone, do come and take care of me.”</p>
<p>“You’re an artful little puss to flatter and wheedle your cross old
sister in that way. The idea of my being aristocratic and well-bred, and your
being afraid to go anywhere alone! I don’t know which is the most absurd.
Well, I’ll go if I must, and do my best. You shall be commander of the
expedition, and I’ll obey blindly, will that satisfy you?” said Jo,
with a sudden change from perversity to lamblike submission.</p>
<p>“You’re a perfect cherub! Now put on all your best things, and
I’ll tell you how to behave at each place, so that you will make a good
impression. I want people to like you, and they would if you’d only try
to be a little more agreeable. Do your hair the pretty way, and put the pink
rose in your bonnet. It’s becoming, and you look too sober in your plain
suit. Take your light gloves and the embroidered handkerchief. We’ll stop
at Meg’s, and borrow her white sunshade, and then you can have my
dove-colored one.”</p>
<p>While Amy dressed, she issued her orders, and Jo obeyed them, not without
entering her protest, however, for she sighed as she rustled into her new
organdie, frowned darkly at herself as she tied her bonnet strings in an
irreproachable bow, wrestled viciously with pins as she put on her collar,
wrinkled up her features generally as she shook out the handkerchief, whose
embroidery was as irritating to her nose as the present mission was to her
feelings, and when she had squeezed her hands into tight gloves with three
buttons and a tassel, as the last touch of elegance, she turned to Amy with an
imbecile expression of countenance, saying meekly...</p>
<p>“I’m perfectly miserable, but if you consider me presentable, I die
happy.”</p>
<p>“You’re highly satisfactory. Turn slowly round, and let me get a
careful view.” Jo revolved, and Amy gave a touch here and there, then
fell back, with her head on one side, observing graciously, “Yes,
you’ll do. Your head is all I could ask, for that white bonnet with the
rose is quite ravishing. Hold back your shoulders, and carry your hands easily,
no matter if your gloves do pinch. There’s one thing you can do well, Jo,
that is, wear a shawl. I can’t, but it’s very nice to see you, and
I’m so glad Aunt March gave you that lovely one. It’s simple, but
handsome, and those folds over the arm are really artistic. Is the point of my
mantle in the middle, and have I looped my dress evenly? I like to show my
boots, for my feet are pretty, though my nose isn’t.”</p>
<p>“You are a thing of beauty and a joy forever,” said Jo, looking
through her hand with the air of a connoisseur at the blue feather against the
golden hair. “Am I to drag my best dress through the dust, or loop it up,
please, ma’am?”</p>
<p>“Hold it up when you walk, but drop it in the house. The sweeping style
suits you best, and you must learn to trail your skirts gracefully. You
haven’t half buttoned one cuff, do it at once. You’ll never look
finished if you are not careful about the little details, for they make up the
pleasing whole.”</p>
<p>Jo sighed, and proceeded to burst the buttons off her glove, in doing up her
cuff, but at last both were ready, and sailed away, looking as ‘pretty as
picters’, Hannah said, as she hung out of the upper window to watch them.</p>
<p>“Now, Jo dear, the Chesters consider themselves very elegant people, so I
want you to put on your best deportment. Don’t make any of your abrupt
remarks, or do anything odd, will you? Just be calm, cool, and quiet,
that’s safe and ladylike, and you can easily do it for fifteen
minutes,” said Amy, as they approached the first place, having borrowed
the white parasol and been inspected by Meg, with a baby on each arm.</p>
<p>“Let me see. ‘Calm, cool, and quiet’, yes, I think I can
promise that. I’ve played the part of a prim young lady on the stage, and
I’ll try it off. My powers are great, as you shall see, so be easy in
your mind, my child.”</p>
<p>Amy looked relieved, but naughty Jo took her at her word, for during the first
call she sat with every limb gracefully composed, every fold correctly draped,
calm as a summer sea, cool as a snowbank, and as silent as the sphinx. In vain
Mrs. Chester alluded to her ‘charming novel’, and the Misses
Chester introduced parties, picnics, the opera, and the fashions. Each and all
were answered by a smile, a bow, and a demure “Yes” or
“No” with the chill on. In vain Amy telegraphed the word
‘talk’, tried to draw her out, and administered covert pokes with
her foot. Jo sat as if blandly unconscious of it all, with deportment like
Maud’s face, ‘icily regular, splendidly null’.</p>
<p>“What a haughty, uninteresting creature that oldest Miss March is!”
