Chapter 21: Thanksgiving
This yearly festival was always kept at Plumfield in the good
old-fashioned way, and nothing was allowed to interfere with
it. For days beforehand, the little girls helped Asia and
Mrs. Jo in store-room and kitchen, making pies and puddings,
sorting fruit, dusting dishes, and being very busy and immensely
important. The boys hovered on the outskirts of the forbidden
ground, sniffing the savory odors, peeping in at the mysterious
performances, and occasionally being permitted to taste some
delicacy in the process of preparation. Something more than
usual seemed to be on foot this year, for the girls were as
busy up-stairs as down, so were the boys in school-room and
barn, and a general air of bustle pervaded the house. There
was a great hunting up of old ribbons and finery, much cutting
and pasting of gold paper, and the most remarkable quantity
of straw, gray cotton, flannel, and big black beads, used
by Franz and Mrs. Jo. Ned hammered at strange machines in
the workshop, Demi and Tommy went about murmuring to themselves
as if learning something. A fearful racket was heard in Emil’s
room at intervals, and peals of laughter from the nursery
when Rob and Teddy were sent for and hidden from sight whole
hours at a time. But the thing that puzzled Mr. Bhaer the
most was what became of Rob’s big pumpkin. It had been
borne in triumph to the kitchen, where a dozen golden-tinted
pies soon after appeared. It would not have taken more than
a quarter of the mammoth vegetable to make them, yet where
was the rest? It disappeared, and Rob never seemed to care,
only chuckled when it was mentioned, and told his father,
“To wait and see,” for the fun of the whole thing
was to surprise Father Bhaer at the end, and not let him know
a bit about what was to happen. He obediently shut eyes, ears,
and mouth, and went about trying not to see what was in plain
sight, not to hear the tell-tale sounds that filled the air,
not to understand any of the perfectly transparent mysteries
going on all about him. Being a German, he loved these simple
domestic festivals, and encouraged them with all his heart,
for they made home so pleasant that the boys did not care
to go elsewhere for fun. When at last the day came, the boys
went off for a long walk, that they might have good appetites
for dinner; as if they ever needed them! The girls remained
at home to help set the table, and give last touches to various
affairs which filled their busy little souls with anxiety.
The school-room had been shut up since the night before, and
Mr. Bhaer was forbidden to enter it on pain of a beating from
Teddy, who guarded the door like a small dragon, though he
was dying to tell about it, and nothing but his father’s
heroic self-denial in not listening, kept him from betraying
a grand secret. “It’s all done, and it’s
perfectly splendid,” cried Nan, coming out at last with
an air of triumph. “The you know goes beautifully, and
Silas knows just what to do now,” added Daisy, skipping
with delight at some unspeakable success. “I’m
blest if it ain’t the ‘cutest thing I ever see,
them critters in particular,” said Silas, who had been
let into the secret, went off laughing like a great boy. “They
are coming; I hear Emil roaring ‘Land lubbers lying
down below,’ so we must run and dress,” cried
Nan, and up-stairs they scampered in a great hurry. The boys
came trooping home with appetites that would have made the
big turkey tremble, if it had not been past all fear. They
also retired to dress; and for half-an-hour there was a washing,
brushing, and prinking that would have done any tidy woman’s
heart good to see. When the bell rang, a troop of fresh-faced
lads with shiny hair, clean collars, and Sunday jackets on,
filed into the dining-room, where Mrs. Jo, in her one black
silk, with a knot of her favorite white chrysanthemums in
her bosom, sat at the head of the table, “looking splendid,”
as the boys said, whenever she got herself up. Daisy and Nan
were as gay as a posy bed in their new winter dresses, with
bright sashes and hair ribbons. Teddy was gorgeous to behold
in a crimson merino blouse, and his best button boots, which
absorbed and distracted him as much as Mr. Toot’s wristbands
did on one occasion. As Mr. and Mrs. Bhaer glanced at each
other down the long table, with those rows of happy faces
on either side, they had a little thanksgiving all to themselves,
and without a word, for one heart said to the other, “Our
work has prospered, let us be grateful and go on.”
from Little Men by Louisa May Alcott
The clatter of knives and forks prevented much conversation
for a few minutes, and Mary Ann with an amazing pink bow in
her hair “flew round” briskly, handing plates
and ladling out gravy. Nearly every one had contributed to
the feast, so the dinner was a peculiarly interesting ones
to the eaters of it, who beguiled the pauses by remarks on
their own productions.
“If these are not good potatoes I never saw any,”
observed Jack, as he received his fourth big mealy one.
“Some of my herbs are in the stuffing of the turkey,
that’s why it’s so nice,” said Nan, taking
a mouthful with intense satisfaction.
“My ducks are prime any way; Asia said she never cooked
such fat ones,” added Tommy.
“Well, our carrots are beautiful, ain’t they,
and our parsnips will be ever so good when we dig them,”
put in Dick, and Dolly murmured his assent from behind the
bone he was picking.
“I helped make the pies with my pumpkin,” called
out Robby, with a laugh which he stopped by retiring into
his mug.
“I picked some of the apples that the cider is made
of,” said Demi.
“I raked the cranberries for the sauce,” cried
Nat.
“I got the nuts,” added Dan, and so it went on
all round the table.
“Who made up Thanksgiving?” asked Rob, for being
lately promoted to jacket and trousers he felt a new and manly
interest in the institutions of his country.
“See who can answer that question,” and Mr. Bhaer
nodded to one or two of his best history boys.
“I know,” said Demi, “the Pilgrims made
it.”
“What for?” asked Rob, without waiting to learn
who the Pilgrims were.
“I forget,” and Demi subsided.
“I believe it was because they were starved once, and
so when they had a good harvest, they said, ‘We will
thank God for it,’ and they had a day and called it
Thanksgiving,” said Dan, who liked the story of the
brave men who suffered so nobly for their faith.
“Good! I didn’t think you would remember any thing
but natural history,” and Mr. Bhaer tapped gently on
the table as applause for his pupil.
Dan looked pleased; and Mrs. Jo said to her son, “Now
do you understand about it, Robby?”
“No, I don’t. I thought pil-grins were a sort
of big bird that lived on rocks, and I saw pictures of them
in Demi’s book.”
“He means penguins. Oh, isn’t he a little goosey!”
and Demi laid back in his chair and laughed aloud.
“Don’t laugh at him, but tell him all about it
if you can,” said Mrs. Bhaer, consoling Rob with more
cranberry sauce for the general smile that went round the
table at his mistake.
“Well, I will;” and, after a pause to collect
his ideas, Demi delivered the following sketch of the Pilgrim
Fathers, which would have made even those grave gentlemen
smile if they could have heard it.