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<title><![CDATA[英文剧本: 小妇人 Little Women Script]]></title>
<link>http://www.130q.com/show.php?tid=1636</link>
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<p>英文剧本: 小妇人 Little Women</p>
<p><br />
Little Women script</p>
<p>- Is this too fast? - Harder!</p>
<p>My sisters and I remember that winter...</p>
<p>as the coldest of our childhood.</p>
<p>A temporary poverty had settled upon our family some years before.</p>
<p>The war had made fuel and lamp oil scarce.</p>
<p>But necessity is indeed the mother of invention.</p>
<p>Somehow in that dark time...</p>
<p>our family, the March family, seemed to create its own light.</p>
<p>Marmee! Marmee's home!</p>
<p>Marmee! Marmee!</p>
<p>We waited and waited! We've been ''expectorating'' you for hours!</p>
<p>- Have you, my darling? - '' Expecting,'' featherhead.</p>
<p>- Oh, Marmee, you're frozen! - Yes.</p>
<p>If you could see the people lined up outside Hope House in this bitter cold.</p>
<p>- Mmm, your cheeks are so warm. - Finished your Christmas bundles?</p>
<p>So many this year! We were handing out--</p>
<p>- Oh, how is your cold? - Better.</p>
<p>Good. We were handing out food...</p>
<p>as quickly as we could make up the baskets.</p>
<p>Now, Miss Amy, what is this in my pocket?</p>
<p>Father!</p>
<p>'' My dearest family, I am well and safe.</p>
<p>Our battalion is encamped on the 'Potamac'.''</p>
<p>- Potomac. - Potomac.</p>
<p>'' December makes a hard, cold season for all of us so far from home.</p>
<p>I think of my girls day and night...</p>
<p>and find my best comfort in your affection.</p>
<p>I pray that your own hardships will not be too great to bear.</p>
<p>Give them all my dear love and a kiss.</p>
<p>Tell them I think of them by day, pray for them by night.''</p>
<p>- Poor Father. - I'm a selfish girl.</p>
<p>Oh! Little ones.</p>
<p>It's Christmas Eve. Father wouldn't want us to be sad now.</p>
<p>Ding-dong merrily on high</p>
<p>In heaven the bells are ringing</p>
<p>In heaven the bells are ringing</p>
<p>Ding-dong merrily the sky is riven with angels singing</p>
<p>Glor-o-o-ria</p>
<p>Hosanna in excelsis</p>
<p>To bed, Miss Amy.</p>
<p>- Merry Christmas, sweetheart. - Merry Christmas.</p>
<p>Let steeple bells be swungen</p>
<p>And i-o i-o i-o</p>
<p>- Merry Christmas. - Merry Christmas.</p>
<p>Glor-o-o-ria</p>
<p>Merry Christmas, Beth.</p>
<p>- Love you. - I love you.</p>
<p>Hosanna in excelsis</p>
<p>MyJo. Merry Christmas.</p>
<p>Merry Christmas, Marmee.</p>
<p>Hosanna in excelsis</p>
<p>And don't sit up too late.</p>
<p>I won't.</p>
<p>May you beautifully rhyme your eve-time song ye singers</p>
<p>Late at night, my mind would come alive with voices and stories...</p>
<p>and friends as dear to me as any in the real world.</p>
<p>I gave myself up to it, longing for transformation.</p>
<p>Oh, what miraculous food!</p>
<p>Isn't this just like the old days, Hannah?</p>
<p>Oh.</p>
<p>We shouldn't eat it. We should just look at it.</p>
<p>I'm going to eat it.</p>
<p>Jo? Jo, come down!</p>
<p>I'm awake!</p>
<p>Horrible piano.</p>
<p>Hannah's put together an absolute Christmas miracle.</p>
<p>Is that sausage?</p>
<p>Wait!</p>
<p>Oh, butter! Oh, oh, isn't butter ''divinity''?</p>
<p>Oh, God, thank you for this breakfast.</p>
<p>Jo, angel, fetch your Marmee.</p>
<p>She went out at the crack of dawn to see some Germans.</p>
<p>Hummel, the boy said. Not a word of English.</p>
<p>His da's gone.</p>
<p>Six children, and she's 'bout to issue another.</p>
<p>May as well take 'em a stick of firewood.</p>
<p>Sure they haven't got any.</p>
<p>Or breakfast either.</p>
<p>Perhaps we could send the Hummels our bread.</p>
<p>Might as well send the butter too. Butter's not much use...</p>
<p>without bread to put it on.</p>
<p>Oh, wonderful snow!</p>
<p>Don't you wish you could roll about in it like dogs?</p>
<p>Once one of our finest families.</p>
<p>Lovely weather for a picnic!</p>
<p>Come along, Theodore. We'll be late for church.</p>
<p>Jo, you should let them speak first. What will they think of us?</p>
<p>Oh, don't look back!</p>
<p>Here we come a-wassailing among the leaves so green</p>
<p>And here we come a-wandering so fair as to be seen</p>
<p>Love and joy come to you And to you your wassail too</p>
<p>And God bless you and send you a happy new year</p>
<p>And God send you a happy new year</p>
<p>''Knights and ladies, elves and pages, monks and flower girls...</p>
<p>all mingled gaily in the dance.</p>
<p>Pauline cried out in horror as her bridegroom's mask fell...</p>
<p>disclosing not her lover Ferdinand...</p>
<p>but the face of his sworn enemy, Count Antonio.</p>
<p>Revenge is mine, quoth he.''</p>
<p>Continued in the following edition.</p>
<p>Excellent installment, Mr. Snodgrass.</p>
<p>- Oh, I love forbidden marriages! - You ought to publish it,Jo.</p>
<p>Really! Not just in the Pickwick Portfolio.</p>
<p>Mr. Tupman, are you demeaning our fine newspaper?</p>
<p>Mr. Winkle.</p>
<p>''One periwink--'' Advertisement.</p>
<p>''One periwinkle sash belonging to Mr. N. Winkle...</p>
<p>has been 'abscondated' from the wash line...</p>
<p>which gentleman desires any reports leading to its recovery.''</p>
<p>Gentlemen of the press, hear, hear! I call to your attention...</p>
<p>our Mr. Tupman's The History of the Squash.</p>
<p>Oh, don't read mine.</p>
<p>Beth, this isn't a story. It's a recipe.</p>
<p>Oh, dear, I never know what to write.</p>
<p>First rule of writing, Mr. Tupman, is never write what you know.</p>
<p>What do we think of the boy?</p>
<p>Is he a captive like Smee in Nicholas Nickleby?</p>
<p>He looks lonely. You don't think he'll try to call?</p>
<p>Maybe he has a secret-- a tragic, European secret.</p>
<p>He's had no upbringing at all they say.</p>
<p>He was reared in Italy among artists and vagrants.</p>
<p>Doesn't he have a noble brow?</p>
<p>If I were a boy, I'd want to look just like that.</p>
<p>Imagine giving up Italy to come live with that awful old man!</p>
<p>Jo, please don't say awful. It's slang.</p>
<p>I'd be terrified to live with him.</p>
<p>I shouldn't mind living in such a fine house and having nice things.</p>
<p>Oh, it doesn't seen like Christmas this year without presents.</p>
<p>I'm desperate for drawing pencils.</p>
<p>I wish I didn't have to work for Great-Aunt March...</p>
<p>that crabby old miser.</p>
<p>And you, Beth. What's your Christmas wish?</p>
<p>I'd like the war to end so Father can come home.</p>
<p>Oh, sweet Beth. We all want that.</p>
<p>They do have a beautiful piano.</p>
<p>Wait 'til I'm a writer. I'll buy you the best piano in creation.</p>
<p>And if she doesn't, you can come over and play mine.</p>
<p>When I marry, I'm going to be disgustingly rich.</p>
<p>And what if the man you love is a poor man but good, like Father?</p>
<p>Well, it isn't like being stuck with the dreadful nose you get.</p>
<p>One does have a choice to whom one loves.</p>
<p>You have a lovely nose!</p>
<p>I wouldn't marry for the money.</p>
<p>I mean, what if his business goes bust?</p>
<p>Besides, down at the Eagle, they pay $5 for each story they print.</p>
<p>Why, I have ten stories in my head right now!</p>
<p>Gentlemen, I dislike all this money talk.</p>
<p>It isn't refined.</p>
<p>If lack of attention to personal finances is a mark of refinement...</p>
<p>then I'd say the Marches are the most elegant family in Concord.</p>
<p>We'll all grow up someday, Meg.</p>
<p>We might as well know what we want.</p>
<p>That'll do.</p>
<p>Put the carriage away, and look smart about it.</p>
<p>Very good, sir.</p>
<p>Merry Christmas!</p>
<p>I have the most wonderful feeling about tonight.</p>
<p>Meg and Jo, you have to tell me...</p>