was the unfortunately audible remark of one of the ladies, as the door closed
upon their guests. Jo laughed noiselessly all through the hall, but Amy looked
disgusted at the failure of her instructions, and very naturally laid the blame
upon Jo.</p>
<p>“How could you mistake me so? I merely meant you to be properly dignified
and composed, and you made yourself a perfect stock and stone. Try to be
sociable at the Lambs’. Gossip as other girls do, and be interested in
dress and flirtations and whatever nonsense comes up. They move in the best
society, are valuable persons for us to know, and I wouldn’t fail to make
a good impression there for anything.”</p>
<p>“I’ll be agreeable. I’ll gossip and giggle, and have horrors
and raptures over any trifle you like. I rather enjoy this, and now I’ll
imitate what is called ‘a charming girl’. I can do it, for I have
May Chester as a model, and I’ll improve upon her. See if the Lambs
don’t say, ‘What a lively, nice creature that Jo March is!”</p>
<p>Amy felt anxious, as well she might, for when Jo turned freakish there was no
knowing where she would stop. Amy’s face was a study when she saw her
sister skim into the next drawing room, kiss all the young ladies with
effusion, beam graciously upon the young gentlemen, and join in the chat with a
spirit which amazed the beholder. Amy was taken possession of by Mrs. Lamb,
with whom she was a favorite, and forced to hear a long account of
Lucretia’s last attack, while three delightful young gentlemen hovered
near, waiting for a pause when they might rush in and rescue her. So situated,
she was powerless to check Jo, who seemed possessed by a spirit of mischief,
and talked away as volubly as the lady. A knot of heads gathered about her, and
Amy strained her ears to hear what was going on, for broken sentences filled
her with curiosity, and frequent peals of laughter made her wild to share the
fun. One may imagine her suffering on overhearing fragments of this sort of
conversation.</p>
<p>“She rides splendidly. Who taught her?”</p>
<p>“No one. She used to practice mounting, holding the reins, and sitting
straight on an old saddle in a tree. Now she rides anything, for she
doesn’t know what fear is, and the stableman lets her have horses cheap
because she trains them to carry ladies so well. She has such a passion for it,
I often tell her if everything else fails, she can be a horsebreaker, and get
her living so.”</p>
<p>At this awful speech Amy contained herself with difficulty, for the impression
was being given that she was rather a fast young lady, which was her especial
aversion. But what could she do? For the old lady was in the middle of her
story, and long before it was done, Jo was off again, making more droll
revelations and committing still more fearful blunders.</p>
<p>“Yes, Amy was in despair that day, for all the good beasts were gone, and
of three left, one was lame, one blind, and the other so balky that you had to
put dirt in his mouth before he would start. Nice animal for a pleasure party,
wasn’t it?”</p>
<p>“Which did she choose?” asked one of the laughing gentlemen, who
enjoyed the subject.</p>
<p>“None of them. She heard of a young horse at the farm house over the
river, and though a lady had never ridden him, she resolved to try, because he
was handsome and spirited. Her struggles were really pathetic. There was no one
to bring the horse to the saddle, so she took the saddle to the horse. My dear
creature, she actually rowed it over the river, put it on her head, and marched
up to the barn to the utter amazement of the old man!”</p>
<p>“Did she ride the horse?”</p>
<p>“Of course she did, and had a capital time. I expected to see her brought
home in fragments, but she managed him perfectly, and was the life of the
party.”</p>
<p>“Well, I call that plucky!” and young Mr. Lamb turned an approving
glance upon Amy, wondering what his mother could be saying to make the girl
look so red and uncomfortable.</p>
<p>She was still redder and more uncomfortable a moment after, when a sudden turn
in the conversation introduced the subject of dress. One of the young ladies
asked Jo where she got the pretty drab hat she wore to the picnic and stupid
Jo, instead of mentioning the place where it was bought two years ago, must
needs answer with unnecessary frankness, “Oh, Amy painted it. You
can’t buy those soft shades, so we paint ours any color we like.
It’s a great comfort to have an artistic sister.”</p>
<p>“Isn’t that an original idea?” cried Miss Lamb, who found Jo
great fun.</p>
<p>“That’s nothing compared to some of her brilliant performances.
