"It is Nora's child, Dinah. Didn't you know she had one?" said Hannah;

with a choking voice and a crimson face.

"Neber even s'picioned! I knowed as she'd been led astray, poor thin',

an' as how it was a-breakin' of her heart and a-killin' of her!

Leastways I heard it up yonder at de house; but I didn't know nuffin'

'bout dis yere!"

"But Uncle Jovial did."

"Dat ole sinner has got eyes like gimlets, dey bores into eberyting!"

"But didn't he tell you?"

"Not a singly breaf! he better not! he know bery well it's much as his

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ole wool's worf to say a word agin dat gal to me. No, he on'y say how

Miss Nora wer' bery ill, an' in want ob eberyting in de worl' an'

eberyting else besides. An' how here wer' a chance to 'vest our property

to 'vantage, by lendin' of it te de Lor', accordin' te de Scriptur's as

'whoever giveth to the poor lendeth to the Lord.' So I hunted up all I

could spare and fotch it ober here, little thinkin' what a sight would

meet my old eyes! Well, Lord!"

"But, Dinah," said the weeping Hannah, "you must not think ill of Nora!

She does not deserve it. And you must not, indeed."

"Chile, it aint for me to judge no poor motherless gal as is already

'peared afore her own Righteous Judge."

"Yes, but you shall judge her! and judge her with righteous judgment,

too! You have known her all your life--all hers, I mean. You put the

first baby clothes on her that she ever wore! And you will put the last

dress that she ever will! And now judge her, Dinah, looking on her pure

brow, and remembering her past life, is she a girl likely to have been

'led astray,' as you call it?"

"No, 'fore my 'Vine Marster in heaben, aint she? As I 'members ob de

time anybody had a-breaved a s'picion ob Miss Nora, I'd jest up'd an'

boxed deir years for 'em good--'deed me! But what staggers of me,

honey, is dat! How de debil we gwine to 'count for dat?" questioned

old Dinah, pointing in sorrowful suspicion at the child.

For all answer Hannah beckoned to the old woman to watch her, while she

untied from Nora's neck a narrow black ribbon, and removed from it a

plain gold ring.

"A wedding-ring!" exclaimed Dinah, in perplexity.

"Yes, it was put upon her finger by the man that married her. Then it

was taken off and hung around her neck, because for certain reasons she

could not wear it openly. But now it shall go with her to the grave in

its right place," said Hannah, as she slipped the ring upon the poor

dead finger.




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