<p>''exquisitely'' everything about Belle Gardiner.</p>
<p>What her nose looks like and about her ring.</p>
<p>Annie Gardiner says it's an emerald.</p>
<p>Can you imagine? Everyone's lucky but me.</p>
<p>I'm glad I don't have to go and be with those frightening people...</p>
<p>and try to think of things to say.</p>
<p>- Hush now. - Oh, mind you,Jo...</p>
<p>don't eat much at supper...</p>
<p>and don't shake hands with people. It isn't the thing anymore.</p>
<p>-Jo, your dress! - Oh, I know!</p>
<p>You always stand too close to the fire.</p>
<p>Oh, dear. Well,just keep your backside to the wall.</p>
<p>- Meg, look. What cunning little heels. - They're rather small.</p>
<p>That's all right. It's only for one night.</p>
<p>You don't suppose anyone will notice...</p>
<p>they came out of the rag bag, do you?</p>
<p>Uh-uh. You have to have heels.</p>
<p>What's that strange smell?</p>
<p>Like burnt feathers.</p>
<p>- Heavens above! - You've ruined me!</p>
<p>I'm sorry! I'm sorry.</p>
<p>You shouldn't have had me do it!</p>
<p>- Meg, don't worry. - I spoil everything.</p>
<p>- I can't go out like this! - Good! I'm not going either.</p>
<p>Here, we'll place my bow in front.</p>
<p>- Yes, that covers it. - It's very becoming.</p>
<p>I'll never have any suitors. I'll just be a dried-up old spinster.</p>
<p>You don't need scores of suitors.</p>
<p>You only need one, if he's the right one.</p>
<p>Listen to the child.</p>
<p>Meg isn't going to be married right away, is she?</p>
<p>With Jo's help, I never will.</p>
<p>- You must be so happy. - Oh, Belle, it's enchanting.</p>
<p>Well, I best go help Mama. Excuse me.</p>
<p>I think it's Mrs. Barkley.</p>
<p>She's going to try it. Watch her.</p>
<p>Oh, yes, I would like it very much.</p>
<p>Jehoshaphat! I'm sorry.</p>
<p>No, no, stay! It's not a bad hiding place.</p>
<p>You see, I don't know anyone...</p>
<p>so I feel awkward standing and staring at people.</p>
<p>Should I put on my jacket? I never know the rules.</p>
<p>Um, um, I'm Laurie.</p>
<p>Theodore Laurence, but I'm, uh, I'm called Laurie.</p>
<p>Jo March. Um--</p>
<p>So, who were you staring at?</p>
<p>Uh, you, actually. What-- what game were you playing?</p>
<p>I don't know, but I think I won.</p>
<p>- Who else? - Well, I was--</p>
<p>I was quite taken with that one.</p>
<p>That's Meg. That's my sister.</p>
<p>She's completely bald in front.</p>
<p>Is it true that you lived in Italy among artists and vagrants?</p>
<p>My mother was Italian. A, uh, pianist.</p>
<p>- Grandfather disapproved of her. - Truly?</p>
<p>I saw a play like that once. Do you like the theater?</p>
<p>- Oh, yes. - Were you born there?</p>
<p>Where? In-- In, uh, Italy.</p>
<p>- Do you speak French or Italian? - English at home.</p>
<p>Francais a L 'ecole. The Music Conservatory in Vevey.</p>
<p>But Grandfather's having me tutored now.</p>
<p>He insists I go to college.</p>
<p>Oh, I'd commit murder to go to college.</p>
<p>Ohh!</p>
<p>Actually, I'm going to Europe.</p>
<p>Well, at least I hope I am.</p>
<p>My Great-Aunt March says she'll go one of these days...</p>
<p>and she has to take me with her because I work as her companion.</p>
<p>I have to read to her for hours and hours.</p>
<p>- But I do all the voices! - I'll bet you do.</p>
<p>If I weren't going to be a writer...</p>
<p>I'd go to New York and pursue the stage.</p>
<p>- Are you shocked? - Very.</p>
<p>I-I'm sorry.</p>
<p>I'm sorry. Meg always makes me take the gentleman's part at home.</p>
<p>It's a shame you don't know the lady's part.</p>
<p>Why are you looking at the back of my dress?</p>
<p>It isn't so bad! Honestly.</p>
<p>You promised you wouldn't look.</p>
<p>Oh,Jo, I've sprained my ankle.</p>
<p>I shouldn't wonder in those shoes! Does it hurt?</p>
<p>Oh. Oh, no, no. I'm quite well, thank you.</p>
<p>Well, this is our neighbor, Laurie, the captive.</p>
<p>Oh, poor Meg. I'll go tell Mrs. Gardiner.</p>
<p>Oh, no,Jo. She'll think I've been sampling the punch.</p>
<p>- A perfectly good party ruined. - I have my carriage.</p>
<p>Let me take you home.</p>
<p>- Oh, yes! - Oh, no, thank you.</p>
<p>Thank you.</p>
<p>Lean on me. Thank you, Mr. Laurence. That's very kind of you.</p>
<p>- Good-bye, Laurie. - Good night, Mrs. March.</p>
<p>Wherever did you get this shoe?</p>
<p>Did you ride in his carriage? Oh, you two have all the luck.</p>
<p>- Oh,Jo, is he very romantic? - Not in the slightest!</p>
<p>We're very much obliged to him, but he's a dreadful boy.</p>
<p>He did a good deed putting snow on this ankle.</p>
<p>- He put snow on your ankle? - To bed, Miss Amy.</p>
<p>- With his own hands? - Oh, stop being so swoony.</p>
<p>I won't have my girls being silly about boys.</p>
<p>To bed,Jo, dear.</p>
<p>Does this hurt?</p>
<p>- Everything lovely happens to Meg. - Oh, yes indeed!</p>
<p>You mustn't be soppy about Laurie anymore than you should be soppy...</p>
<p>about those silly girls at school.</p>
<p>I hope we shall be good friends with him.</p>
<p>- With a boy? - He isn't a boy! He's Laurie!</p>
<p>Faster!</p>
<p>Faster!</p>
<p>Laurie!</p>
<p>Your young ladies are unusually active, Mrs. March, if I may say so.</p>
<p>You may indeed, Mr. Brooke.</p>
<p>It is my opinion that young girls are no different than boys...</p>
<p>in their need for exertion.</p>
<p>Feminine weakness and fainting spells are the direct result...</p>
<p>of our confining young girls to the house...</p>
<p>bent over their needlework in restrictive corsets.</p>
<p>Marmee!</p>
<p>Your young student is an athlete.</p>
<p>He is, thank you, a good one.</p>
<p>But he makes an unruly scholar.</p>
<p>I regret that his grandfather is away much.</p>
<p>One hopes that your girls...</p>
<p>will be a gentling influence.</p>
<p>Indeed, Mr. Brooke.</p>
<p>Marmee, must you speak to everyone about corsets?</p>
<p>Oh, Meg.</p>
<p>Do I?</p>
<p>Blast these wretched skirts!</p>
<p>Don't say blast and wretch.</p>
<p>Amy, don't be such a ninny-pinny.</p>
<p>I wish I was Beth so I could stay home and do pleasant things.</p>
<p>Oh, if you call doing laundry and housework pleasant!</p>
<p>Blast!</p>
<p>Amy, hurry. I'll be late for work.</p>
<p>There's Mrs. King. I'm tardy again.</p>
<p>Lovely children.</p>
<p>Oh, Meg, must I go to school? I'm so ''degradatated.''</p>
<p>I can hardly hold my head up. I owe at least a dozen limes.</p>
<p>- Limes? - Are limes the fashion now?</p>
<p>Of course they are. It's nothing but limes now.</p>
<p>Everyone keeps them in their desks and trades them for beads and things.</p>
<p>And all the girls treat each other at recess.</p>
<p>If you don't bring limes to school, you're nothing.</p>
<p>You might as well be dead.</p>
<p>I've had ever so many limes, and I can't pay anyone back.</p>
<p>No wonder you don't learn anything at that school!</p>
<p>I know how it feels to do without any little luxuries.</p>
<p>But we are not destitute, not yet.</p>
<p>Here's a quarter. Marmee gave me the rag money this month.</p>
<p>Go on!</p>
<p>''Secondly, the immortality of the soul...</p>
<p>is asserted to be in consequence...</p>
<p>of its immateriality...</p>
<p>as in all leipothymic cases...</p>
<p>consistent with the idea of immortality...</p>
<p>and immorality, and physicality--''</p>
<p>And I think you finally dozed off.</p>
<p>Josephine, there's a draft!</p>
<p>Is it Father?</p>
<p>Teacher struck me.</p>
<p>He put the limes out into the snow.</p>
<p>May Chester said my limes must have been donated to Hope House.</p>
<p>Then I said that she wouldn't get a single lime from me.</p>
<p>And then she told Mr. Davis they were hidden in my desk...</p>
<p>and then he struck me.</p>
<p>We oughta go over there and beat the tar out of him with his own stick!</p>