There’s nothing the child can’t do. Why, she wanted a pair of blue
boots for Sallie’s party, so she just painted her soiled white ones the
loveliest shade of sky blue you ever saw, and they looked exactly like
satin,” added Jo, with an air of pride in her sister’s
accomplishments that exasperated Amy till she felt that it would be a relief to
throw her cardcase at her.</p>
<p>“We read a story of yours the other day, and enjoyed it very much,”
observed the elder Miss Lamb, wishing to compliment the literary lady, who did
not look the character just then, it must be confessed.</p>
<p>Any mention of her ‘works’ always had a bad effect upon Jo, who
either grew rigid and looked offended, or changed the subject with a brusque
remark, as now. “Sorry you could find nothing better to read. I write
that rubbish because it sells, and ordinary people like it. Are you going to
New York this winter?”</p>
<p>As Miss Lamb had ‘enjoyed’ the story, this speech was not exactly
grateful or complimentary. The minute it was made Jo saw her mistake, but
fearing to make the matter worse, suddenly remembered that it was for her to
make the first move toward departure, and did so with an abruptness that left
three people with half-finished sentences in their mouths.</p>
<p>“Amy, we must go. Good-by, dear, do come and see us. We are pining for a
visit. I don’t dare to ask you, Mr. Lamb, but if you should come, I
don’t think I shall have the heart to send you away.”</p>
<p>Jo said this with such a droll imitation of May Chester’s gushing style
that Amy got out of the room as rapidly as possible, feeling a strong desire to
laugh and cry at the same time.</p>
<p>“Didn’t I do well?” asked Jo, with a satisfied air as they
walked away.</p>
<p>“Nothing could have been worse,” was Amy’s crushing reply.
“What possessed you to tell those stories about my saddle, and the hats
and boots, and all the rest of it?”</p>
<p>“Why, it’s funny, and amuses people. They know we are poor, so
it’s no use pretending that we have grooms, buy three or four hats a
season, and have things as easy and fine as they do.”</p>
<p>“You needn’t go and tell them all our little shifts, and expose our
poverty in that perfectly unnecessary way. You haven’t a bit of proper
pride, and never will learn when to hold your tongue and when to speak,”
said Amy despairingly.</p>
<p>Poor Jo looked abashed, and silently chafed the end of her nose with the stiff
handkerchief, as if performing a penance for her misdemeanors.</p>
<p>“How shall I behave here?” she asked, as they approached the third
mansion.</p>
<p>“Just as you please. I wash my hands of you,” was Amy’s short
answer.</p>
<p>“Then I’ll enjoy myself. The boys are at home, and we’ll have
a comfortable time. Goodness knows I need a little change, for elegance has a
bad effect upon my constitution,” returned Jo gruffly, being disturbed by
her failure to suit.</p>
<p>An enthusiastic welcome from three big boys and several pretty children
speedily soothed her ruffled feelings, and leaving Amy to entertain the hostess
and Mr. Tudor, who happened to be calling likewise, Jo devoted herself to the
young folks and found the change refreshing. She listened to college stories
with deep interest, caressed pointers and poodles without a murmur, agreed
heartily that “Tom Brown was a brick,” regardless of the improper
form of praise, and when one lad proposed a visit to his turtle tank, she went
with an alacrity which caused Mamma to smile upon her, as that motherly lady
settled the cap which was left in a ruinous condition by filial hugs, bearlike
but affectionate, and dearer to her than the most faultless coiffure from the
hands of an inspired Frenchwoman.</p>
<p>Leaving her sister to her own devices, Amy proceeded to enjoy herself to her
heart’s content. Mr. Tudor’s uncle had married an English lady who
was third cousin to a living lord, and Amy regarded the whole family with great
respect, for in spite of her American birth and breeding, she possessed that
reverence for titles which haunts the best of us—that unacknowledged
loyalty to the early faith in kings which set the most democratic nation under
the sun in ferment at the coming of a royal yellow-haired laddie, some years
ago, and which still has something to do with the love the young country bears
the old, like that of a big son for an imperious little mother, who held him
while she could, and let him go with a farewell scolding when he rebelled. But
even the satisfaction of talking with a distant connection of the British
nobility did not render Amy forgetful of time, and when the proper number of
minutes had passed, she reluctantly tore herself from this aristocratic
society, and looked about for Jo, fervently hoping that her incorrigible sister
would not be found in any position which should bring disgrace upon the name of
March.</p>
<p>It might have been worse, but Amy considered it bad. For Jo sat on the grass,
with an encampment of boys about her, and a dirty-footed dog reposing on the
skirt of her state and festival dress, as she related one of Laurie’s
pranks to her admiring audience. One small child was poking turtles with
Amy’s cherished parasol, a second was eating gingerbread over Jo’s
best bonnet, and a third playing ball with her gloves, but all were enjoying
