As
a comfort during this strange and difficult time, I am re-reading Little Women, by Louisa May Alcott,
first read in childhood. I recalled the March family hunkered at home during
the Civil War, their father off serving as a chaplain for the
army, but little did I know quite how much their situation would resonate now!
When
I picked up my book this morning, opening to where my bookmark had fallen inplace the night before, the little women and their mother had received news of
the illness of Mr. March. Illness in war is common, and our big flu pandemic of
1918 happened in war, and here we are again. So Marmee, as her daughters call
her, packs a trunk and heads off to tend him, leaving the little women on their
own, in the care of Hannah the cook, and with the protection of the neighbor,
Mr. Laurence, and his grandson, Laurie.
The
next morning, they wake to the completely changed circumstances. “’I feel as if
there had been an earthquake,’ said Jo…” Indeed! And not only does the
disruption current in our lives feel as devastating as that, but there has just been another earthquake—in
Idaho!
And
for those of you who are stress eating (or stress baking), look at the
pertinence and needed humor of this! “’I think anxiety is very interesting,’
said Amy, eating sugar pensively.” I laughed a little, while maintaining my
compassion for those whose anxiety is hard to manage, and probably not with
sugar, and definitely not straight from the shared sugar bowl!
I
am reading a hard copy of Little Women,
a paperback I got for my son when he became enamored of the movie
(with Winona Ryder) one Christmas season. (I don’t think he read it, though, as
the binding was very tight, until, alas, I broke it, but now I am not straining
to read in the gutter, so to speak.) And I was eager to re-read this novel
after seeing the new film version this
Christmas season, directed by Greta Gerwig. But you can easily find e-book
versions at the library, along with Little
Men and Jo’s Boys, so I might try
those as our “shelter in place” continues.
So
many wonderful details from the book are coming back so vividly from my first
reading! Others I had forgotten: for instance, that the sisters had girlfriends
in the neighborhood who attended their little plays. And that they went on a
picnic with Laurie’s British friends and played croquet. That is, there’s not
as much “social distancing” in Little Women as I had remembered.
Ah,
but I know what’s coming next in the plot: Beth’s visit to a house with illness
in it. Again, the pertinence of Little
Women.
No comments:
Post a Comment