<p>Jo, we must not embrace violence.</p>
<p>- I'll write this man a letter. - A letter? That'll show him.</p>
<p>You failed to mention to me they were forbidden.</p>
<p>A whole month's rag money?</p>
<p>- Amy, I shouldn't have given it to you. - I'm sorry!</p>
<p>All those lovely limes. I'm perfectly ''desolated.''</p>
<p>I'm not sorry you lost them.</p>
<p>It's a frivolous concern in times like these.</p>
<p>You are more intent upon reshaping your dear little nose...</p>
<p>than in fashioning your character.</p>
<p>It's an appalling school. Your spelling's atrocious...</p>
<p>your Latin absurd.</p>
<p>Mr. Davis said it was as useful to educate a woman...</p>
<p>as to educate a female cat.</p>
<p>I shall strangle Mr. Davis!</p>
<p>'' Mr. Davis...</p>
<p>what right have you to strike a child?</p>
<p>In God's eyes we are all children and we are all equals.</p>
<p>If you hit and humiliate a child, the only lesson she will learn...</p>
<p>is to hit and humiliate.''</p>
<p>Amy, do you think you can discipline yourself...</p>
<p>to learn at home as Beth has done?</p>
<p>''I withdraw my daughter Amy from your school.''</p>
<p>It serves the scoundrel right!</p>
<p>Jo will now supervise your education.</p>
<p>Jo, tell me what happens next...</p>
<p>after the Duke turns his back on his family fortune and saves Lady Zara.</p>
<p>Don't know. It's all murder and gore. The damsel's in distress.</p>
<p>Oh, I love your damsels in distress.</p>
<p>Oh, Beth, truly, I don't know if I could ever be good like Marmee.</p>
<p>I rather crave violence.</p>
<p>If only I could be like Father...</p>
<p>and go to war and stand up to the lions of injustice.</p>
<p>And so Marmee does in her own way.</p>
<p>Yes.</p>
<p>But I want to do something different!</p>
<p>I don't know what it is yet, but I'm on the watch for it.</p>
<p>You will find it,Jo.</p>
<p>Hello!Jo!</p>
<p>Come over here. You too, Meg. It's dull as tombs around here.</p>
<p>Mr. Laurence, one doesn't shout at ladies as if they were cattle.</p>
<p>My apologies.</p>
<p>All right.</p>
<p>What do those girls do over there all day?</p>
<p>Over the mysteries of female life...</p>
<p>there is drawn a veil best left undisturbed.</p>
<p>Oh, dear Countess, pray for me...</p>
<p>for I have sinned against meself and me brother Rodrigo.</p>
<p>You've got to say sinned as if you've really sinned!</p>
<p>Sinned! Sinned!</p>
<p>Rodrigo!</p>
<p>You arrive seeking the Duke of Lankershire.</p>
<p>Hark ye. Who goes there?</p>
<p>Oh, I forgot the cymbals.</p>
<p>Why it's... it's Rodrigo!</p>
<p>- Rodrigo? - I want to be Lady Violet.</p>
<p>I'm ''exhaustified'' of being the boy.</p>
<p>The play is the thing, Amy! You're too little to be Lady Violet.</p>
<p>Here, be the Countess de Montanescu.</p>
<p>- You don't have any lines. - Besides who would be our Rodrigo?</p>
<p>Gentlemen...</p>
<p>I propose the admission of a new member to our theatrical society.</p>
<p>Theodore Laurence. We'll put it to a vote.</p>
<p>Nay. He'll laugh at our acting and poke fun at us later.</p>
<p>He'll think it's only a game.</p>
<p>No, he won't. Upon my word as a gentleman.</p>
<p>Jo, when it's only ladies, we don't guard our conduct in the same way.</p>
<p>We bear our souls and tell the most appalling secrets.</p>
<p>- He would find us improper. - Teddy would do nothing of the sort.</p>
<p>Oh, please? Let's try him.</p>
<p>Shall we?</p>
<p>-Jo! - Traitor!</p>
<p>Fellow artists, may I present myself...</p>
<p>as an actor, a musician, and a loyal and very humble servant of the club.</p>
<p>We'll be the judge of that.</p>
<p>In token of my gratitude, and as a means of promoting...</p>
<p>communication between adjoining nations...</p>
<p>shouting from windows being forbidden, I shall provide...</p>
<p>a post office in our hedge...</p>
<p>to further encourage the baring of our souls...</p>
<p>and the telling of our most appalling secrets.</p>
<p>I do pledge...</p>
<p>never to reveal what I receive in confidence here.</p>
<p>Well then...</p>
<p>do take your place, Rodrigo.</p>
<p>Sir...</p>
<p>Rodrigo.</p>
<p>And so Laurie was admitted as an equal into our society...</p>
<p>and we March girls could enjoy the daily novelty...</p>
<p>of having a real brother of our very own.</p>
<p>I want to go to the theater.</p>
<p>- I never get to go anywhere. - You're too little.</p>
<p>Beth, where in tarnation are Marmee's opera glasses?</p>
<p>I'm not too little. You're just hogging Laurie.</p>
<p>Please, can't I go?</p>
<p>Oh, Amy, I'm afraid Laurie only reserved four seats.</p>
<p>Do I look too shabby?</p>
<p>Oh,Jehoshaphat, Meg, this isn't a coronation.</p>
<p>It's just Laurie and that awful Mr. Brooke.</p>
<p>Jo, can't you ask Teddy to get another ticket?</p>
<p>No!</p>
<p>You have a cold, dear. Rest your eyes.</p>
<p>Evangeline and I will make you some ginger tea.</p>
<p>You're weeks behind in algebra. Do all the pages that I've marked.</p>
<p>I won't have a sister who's a lazy ignoramus.</p>
<p>- Don't sulk. You look like a pigeon. - Coo! Coo!</p>
<p>Good night.</p>
<p>You'll be sorry for this, Jo March!</p>
<p>Whoa! Whoa, there.</p>
<p>Thank you.</p>
<p>Oh, Mrs. Nell Watson. Wasn't she a wonderful swooner?</p>
<p>If only I were the swooning type!</p>
<p>If only I were the catching type.</p>
<p>Young Laurence informs me...</p>
<p>you are an aficionado of the theater, Miss March.</p>
<p>- Well, I-- I enjoy reading plays. - Yes.</p>
<p>I, I find it most pleasurable myself.</p>
<p>Though I confess I'm distracted at the theater...</p>
<p>thinking of the peculiar lives of the actors themselves.</p>
<p>When one considers the immodesties Mrs. Nell Watson suffers...</p>
<p>one wonders what sort of lady would seek such a life.</p>
<p>Meg is a sensational actress!</p>
<p>We're always putting on wild theatricals.</p>
<p>It's just something that we play at.</p>
<p>Well, as, as a matter of fact...</p>
<p>at school I engaged in debating.</p>
<p>What do you think of that? Let's see what they do.</p>
<p>- I had a wonderful time, Mr. Brooke. - As did I.</p>
<p>It was a most delightful evening.</p>
<p>- And I'd very much like-- - Thank you very much. Good night.</p>
<p>- Oh, good night. - Good night.</p>
<p>- That was rude. - You plastered yourself on him.</p>
<p>It's proper to take a gentleman's arm if it's offered.</p>
<p>How was the theater? Amusing?</p>
<p>It was wonderful! I was absolutely inspired by the love scene.</p>
<p>You look flushed, Meg dear. Was the theater overcrowded?</p>
<p>Still sulking?</p>
<p>Beth, where did I put my manuscript?</p>
<p>Beth?</p>
<p>No!</p>
<p>Oh, no.</p>
<p>I didn't do it!</p>
<p>I'm gonna kill you! I'm gonna kill you!</p>
<p>Marmee, help me!</p>
<p>I'm gonna kill you! Do you hear me?</p>
<p>- How can you do this to me? -Jo!</p>
<p>-Jo, stop. You're hurting her. - Marmee!</p>
<p>- Marmee! -Jo!Jo! Let go of her!</p>
<p>- What's happened? All right, all right. - I hate you!</p>
<p>No,Jo!</p>
<p>Don't touch it.</p>
<p>Come.Just let it go.</p>
<p>You're dead! You're nothing!</p>
<p>I never want to see you again!</p>
<p>It is a very great loss, and you have every right to be put out.</p>
<p>But don't let the sun go down upon your anger.</p>
<p>Forgive each other. Begin again tomorrow, huh?</p>
<p>I will never forgive her.</p>
<p>I'm sorry,Jo.</p>
<p>Looks like the last ice we'll have this year.</p>
<p>Say ''go.''</p>
<p>Laurie,Jo, wait for me!</p>
<p>Ignore her.</p>
<p>Ready-- Blast!</p>
<p>Jo, please!</p>
<p>- Amy! -Jo!</p>
<p>Hold on. I'm coming!</p>
<p>Hold on, Amy.</p>
<p>Get a rail!</p>
<p>Grab the stick, Amy.</p>
<p>- Grab it! - Come on!</p>
<p>Hold on!</p>
<p>There we go. That's it, that's it.</p>
<p>Josephine March, you walked all the way from Walden Pond...</p>
<p>- in only these bloomers? - As if she even noticed.</p>
<p>Dear Amy.</p>
<p>How could I have been so horrible? Thank God for Laurie.</p>
<p>Jo, do you love Laurie more than you love me?</p>
<p>Oh, don't be such a beetle!</p>
<p>I could never love anyone as I love my sisters.</p>
<p>I'm not a beetle.</p>
<p>Oh, look out. You're leaving out the best part.</p>
<p>When Lady Zara succumbs to the Duke's rival.</p>
<p>Oh, right, yes! Sir Hugo.</p>
<p>I quite prefer him myself.</p>
<p>In the spring, we turned Orchard House upside down...</p>
<p>with preparations for Meg to attend Sally Moffat's coming out.</p>
<p>Myself, I'd sooner have been hung by the neck than attend a fancy ball.</p>
<p>Wait 'til all of Boston sees you in this dress, Meg.</p>
<p>I told Laurie he has to show you off and keep you from being a wallflower...</p>
<p>upon penalty of death.</p>
<p>Oh, where is that miserable glove?</p>
<p>Abigail, I shake my head at the way you're managing Margaret.</p>
<p>How is she to be married without a proper debut?</p>
<p>Now, Auntie, in our present circumstances--</p>
<p>Your circumstances will not change with your husband's return.</p>
<p>My nephew is as foolish with money as he is in his new philosophies.</p>
<p>The one hope for your family is for Margaret to marry well...</p>
<p>though I don't know who marries governesses.</p>
<p>Marmee!</p>
<p>And this one has entirely ruined her disposition with books.</p>
<p>Oh, are those for me, Josephine?</p>
<p>No. Meg's taking them to the Moffat's.</p>
<p>Marmee, Meg's frantic.</p>
<p>She lost her glove, and she only has one pair.</p>
<p>She cannot go without gloves. The Moffats are society.</p>
<p>You're absolutely correct. Tell Meg she may borrow mine.</p>
<p>Meg, you can take Marmee's!</p>
<p>Oh, dear!</p>
<p>Ohh!</p>
<p>- More tea? - No, thank you.</p>
<p>Sally Moffat, you won't be able to draw your laces.</p>
<p>At my coming out party, I didn't eat for weeks beforehand.</p>
<p>Oh, Meg, I do like that color on you.</p>
<p>It's just like forget-me-nots.</p>
<p>The nicest I've seen that kind of fabric since the war broke out.</p>
<p>But you had it made up so plain.</p>
<p>Well, I-- I do my own sewing, and--</p>
<p>Mrs. Finster's on Charles Street carries silk pieces ready-made.</p>
<p>- Tomorrow I'll take you there. - Marches haven't bought silk in years.</p>
<p>They have views on slavery.</p>
<p>Meg, isn't it true your father's school had to close...</p>
<p>when he admitted a little dark girl?</p>
<p>The silk of Mrs. Finster's isn't milled in the South.</p>
<p>It's made right here, over in Linfield.</p>
<p>This isn't China silk?</p>
<p>They use little children for labor. All the silk mills do.</p>
<p>The poor are always with us.</p>
<p>You are so good to remind us.</p>
<p>May I tell you something?</p>
<p>This is an afternoon dress.</p>
<p>I'm going to make you my pet.</p>
<p>Tonight Miss March shall have as many conquests as she likes.</p>
<p>You have no corset.</p>
<p>Come on.</p>
<p>Not for me, thank you.</p>
<p>No, I believe the next dance is the polka...</p>
<p>with me.</p>
<p>I would dance with you, Mr. Parker...</p>
<p>but I fear for my new slippers.</p>
<p>My credo is, '' Don't tread on me.''</p>
<p>Miss March. I thought your family were temperance people.</p>
<p>Laurie.</p>
<p>Oh, don't cover up.</p>
<p>There may be one or two gentlemen here...</p>
<p>who haven't seen all of your charms.</p>
<p>I did promiseJo I would show you off.</p>
<p>The girls dressed me up, and I rather like it.</p>
<p>Yes, it reveals a whole new Meg.</p>
<p>What do you call this?</p>
<p>Meg!</p>
<p>I'm sorry.</p>
<p>Please don't tellJo how I've behaved.</p>
<p>Of course not.</p>
<p>If you won't tell anyone how I've behaved.</p>
<p>I was only playing a part...</p>
<p>to see how it felt to be Belle Gardiner...</p>
<p>with four proposals and 20 pairs of gloves.</p>
<p>You're worth ten of those other girls.</p>
<p>Did you see the way this March girl has gone after the Laurence heir?</p>
<p>Best thing that could happen to the Marches.</p>
<p>Oh! This ridiculous dress!</p>
<p>I've been tripping over it all night.</p>
<p>Tie something around your neck where it can do you some good.</p>
<p>I don't like people speculating about Laurie and our Meg...</p>
<p>as if they were characters in some play.</p>
<p>Nothing provokes speculation more...</p>
<p>than the sight of a woman enjoying herself.</p>
<p>Why is it Laurie may do as he likes, flirt and tipple champagne--</p>
<p>And no one thinks the less of him?</p>
<p>Well, I suppose for one practical reason:</p>
<p>Laurie is a man, and as such...</p>
<p>he may vote, hold property and pursue any profession he pleases.</p>
<p>And so he is not so easily demeaned.</p>
<p>Why should anyone care what they think?</p>
<p>I do.</p>
<p>It's nice to be praised and admired. I couldn't help but like it.</p>
<p>Of course not!</p>
<p>I only care what you think of yourself.</p>
<p>If you feel your value lies in being merely decorative...</p>
<p>I fear that someday you might find yourself...</p>
<p>believing that's all that you really are.</p>
<p>Time erodes all such beauty, but what it cannot diminish...</p>
<p>is the wonderful workings of your mind.</p>
<p>Your humor, your kindness...</p>
<p>and your moral courage.</p>
<p>These are the things I cherish so in you.</p>
<p>I so wish I could give my girls a more just world.</p>
<p>I know you'll make it a better place.</p>
<p>Hmm?</p>
<p>''...resounded, resounded with song of the nightingale.''</p>
<p>No.</p>
<p>No, I don't want them now.</p>
<p>And keep the music. I won't be going near a piano for ages.</p>
<p>You need your books in college. Here's your Dombey and Sons.</p>
<p>I could've sworn there was another volume.</p>
<p>Honestly,Jo...</p>
<p>I won't be taking all of Dickens to Harvard with me.</p>
<p>Oh, no. You'll have much more important things to read.</p>
<p>Nothing's going to change,Jo.</p>
<p>I wish I could go.</p>
<p>I wish you could too.</p>
<p>You'll come back knowing all sorts of things I don't know...</p>
<p>and then I'll hate you.</p>
<p>Oh.</p>
<p>Well, as it happens...</p>
<p>I already know something you don't know.</p>
<p>About Meg and a certain former tutor of mine...</p>
<p>soon to be employed at the firm of Laurence and Laurence.</p>
<p>Liar.</p>
<p>Has Meg mislaid a certain personal article...</p>
<p>such as a glove?</p>
<p>Meg,John Brooke stole your glove!</p>
<p>What glove? N-Not my white one?</p>
<p>Brooke's had it forever. Laurie says he keeps it in his pocket.</p>
<p>You must tell him to return it.</p>
<p>Hannah, don't you think he oughta give it back?</p>
<p>'Tisn't what I think that matters.</p>
<p>Jo? Meg?</p>
<p>It's, uh, a telegram...</p>
<p>from Washington Hospital.</p>
<p>Your father's been wounded.</p>
<p>- Come on, Amy. That's it. - There are six.</p>
<p>The household account is in this ledger. It should see you through the month.</p>
<p>- Of course. Don't worry about us. - Oh, Beth?</p>
<p>Look in on the Hummels for me, will you?</p>
<p>I will, Marmee.</p>
<p>Where's Jo? It's almost 6:00.</p>
<p>Doing battle with Aunt March for Marmee's railway ticket.</p>
<p>Carry a letter to Mrs.Juba at the Hope House.</p>
<p>John! Mr. Brooke.</p>
<p>I've come to offer myself as an escort to your mother.</p>
<p>Cook packed this up...</p>
<p>and Grandfather sends a bottle of spirits for Mr. March.</p>
<p>- That's lovely. Thank you. - Marmee?</p>
<p>- Mr. Brooke is here. - Mrs. March.</p>
<p>Mr. Brooke.</p>
<p>As young Laurence no longer requires a tutor...</p>
<p>Mr. Laurence has commissions for me in Washington.</p>
<p>I should like to be of service to you there.</p>
<p>- We couldn't let you travel alone. - Mr. Brooke, how kind of you.</p>
<p>- May I? - Thank you.</p>
<p>Are we to go on the 6:00 train?</p>
<p>Yes, I sentJo off, but she hasn't--</p>
<p>- I'm here! -Jo. Finally.</p>
<p>Twenty-five. Can Aunt March spare this?</p>
<p>I couldn't bear to ask her.</p>
<p>- I sold my hair. -Jo, how could you?</p>
<p>Your one beauty.</p>
<p>It isn't going to affect the state of the Union.</p>
<p>- It'll grow back. - It suits you.</p>
<p>Tell Father that we love him.</p>
<p>- Tell him we pray for him. - Bring him home.</p>
<p>- I'll never forget his kindness. - Hannah, thank you.</p>
<p>Oh, I shall miss my little women.</p>
<p>Are you thinking about Father?</p>
<p>No. My hair.</p>
<p>- A little harder. - Yeah, I hit him on the noggin.</p>
<p>Wait for me!</p>
<p>Blast! Oh, dear.</p>
<p>- This stove! - We'll eat them anyway.</p>
<p>There's no more cornmeal nor coffee.</p>
<p>The grocer won't let us have more on account.</p>
<p>- What can I bring the Hummels? - Oh, fry the Hummels!</p>
<p>- You spent hours there last week. - The boys are sick.</p>
<p>I mustn't write of this to Marmee.</p>
<p>- She has enough burdens now. - I hate money!</p>
<p>Your potatoes!</p>
<p>Come on! Here!</p>
<p>Air the beds. And be careful cleaning.</p>
<p>- And don't forget your studies, Amy. - I won't. I will. Go!</p>
<p>- Beth! - Christine.</p>
<p>I don't understand. I brought you a potato.</p>
<p>- Laurie's home for the weekend! - In need of funds, no doubt.</p>
<p>We'd have a week's groceries with what he spends on billiards.</p>
<p>Oh,Jehoshaphat!</p>
<p>Meg! Meg, you won't believe it!</p>
<p>I've sold the Lost Duke of Gloucester! Five whole dollars!</p>
<p>I'm an author!</p>
<p>- Beth? - The Hummel baby is sick.</p>
<p>I feel so strange.</p>
<p>She's burning up, but she says that she's freezing.</p>
<p>She has a terrible thirst, but she won't drink.</p>
<p>Sounds like arsenicum, but she looks more like belladonna.</p>
<p>I saw the Hummels.</p>
<p>Two children taken up toJesus. Scarlet fever.</p>
<p>You and Miss Jo won't be harmed.</p>
<p>You had it when you were babies.</p>
<p>But, Miss Amy, we have to send you away.</p>
<p>She won't die.</p>
<p>Will she, Laurie? God wouldn't let her die.</p>
<p>I don't wanna go away.</p>
<p>I'll come and see you every day.</p>
<p>I swear it. You won't be alone.</p>
<p>I'm afraid of Aunt March.</p>
<p>If she's unkind to you...</p>
<p>I'll come and take you away.</p>
<p>Where will we go?</p>
<p>Paris?</p>
<p>If I get scarlet fever and die...</p>
<p>give Meg my box with the green doves on it.</p>
<p>- And Jo must have my turquoise ring. - I'll see to that.</p>
<p>I don't wanna die.</p>
<p>I've never even been kissed.</p>
<p>I've waited my whole life to be kissed.</p>
<p>And what if I miss it?</p>
<p>I tell you what.</p>
<p>I promise to kiss you before you die.</p>
<p>Whoa!</p>
<p>I don't know. I don't think Marmee should leave Father.</p>
<p>Beth needs Marmee. She depends on her.</p>
<p>But what if we send for her and Father gets worse?</p>
<p>How in the name of all that's holy would we pay for the train?</p>
<p>''That he profane not my 'sancteraries'--''</p>
<p>- Sanctuary. - ''Sanctuaries.</p>
<p>For I, the Lord, do sanctify them.</p>
<p>And Moses told it unto Aaron and to his sons...</p>
<p>and unto all the children of Israel.''</p>
<p>Go on.</p>
<p>''And the Lord spake unto Moses saying--''</p>
<p>Jo, Mr. Laurence is here.</p>
<p>If we may, I wish my personal physician, Dr. Bangs...</p>
<p>to examine the little girl.</p>
<p>There's nothing to be done.</p>
<p>If I bleed her, it would finish her.</p>
<p>- Best to send for the mother. - Forgive me.</p>
<p>I've already done so. Mrs. March arrives on the train this night.</p>
<p>Hail Mary, full of grace, the Lord is with thee.</p>
<p>Blessed art thou amongst women and--</p>
<p>Cricket, Marmee's here.</p>
<p>Icy cold.Jo.</p>
<p>Jo, fetch a basin with vinegar water and rags.</p>
<p>Meg, my kit.</p>
<p>Must draw the fever down from her head.</p>
<p>It's all right. It's all right.</p>
<p>It's all right now. That's my love.</p>
<p>Beth!</p>
<p>And so our dear Beth came back to us...</p>
<p>although the fever had weakened her heart forever.</p>
<p>We did not know then that a shadow had fallen.</p>
<p>We prepared for another Christmas without Father.</p>
<p>Try each corner. Thank you.</p>
<p>No, no! One bow is enough!</p>
<p>Mr. Laurence. Thank you.</p>
<p>- Oh. I'm so sorry. - It happens all the time.</p>
<p>Here she comes!</p>
<p>- Come on! Come on! - What should I do with these bows?</p>
<p>Now, don't scare her to death. She's been sick, you know.</p>
<p>Hide the chairs. Hide them, Amy!</p>
<p>Quick.</p>
<p>The house is beautiful.</p>
<p>They're friends of mine from college.</p>
<p>Freddy Vaughan and Averill Watson.</p>
<p>They won't bite.</p>
<p>No, don't sit there! Sit--</p>
<p>Here.</p>
<p>Sit here child.</p>
<p>Merry Christmas.</p>
<p>- Merry Christmas, Beth! - Merry Christmas, Beth!</p>
<p>I should have given it to you long ago.</p>
<p>It belonged to my little girl...</p>
<p>who had to leave us when she was very young.</p>
<p>But now, it will make music again.</p>
<p>Thank you, Mr. Laurence.</p>
<p>- Merry Christmas! - Merry Christmas.</p>
<p>Play something, Beth.</p>
<p>Shall I?</p>
<p>Deck the halls with boughs of holly</p>
<p>Fa la la la la La la la la</p>
<p>'Tis the season to be jolly</p>
<p>Fa la la la la La la la la</p>
<p>Don we now our gay apparel</p>
<p>Fa la la la la la La la la</p>
<p>Troll the ancient yuletide carol</p>
<p>Fa la la la la La la la la</p>
<p>See the blazing yule before us</p>
<p>Fa la la la la La la la la</p>
<p>Strike the harp and join the chorus</p>
<p>Fa la la la la La la la la</p>
<p>Follow me in merry measure</p>
<p>Fa la la la la la La la la</p>
<p>While I tell of yuletide treasure</p>
<p>Fa la la la la La la la la</p>
<p>That was good.</p>
<p>I fear you would have a long engagement.</p>
<p>Three or four years.John must secure a house before you can marry...</p>
<p>and he must do a service to the Union.</p>
<p>John? Marry?</p>
<p>You mean that pokey old Mr. Brooke?</p>
<p>How did he weasel his way into this family?</p>
<p>John has been very kind to go visit father in the hospital every day.</p>
<p>He's dull as powder. Meg, can't you at least marry someone amusing?</p>
<p>I'm fond of Mr. Brooke. He's a good man.</p>
<p>He's kind and serious...</p>
<p>and I'm not afraid of being poor.</p>
<p>Marmee, you can't just let her go and marry him.</p>
<p>I'd hardly just go and marry anyone.</p>
<p>I would rather Meg marry for love and be a poor man's wife...</p>
<p>than marry for riches and lose her self-respect.</p>
<p>So you don't mind thatJohn is poor?</p>
<p>No, but I would rather he have a house.</p>
<p>Why must we marry at all?</p>
<p>Why can't things just stay as they are?</p>
<p>It is only a proposal. Nothing need be decided.</p>
<p>Now, girls...</p>
<p>let's not spoil the day.</p>
<p>Hark the herald angels sing</p>
<p>Glory to the newborn king</p>
<p>Glory to the newborn king</p>
<p>Peace on earth</p>
<p>- Father? -And mercy mild</p>
<p>- Father! - Merry Christmas, everyone.</p>
<p>What a wonderful Christmas present!</p>
<p>Oh, Father, you're home!</p>
<p>Oh, you're more handsome than ever!</p>
<p>Beth, my little cookie. Thank God you're well.</p>
<p>Give the man room to breathe.</p>
<p>Jo! Oh, my wild girl!</p>
<p>Well, this could become the fashion.</p>
<p>- Watch his arm. Be careful. - I'm not used to this.</p>
<p>Be very careful now.</p>
<p>Don't coddle this soldier too much.</p>
<p>Oh, Father!</p>
<p>Hannah, God bless you. It's good to see you.</p>
<p>It's good to have you home, Mr. March.</p>
<p>Now, let me look at my girls.</p>
<p>Take them and give them--</p>
<p>The cholera took more men than the rebs, as I understand it, sir.</p>
<p>Agriculture isn't taught, and it should be.</p>
<p>It should be required.</p>
<p>Perhaps the freedmen should be given land in the West.</p>
<p>- What happened between you and John? - Never you mind.</p>
<p>Isn't it wonderful,Jo?</p>
<p>Yes, it's wonderful.</p>
<p>Isn't It wonderful,Jo?</p>
<p>Yes, It's wonderful.</p>
<p>Welcome home, soldIer. Would you lIke some water, sIr?</p>
<p>From our birth</p>
<p>Over ad aroud us lies</p>
<p>Lord of all to Thee we raise</p>
<p>This our hym of grateful praise</p>
<p>Chage will come as surely as the seasos ad twice as quick.</p>
<p>We make our peace with it as best we ca...</p>
<p>or as Amy oce said whe she was still a little girl..</p>
<p>''We'll all grow up someday. We might as well kow what we wat. ''</p>
<p>Su ad moo ad stars of light</p>
<p>Lord of all to Thee we raise</p>
<p>This our hym of grateful praise</p>
<p>Lord of all to Thee we raise</p>
<p>This our hym of grateful praise</p>
<p>So you feel our Amy has talent?</p>
<p>Oh, MIss March excels at drawIng...</p>
<p>but, you know, her landscapes lack emotIon.</p>
<p>I definItely feel Amy would benefit from further study...</p>
<p>but she won't get It around here.</p>
<p>Where do you suggest?</p>
<p>Cape Cod has a fine artIst colony...</p>
<p>but Europe Is the best place.</p>
<p>Your houseman saId you wouldn't be home tIll nIght.</p>
<p>- I couldn't waIt so long. - HaIl the conquerIng graduate!</p>
<p>Is Grandfather exceedIngly proud?</p>
<p>Yes, and exceedIngly bent on lockIng me up In one of hIs offices.</p>
<p>Why Is It Amy may paInt chIna and you can scrIbble away...</p>
<p>whIle I must manfully set my musIc asIde?</p>
<p>Why must you?</p>
<p>If I don't...</p>
<p>I'd have to defy Grandfather.</p>
<p>Yes, and not the whole of socIety.</p>
<p>I can't go agaInst the old man.</p>
<p>When I ImagIne myself In that lIfe...</p>
<p>I can thInk of only one thIng...</p>
<p>that would make me happy.</p>
<p>Oh, no, Teddy.</p>
<p>Teddy, don't.</p>
<p>No, waIt, Teddy.</p>
<p>We have to talk about thIs reasonably.</p>
<p>I have loved you...</p>
<p>sInce the moment I clamped eyes on you.</p>
<p>Would could be more reasonable than to marry you?</p>
<p>- We'd kIll each other. - Nonsense.</p>
<p>- NeIther of us can keep our temper. - I can...</p>
<p>unless provoked.</p>
<p>We're both stupIdly stubborn, especIally you.</p>
<p>- We'd only quarrel. - I wouldn't!</p>
<p>You can't even propose wIthout quarrelIng.</p>
<p>DearJo, I swear I'll be a saInt.</p>
<p>I'll let you wIn every argument.</p>
<p>I'll take care of you and your famIly.</p>
<p>I'll gIve you every luxury you've ever been denIed.</p>
<p>You won't have to wrIte unless you want to.</p>
<p>Grandfather...</p>
<p>wants me to learn the busIness In England.</p>
<p>Can't you see us bashIng around London?</p>
<p>London.</p>
<p>Oh, Teddy, I'm not fashIonable enough for London.</p>
<p>You need someone who's elegant and refined.</p>
<p>I want you.</p>
<p>Teddy, please, don't ask me.</p>
<p>- Teddy, I'm desperately sorry. - No.</p>
<p>- I do care for you... - No.</p>
<p>wIth all of my heart.</p>
<p>You're my dearest frIend.</p>
<p>I just can't go be a wIfe.</p>
<p>You say you won't, but... you wIll.</p>
<p>I won't.</p>
<p>One day...</p>
<p>you'll meet some man.</p>
<p>A good man.</p>
<p>And you wIll love hIm tremendously.</p>
<p>And you wIll lIve and dIe for hIm.</p>
<p>- Teddy, please. - You wIll.</p>
<p>I know you.</p>
<p>And I'll be hanged...</p>
<p>If I stand by and watch.</p>
<p>Jo, are you Ill?</p>
<p>She has refused LaurIe.</p>
<p>Well, I'm sure she can take It back.</p>
<p>It's just a mIsunderstandIng.</p>
<p>LIsten to hIm.</p>
<p>I must get away.</p>
<p>Of course.</p>
<p>Aunt March Is goIng to France.</p>
<p>France! That's Ideal! I'll put up wIth anythIng to go!</p>
<p>Aunt March has asked me to go.</p>
<p>To Europe?</p>
<p>My Europe?</p>
<p>When?</p>
<p>It was decIded just today.</p>
<p>Well, I am her companIon now.</p>
<p>She wIshes me to study paIntIng abroad...</p>
<p>In hopes I mIght make a good match there.</p>
<p>But perhaps she wouldn't mInd If you stayed at Plumfield...</p>
<p>whIle we are gone.</p>
<p>Of course Aunt March prefers Amy over me.</p>
<p>Why shouldn't she? I'm ugly and awkward, and I always say the wrong thIngs.</p>
<p>I fly around throwIng away perfectly good marrIage proposals.</p>
<p>I love our home, but I'm just so fitful that I can't stand beIng here!</p>
<p>I'm sorry. I'm sorry, Marmee.</p>
<p>There's just somethIng really wrong wIth me.</p>
<p>I want to change, but I can't...</p>
<p>and I just know I'll never fit In anywhere.</p>
<p>Jo, you have so many extraordInary gIfts.</p>
<p>How can you expect to lead an ordInary lIfe?</p>
<p>You're ready to go out and find a good use for your talent.</p>
<p>Although I don't know what I shall do wIthout myJo.</p>
<p>Go...</p>
<p>and embrace your lIberty...</p>
<p>and see what wonderful thIngs come of It.</p>
<p>Laurie sought his refuge i Lodo ad abroad.</p>
<p>Marmee helped me find a place i the great city of New York...</p>
<p>ad so I stepped over the divide betwee childhood ad all that lay beyod.</p>
<p>Mrs. KIrk?</p>
<p>JosephIne!</p>
<p>- Yes. How do you do? - KItty, MInnIe.</p>
<p>ThIs Is MIss March.</p>
<p>Her father was Colonel March. He knew your papa.</p>
<p>- It was cold. - Watch your feet, Mr. CostIgan.</p>
<p>- Do come In, my dear. - You're makIng that up.</p>
<p>Dear Beth..Marmee's fried, Mrs. Kirk, has made me feel quite at home.</p>
<p>My little studets, Kitty ad Miie, are dear girls.</p>
<p>How curious to grow up i a busy boardig house...</p>
<p>with o father ad your ow mother the ikeeper.</p>
<p>I felt bold o leavig Cocord...</p>
<p>but I cofess I find New York rough ad strage...</p>
<p>ad myself strage i it.</p>
<p>Please pass these down the table. Thank you kIndly, Professor.</p>
<p>Mrs. Kirk believes that I am here...</p>
<p>for a brief iterlude of sesatioal experiece...</p>
<p>before succumbig to a matrimoial fate.</p>
<p>Excuse me, mIss.</p>
<p>Ad while there is surely o lack of sesatioal experiece...</p>
<p>of every kid available i such a city...</p>
<p>- Come In! - I hope, though I've had o luck yet...</p>
<p>that ay experiece I gai here will be strictly literary...</p>
<p>ad that all evets of a romatic or sesatioal ature...</p>
<p>will be etirely cofined to the page.</p>
<p>Our subscrIbers are not Interested In sentIment and faIry storIes, mIss.</p>
<p>They're not faIry storIes.</p>
<p>Try one of the ladIes' magazInes.</p>
<p>- Come on, WIll! Hurry up! - I'm comIng!</p>
<p>I'm so sorry. I'm so clumsy.</p>
<p>You know that when first I saw you, I thought...</p>
<p>''Ah! She Is a wrIter.''</p>
<p>What made you thInk so?</p>
<p>Yes, I know many wrIters.</p>
<p>In BerlIn I was professor at the unIversIty.</p>
<p>Here I am just a humble tutor, I'm afraId.</p>
<p>Please, sIt down.</p>
<p>Thank you.</p>
<p>You are far from home, MIss March?</p>
<p>- Do you mIss your famIly? - Oh, very much.</p>
<p>My sIsters especIally.</p>
<p>And LaurIe.</p>
<p>She Is your sIster?</p>
<p>No, he's a frIend.</p>
<p>You lIke your coffee?</p>
<p>Oh, It's...just very strong.</p>
<p>I lIke It.</p>
<p>You have quIte a lIbrary.</p>
<p>DId you brIng all these books from Germany?</p>
<p>A few of them.</p>
<p>- May I? - Of course.</p>
<p>Most of these I could not bear to leave behInd.</p>
<p>I sold everythIng that I own to get my passage to come here...</p>
<p>but my books...</p>
<p>never.</p>
<p>Shakespeare.</p>
<p>Some books are so famIlIar.</p>
<p>ReadIng them Is lIke beIng home agaIn.</p>
<p>WIll you be returnIng to BerlIn, Professor Bhaer?</p>
<p>FrIedrIch. Call me FrIedrIch.</p>
<p>FrIedrIch.</p>
<p>No. Sadly, the fatherland of Goethe and SchIller...</p>
<p>Is no more.</p>
<p>I adore Goethe.</p>
<p>My father used to read me all the German poets when I was a chIld.</p>
<p>Really? That Is most surprIsIng.</p>
<p>My mother and father were part of...</p>
<p>a rather unusual cIrcle In Concord.</p>
<p>Do you know the word ''transcendentalIst''?</p>
<p>But thIs Is German romantIc phIlosophy.</p>
<p>We throw off all our constraInts and we come to know ourselves...</p>
<p>through InsIght and experIence.</p>
<p>It got out of fashIon now.</p>
<p>Not In the March famIly, I'm afraId.</p>
<p>It's just that wIth all of thIs transcendence...</p>
<p>comes much emphasIs on perfectIng oneself.</p>
<p>ThIs gIves you a problem?</p>
<p>I'm hopelessly flawed.</p>
<p>If only we could...</p>
<p>transcend ourselves wIthout perfectIon.</p>
<p>LIke your poet, Walt WhItman...</p>
<p>who rIdes up and down the streets of Broadway all day...</p>
<p>shoutIng poetry agaInst the roar of the carts.</p>
<p>'' Keep your sIlent woods, O Nature...</p>
<p>- ''And your quIet places by the rIver-- - And your quIet places by the woods...</p>
<p>by the woods.</p>
<p>GIve me the streets of Manhattan.''</p>
<p>I thInk we are all hopelessly flawed.</p>
<p>He is as poor as oe might imagie a itierat philosopher to be.</p>
<p>Yet, as the weeks go by, I see that he is ufailigly geerous...</p>
<p>to all of us who live i the house.</p>
<p>I am grateful to have a fried.</p>
<p>It Is the system our natIon was founded on.</p>
<p>Come now. It was nothIng short of a betrayal of our country's Ideals.</p>
<p>Our country's Ideals?</p>
<p>A constItutIon...</p>
<p>that denIes the basIc rIghts of cItIzenshIp to women and black people?</p>
<p>They just passed the 1 5th Amendment,Jacob.</p>
<p>- They can vote. - Black men can vote, Charles.</p>
<p>A lady has no need of suffrage If she has a husband.</p>
<p>- You don't take wIne? - Only medIcInally.</p>
<p>Pretend that you've got a cold.</p>
<p>I agree, but If women are a moral force...</p>
<p>shouldn't they have the rIght to govern and preach and testIfy In court?</p>
<p>What Is It, MIss March?</p>
<p>I find It poor logIc to say that because women are good...</p>
<p>women should vote.</p>
<p>Men do not vote because they are good. They vote because they are male.</p>
<p>And women should vote not because they are angels and men are anImals...</p>
<p>but because we are human beIngs and cItIzens of thIs country.</p>
<p>You should have been a lawyer, MIss March.</p>
<p>I should have been a great many thIngs, Mr. Mayer.</p>
<p>Oh, I'm sorry.</p>
<p>No, please. Please, come In.</p>
<p>I have some good news.</p>
<p>A newspaper has publIshed two of my storIes, and they wIsh to see more.</p>
<p>ThIs Is wonderful.</p>
<p>RIght there.</p>
<p>- The Daily Volcao? - Yes.</p>
<p>''The SInner's Corpse''...</p>
<p>byJoseph March.</p>
<p>LunatIcs. VampIres.</p>
<p>ThIs Interests you?</p>
<p>People lIke thrIllIng storIes, FrIedrIch.</p>
<p>ThIs Is what the newspapers want.</p>
<p>Yes. Yes, I suppose.</p>
<p>I suppose that Is true.</p>
<p>It wIll buy a new coat for Beth, and I'm sure she'll be grateful to have It.</p>
<p>I do not want to be your teacher. No, understand me.</p>
<p>I am sayIng only that you should please yourself.</p>
<p>My opInIon Is of no Importance.</p>
<p>Do you forgIve me?</p>
<p>- Of course. - Then I make a gIft.</p>
<p>An experIence. Do you lIke the opera?</p>
<p>Oh, I do. I mean, I thInk I do.</p>
<p>We don't seem to get a lot of opera In Concord.</p>
<p>I don't have an opera dress.</p>
<p>You wIll be perfect.</p>
<p>Where we are sIttIng, we shall not be so...</p>
<p>formal.</p>
<p>LeIla Is a goddess.</p>
<p>She has made a promIse never to love.</p>
<p>If she breaks her vow, all wIll be lost.</p>
<p>Oh, look. Trouble Is comIng.</p>
<p>- What's goIng to happen? - The InevItable.</p>
<p>LeIla's soul Is openIng.</p>
<p>She's drawn to an Idea.</p>
<p>He says, '' Love has a fatal power.''</p>
<p>Your heart...</p>
<p>understood mIne.</p>
<p>In the depth of the fragrant nIght...</p>
<p>I lIstened wIth ravIshed soul...</p>
<p>to your beloved voIce.</p>
<p>Your heart understood mIne.</p>
<p>Oh, LaurIe! You wIcked!</p>
<p>We heard you were In Greece or somewhere.</p>
<p>LaurIe! Come! Come!</p>
<p>You've been much occupIed wIth busIness, I am sure.</p>
<p>I'm not pursuIng busIness just now.</p>
<p>Grandfather agreed I should concentrate...</p>
<p>on my musIc for a whIle.</p>
<p>You know Fred Vaughan?</p>
<p>- Freddy. - Good day, Laurence.</p>
<p>Yes. I see you've taken up a passIon for art, Freddy.</p>
<p>Aunt March, you look splendId.</p>
<p>I cannot say the same for you, my boy.</p>
<p>Amy dear.</p>
<p>- WIll you be long? I must retIre. - Yes, Aunt March.</p>
<p>Do come see us.</p>
<p>- Are they engaged? - Not yet.</p>
<p>Hop, hop.</p>
<p>One, two, three, four.</p>
<p>Hop, hop, hop, turn.</p>
<p>FrIedrIch, how long would It take strychnIne to dIssolve In brandy?</p>
<p>Oh. About eIght mInutes?</p>
<p>And Is a dagger worn at the waIst, or Is that a saber?</p>
<p>I thInk that In these novels...</p>
<p>the dagger Is usually concealed In the boot...</p>
<p>by a man wIth a dark moustache.</p>
<p>Go thIs way.</p>
<p>Hurry! Hurry!</p>
<p>Oh, LaurIe, how lovely.</p>
<p>It Isn't what It should be, but you have Improved It.</p>
<p>Please don't.</p>
<p>I lIked you much better when you were blunt and natural.</p>
<p>It dId not serve me well.</p>
<p>I find you changed.</p>
<p>In fact, I despIse you.</p>
<p>You laze about spendIng your famIly's money and courtIng women.</p>
<p>You aren't serIous about musIc.</p>
<p>My composItIons are lIke your paIntIngs:</p>
<p>medIocre copIes of another man's genIus.</p>
<p>Then why don't you go to Grandfather In London and make yourself useful?</p>
<p>I should.</p>
<p>Why don't you reform me?</p>
<p>I've someone more practIcal In mInd.</p>
<p>You do not love Fred Vaughan.</p>
<p>Fred Vaughan Is stable and well-mannered--</p>
<p>And has 40,000 a year.</p>
<p>I've always known I would not marry a pauper.</p>
<p>I expect a proposal any day.</p>
<p>You'll regret It.</p>
<p>I'll regret It.</p>
<p>I'm remInded of a promIse.</p>
<p>DIdn't I say I would kIss you before you dIe?</p>
<p>Do you hear from Jo?</p>
<p>She has befrIended a German professor.</p>
<p>Yes. No doubt he's showIng her...</p>
<p>the ways of the world.</p>
<p>I do not wIsh to be courted by someone who Is stIll In love wIth my sIster!</p>
<p>I'm not In love wIth Jo.</p>
<p>Then how do you explaIn your jealousy?</p>
<p>I envy her happIness.</p>
<p>I envy hIs happIness.</p>
<p>I envyJohn Brooke for marryIng Meg.</p>
<p>I hate Fred Vaughan.</p>
<p>If Beth had a lover, I would despIse hIm too.</p>
<p>Just as you have always known you would never marry a pauper...</p>
<p>I have always known...</p>
<p>I should be part of the March famIly.</p>
<p>I do not wIsh to be loved for my famIly.</p>
<p>Any more than Fred Vaughan wIshes to be loved for hIs 40,000 a year.</p>
<p>My darlig Amy.</p>
<p>It is you I wat ad ot your family.</p>
<p>I've goe to Lodo to make myself worthy of you.</p>
<p>Please, do ot do aythig we shall regret.</p>
<p>MonsIeur Vaughan, mademoIselle. May I show hIm In?</p>
<p>- FrIedrIch, dId you read It? - Yes.</p>
<p>It's well wrItten,Jo.</p>
<p>And the first novel. What a great accomplIshment.</p>
<p>I'm goIng to be showIng It to your publIsher frIend, Mr. FIelds, today.</p>
<p>He lIked ''The SInner's Corpse.''</p>
<p>What Is It?</p>
<p>Mr. FIelds Is a good man. He wIll gIve you an honest opInIon.</p>
<p>Oh, I see.</p>
<p>What Is your honest opInIon?</p>
<p>- I'm a professor of phIlosophy. - No, I'd lIke to know what you thInk.</p>
<p>You should be wrItIng from lIfe...</p>
<p>from the depths of your soul.</p>
<p>There Is nothIng In here of the woman that I am prIvIleged to know.</p>
<p>FrIedrIch, thIs Is what I wrIte.</p>
<p>My apologIes If It faIls to lIve up to your hIgh standards.</p>
<p>Jo, there Is more to you than thIs...</p>
<p>If you have the courage to wrIte It.</p>
<p>Why dIdn't you tell me?</p>
<p>One hardly speaks of such thIngs.</p>
<p>Oh, how wonderful.</p>
<p>How Is Beth?</p>
<p>You wIll find her much altered.</p>
<p>Marmee.</p>
<p>She wouldn't let us send for you sooner.</p>
<p>The doctor has been here a number of tImes...</p>
<p>but It's beyond all of us, and I thInk--</p>
<p>I thInk she's been waItIng for you...</p>
<p>before--</p>
<p>You're goIng to drInk up all of thIs good broth.</p>
<p>I'm glad you're home.</p>
<p>So am I.</p>
<p>'' Mr. PIckwIck changed color. 'Ah,' saId Mr. Wartle.</p>
<p>'Well, that's Important. There's nothIng suspIcIous then, I suppose.'''</p>
<p>I feel stronger wIth you close by.</p>
<p>I'm goIng to get you better yet.</p>
<p>If God wants me wIth HIm, there Is none who wIll stop HIm.</p>
<p>I don't mInd.</p>
<p>I was never lIke the rest of you...</p>
<p>makIng plans about the great thIngs I'd do.</p>
<p>I never saw myself as anythIng much.</p>
<p>Not a great wrIter lIke you.</p>
<p>Beth, I'm not a great wrIter.</p>
<p>But you wIll be.</p>
<p>Oh,Jo, I've mIssed you so.</p>
<p>Why does everyone want to go away?</p>
<p>I love beIng home.</p>
<p>But I don't lIke beIng left behInd.</p>
<p>Now I am the one goIng ahead.</p>
<p>I am not afraId.</p>
<p>I can be brave lIke you.</p>
<p>But I know I shall be homesIck for you...</p>
<p>even In heaven.</p>
<p>I won't let you go.</p>
<p>Oh, myJo.</p>
<p>Aunt March Is bedrIdden and would not survIve a sea voyage.</p>
<p>Amy must bIde her tIme and return later.</p>
<p>It's just as well.</p>
<p>WIll we never all be together agaIn?</p>
<p>Lovely mornIng.</p>
<p>Thank you, sIr.</p>
<p>Dearest Laurie..</p>
<p>You may ot have heard our sad ews of Beth's--</p>
<p>'' Meg has entered her confinement...</p>
<p>and poor Amy must stay In Vevey wIth Aunt March.''</p>
<p>This is far too great a sorrow to bear aloe.</p>
<p>Please come home to us, Teddy dear.</p>
<p>Your faithful,Jo.</p>
<p>I knew you would come.</p>
<p>The real charm of it lay i Beth's happy face...</p>
<p>as she leaed over the ew piao ad lovigly touched...</p>
<p>the beautiful black ad white keys.</p>
<p>Durig the ext few miutes, the rumor circulated...</p>
<p>that Amy March had got 2 4 delicious limes.</p>
<p>I told you they dressed me up, but I did't tell you...</p>
<p>that they powdered ad squeezed ad made me look a fashio plate.</p>
<p>As she spoke, Jo took off her boet.</p>
<p>A geeral outcry arose, for all her abudat hair was cut short.</p>
<p>Jo, how could you? Your oe beauty.</p>
<p>Nothig's goig to chage,Jo.</p>
<p>For the beauty of the earth</p>
<p>For the glory of the skies</p>
<p>For the love which from our birth</p>
<p>Over ad aroud us lies</p>
<p>Lord of all to Thee we raise</p>
<p>This our hym of grateful praise</p>
<p>SurprIse!</p>
<p>John, you have a daughter.</p>
<p>And a son.</p>
<p>Oh, Marmee, I can't belIeve you dId thIs four tImes.</p>
<p>Yes, but never two at once, my darlIng.</p>
<p>Oh, DaIsy.</p>
<p>Oh, Meg, she's so beautIful.</p>
<p>And hIm. He Is handsome.</p>
<p>He's goIng to look just lIke hIs papa when he grows up.</p>
<p>Yes, he does look lIkeJohn.</p>
<p>Have you heard from the professor?</p>
<p>We dId not part well.</p>
<p>John and I don't always agree, but then we mend It.</p>
<p>Who could that be?</p>
<p>Oh, thIs Is magIc!</p>
<p>You are absolutely--</p>
<p>Covered In flour! Oh, dear!</p>
<p>- Come In. - No,Jo, not yet.</p>
<p>May I tell you somethIng wIthout the others?</p>
<p>You're my dear frIend.</p>
<p>I'm glad that you shall be the first to know.</p>
<p>- What? - May I present...</p>
<p>my wIfe.</p>
<p>Oh, my!</p>
<p>- Here, flowers. - Thank you.</p>
<p>Come In!</p>
<p>Brussels lace! Oh!</p>
<p>I went to Europe to paInt the great cathedrals...</p>
<p>but I couldn't get our home out of my mInd.</p>
<p>Oh, look how Amy has captured Orchard House.</p>
<p>- Lovely. - Oh, It's beautIful.</p>
<p>Not as beautIful as I wanted, but I am stIll learnIng.</p>
<p>Dear lIttle angel.</p>
<p>Jo, you must tell me the truth, as a sIster...</p>
<p>whIch Is a relatIon stronger than marrIage.</p>
<p>Do you mInd at all?</p>
<p>Oh, no.</p>
<p>I was surprIsed.</p>
<p>MInd you, I had It on good authorIty that our Teddy...</p>
<p>would never love another.</p>
<p>And now he's gone and gotten marrIed.</p>
<p>It's good to hear you call me Teddy agaIn.</p>
<p>At last, we're all famIly, as we always should have been.</p>
<p>You must promIse me that you wIll always lIve close by.</p>
<p>I couldn't bear losIng another sIster.</p>
<p>Jo, It's so gloomy and chIlly.</p>
<p>One would requIre an Income just for the coal to heat thIs place.</p>
<p>What could the dear old gIrl have been thInkIng?</p>
<p>Most lIkely she felt sorry for me.</p>
<p>DecrepIt homeless spInster!</p>
<p>Oh, poor Aunt.</p>
<p>LIvIng here all those years alone In thIs useless old house.</p>
<p>Yes, her blessIngs became a burden because she couldn't share them.</p>
<p>Wouldn't thIs have made a wonderful school?</p>
<p>A school.</p>
<p>What a challenge that would be.</p>
<p>Hello, Tuppy. Hello.</p>
<p>Good boy.</p>
<p>My book!</p>
<p>Someone's publIshIng my book.</p>
<p>- Someone's publIshIng my book! - Heaven help us!</p>
<p>It came wIth no letter. How dId It arrIve?</p>
<p>ForeIgn gentleman brung It. Strange kInd of name.</p>
<p>Can't thInk of It. Oh, Fox, or Bear or such.</p>
<p>Bhaer! DId you ask hIm to waIt?</p>
<p>I thought he was one of MIss Amy's European frIends...</p>
<p>comIng wIth a weddIng gIft.</p>
<p>I saId, '' MIss March and Mr. LaurIe are lIvIng next door.''</p>
<p>- Hannah, you dIdn't! - Then he saId he had a traIn to catch.</p>
<p>FrIedrIch!</p>
<p>Oh, FrIedrIch, thank you for my book.</p>
<p>When I dIdn't hear from you...</p>
<p>I thought you hated It.</p>
<p>Oh, no. ReadIng your book was lIke openIng a wIndow...</p>
<p>Into your heart.</p>
<p>James FIelds took It out of my hands, and he would not gIve It back to me.</p>
<p>I saId, ''Such news I have to gIve to her myself.''</p>
<p>Well, It was a sIlly Impulse.</p>
<p>No, not sIlly at all.</p>
<p>It's so good to see you.</p>
<p>- Come and meet my famIly. - No, I--</p>
<p>Thank you, but...</p>
<p>I have to catch a traIn.</p>
<p>I am goIng to the West.</p>
<p>My shIp leaves from Boston tomorrow mornIng.</p>
<p>Yes, the schools In the West are young.</p>
<p>They need professors and...</p>
<p>they are not so concerned about the accent.</p>
<p>I don't mInd It eIther.</p>
<p>See, my aunt left me Plumfield.</p>
<p>It Isn't a field. It's a house, actually. A rather large house.</p>
<p>And It Isn't really good for anythIng except a school...</p>
<p>and I want a good school...</p>
<p>one that would be open to anyone who wanted to learn, and, well...</p>
<p>I'll be needIng someone who knows how to teach.</p>
<p>Is there nothIng I mIght say to keep you here?</p>
<p>I confess that I was hopIng that I mIght have a reason...</p>
<p>to stay, but...</p>
<p>congratulatIons on the celebratIon of your marrIage.</p>
<p>Oh, no!</p>
<p>No, that's Amy. That's my sIster.</p>
<p>Amy and LaurIe, actually.</p>
<p>No, I'm not marrIed.</p>
<p>Please don't go so far away.</p>
<p>Jo.</p>
<p>Such a lIttle name for--</p>
<p>for such a person.</p>
<p>WIll you have me?</p>
<p>WIth all of my heart!</p>
<p>But I have nothIng to gIve you. My hands are empty.</p>
<p>Not empty now.</p>
]]></description>
<pubDate>2009-01-05 00:18:22</pubDate>
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