themselves, and when Jo collected her damaged property to go, her escort
accompanied her, begging her to come again, “It was such fun to hear
about Laurie’s larks.”</p>
<p>“Capital boys, aren’t they? I feel quite young and brisk again
after that.” said Jo, strolling along with her hands behind her, partly
from habit, partly to conceal the bespattered parasol.</p>
<p>“Why do you always avoid Mr. Tudor?” asked Amy, wisely refraining
from any comment upon Jo’s dilapidated appearance.</p>
<p>“Don’t like him, he puts on airs, snubs his sisters, worries his
father, and doesn’t speak respectfully of his mother. Laurie says he is
fast, and I don’t consider him a desirable acquaintance, so I let him
alone.”</p>
<p>“You might treat him civilly, at least. You gave him a cool nod, and just
now you bowed and smiled in the politest way to Tommy Chamberlain, whose father
keeps a grocery store. If you had just reversed the nod and the bow, it would
have been right,” said Amy reprovingly.</p>
<p>“No, it wouldn’t,” returned Jo, “I neither like,
respect, nor admire Tudor, though his grandfather’s uncle’s
nephew’s niece was a third cousin to a lord. Tommy is poor and bashful
and good and very clever. I think well of him, and like to show that I do, for
he is a gentleman in spite of the brown paper parcels.”</p>
<p>“It’s no use trying to argue with you,” began Amy.</p>
<p>“Not the least, my dear,” interrupted Jo, “so let us look
amiable, and drop a card here, as the Kings are evidently out, for which
I’m deeply grateful.”</p>
<p>The family cardcase having done its duty the girls walked on, and Jo uttered
another thanksgiving on reaching the fifth house, and being told that the young
ladies were engaged.</p>
<p>“Now let us go home, and never mind Aunt March today. We can run down
there any time, and it’s really a pity to trail through the dust in our
best bibs and tuckers, when we are tired and cross.”</p>
<p>“Speak for yourself, if you please. Aunt March likes to have us pay her
the compliment of coming in style, and making a formal call. It’s a
little thing to do, but it gives her pleasure, and I don’t believe it
will hurt your things half so much as letting dirty dogs and clumping boys
spoil them. Stoop down, and let me take the crumbs off of your bonnet.”</p>
<p>“What a good girl you are, Amy!” said Jo, with a repentant glance
from her own damaged costume to that of her sister, which was fresh and
spotless still. “I wish it was as easy for me to do little things to
please people as it is for you. I think of them, but it takes too much time to
do them, so I wait for a chance to confer a great favor, and let the small ones
slip, but they tell best in the end, I fancy.”</p>
<p>Amy smiled and was mollified at once, saying with a maternal air, “Women
should learn to be agreeable, particularly poor ones, for they have no other
way of repaying the kindnesses they receive. If you’d remember that, and
practice it, you’d be better liked than I am, because there is more of
you.”</p>
<p>“I’m a crotchety old thing, and always shall be, but I’m
willing to own that you are right, only it’s easier for me to risk my
life for a person than to be pleasant to him when I don’t feel like it.
It’s a great misfortune to have such strong likes and dislikes,
isn’t it?”</p>
<p>“It’s a greater not to be able to hide them. I don’t mind
saying that I don’t approve of Tudor any more than you do, but I’m
not called upon to tell him so. Neither are you, and there is no use in making
yourself disagreeable because he is.”</p>
<p>“But I think girls ought to show when they disapprove of young men, and
how can they do it except by their manners? Preaching does not do any good, as
I know to my sorrow, since I’ve had Teddie to manage. But there are many
little ways in which I can influence him without a word, and I say we ought to
do it to others if we can.”</p>
<p>“Teddy is a remarkable boy, and can’t be taken as a sample of other
boys,” said Amy, in a tone of solemn conviction, which would have
convulsed the ‘remarkable boy’ if he had heard it. “If we
were belles, or women of wealth and position, we might do something, perhaps,
but for us to frown at one set of young gentlemen because we don’t
approve of them, and smile upon another set because we do, wouldn’t have
a particle of effect, and we should only be considered odd and
puritanical.”</p>
<p>“So we are to countenance things and people which we detest, merely
because we are not belles and millionaires, are we? That’s a nice sort of
morality.”</p>
<p>“I can’t argue about it, I only know that it’s the way of the
world, and people who set themselves against it only get laughed at for their
pains. I don’t like reformers, and I hope you never try to be one.”</p>
<p>“I do like them, and I shall be one if I can, for in spite of the
laughing the world would never get on without them. We can’t agree about
that, for you belong to the old set, and I to the new. You will get on the
best, but I shall have the liveliest time of it. I should rather enjoy the
brickbats and hooting, I think.”</p>
<p>“Well, compose yourself now, and don’t worry Aunt with your new
ideas.”</p>
<p>“I’ll try not to, but I’m always possessed to burst out with
some particularly blunt speech or revolutionary sentiment before her.
It’s my doom, and I can’t help it.”</p>
<p>They found Aunt Carrol with the old lady, both absorbed in some very
interesting subject, but they dropped it as the girls came in, with a conscious
look which betrayed that they had been talking about their nieces. Jo was not
in a good humor, and the perverse fit returned, but Amy, who had virtuously
done her duty, kept her temper and pleased everybody, was in a most angelic
frame of mind. This amiable spirit was felt at once, and both aunts ‘my
deared’ her affectionately, looking what they afterward said
emphatically, “That child improves every day.”</p>
<p>“Are you going to help about the fair, dear?” asked Mrs. Carrol, as
Amy sat down beside her with the confiding air elderly people like so well in
the young.</p>
<p>“Yes, Aunt. Mrs. Chester asked me if I would, and I offered to tend a
table, as I have nothing but my time to give.”</p>
<p>“I’m not,” put in Jo decidedly. “I hate to be
patronized, and the Chesters think it’s a great favor to allow us to help
with their highly connected fair. I wonder you consented, Amy, they only want
you to work.”</p>
<p>“I am willing to work. It’s for the freedmen as well as the
Chesters, and I think it very kind of them to let me share the labor and the
fun. Patronage does not trouble me when it is well meant.”</p>
<p>“Quite right and proper. I like your grateful spirit, my dear. It’s
a pleasure to help people who appreciate our efforts. Some do not, and that is
trying,” observed Aunt March, looking over her spectacles at Jo, who sat
apart, rocking herself, with a somewhat morose expression.</p>
<p>If Jo had only known what a great happiness was wavering in the balance for one
of them, she would have turned dove-like in a minute, but unfortunately, we
don’t have windows in our breasts, and cannot see what goes on in the
minds of our friends. Better for us that we cannot as a general thing, but now
and then it would be such a comfort, such a saving of time and temper. By her
next speech, Jo deprived herself of several years of pleasure, and received a
timely lesson in the art of holding her tongue.</p>
<p>“I don’t like favors, they oppress and make me feel like a slave.
I’d rather do everything for myself, and be perfectly independent.”</p>
<p>“Ahem!” coughed Aunt Carrol softly, with a look at Aunt March.</p>
<p>“I told you so,” said Aunt March, with a decided nod to Aunt
Carrol.</p>
<p>Mercifully unconscious of what she had done, Jo sat with her nose in the air,
and a revolutionary aspect which was anything but inviting.</p>
<p>“Do you speak French, dear?” asked Mrs. Carrol, laying a hand on
Amy’s.</p>
<p>“Pretty well, thanks to Aunt March, who lets Esther talk to me as often
as I like,” replied Amy, with a grateful look, which caused the old lady
to smile affably.</p>
<p>“How are you about languages?” asked Mrs. Carrol of Jo.</p>
<p>“Don’t know a word. I’m very stupid about studying anything,
can’t bear French, it’s such a slippery, silly sort of
language,” was the brusque reply.</p>
<p>Another look passed between the ladies, and Aunt March said to Amy, “You
are quite strong and well now, dear, I believe? Eyes don’t trouble you
any more, do they?”</p>
<p>“Not at all, thank you, ma’am. I’m very well, and mean to do
great things next winter, so that I may be ready for Rome, whenever that joyful
time arrives.”</p>
<p>“Good girl! You deserve to go, and I’m sure you will some
day,” said Aunt March, with an approving pat on the head, as Amy picked
up her ball for her.</p>
<p class="poem">
Crosspatch, draw the latch,<br/>
Sit by the fire and spin,</p>
<p class="noindent">
squalled Polly, bending down from his perch on the back of her chair to peep
into Jo’s face, with such a comical air of impertinent inquiry that it
was impossible to help laughing.</p>
<p>“Most observing bird,” said the old lady.</p>
<p>“Come and take a walk, my dear?” cried Polly, hopping toward the
china closet, with a look suggestive of a lump of sugar.</p>
<p>“Thank you, I will. Come Amy.” and Jo brought the visit to an end,
feeling more strongly than ever that calls did have a bad effect upon her
constitution. She shook hands in a gentlemanly manner, but Amy kissed both the
aunts, and the girls departed, leaving behind them the impression of shadow and
sunshine, which impression caused Aunt March to say, as they vanished...</p>
<p>“You’d better do it, Mary. I’ll supply the money.” and
Aunt Carrol to reply decidedly, “I certainly will, if her father and
mother consent.”</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />