"Hannah, you are a terrible duenna! You would be an acquisition to some

crabbed old Spaniard who had a beautiful young wife to look after! Now I

want you to tell me how on earth my burning up that old loom and wheel,

and putting a little comfortable furniture in this room, and paying you

sufficient to support you both, can possibly hurt her self-respect?"

demanded Herman.

"It will do more than that! it will hurt her character, Mr. Brudenell;

and that should be as dear to you as to herself."

"It is! it is the dearest thing in life to me! But how should what I

propose to do hurt either her self-respect or her character? You have

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not told me that yet!"

"This way, Mr. Brudenell! If we were to accept your offers, our

neighbors would talk of us."

"Neighbors! why, Hannah, what neighbors have you? In all the months that

I have been coming here, I have not chanced to meet a single soul!"

"No, you have not. And if you had, once in a way, met anyone here, they

would have taken you to be a mere passer-by resting yourself in our hut;

but if you were to make us as comfortable as you wish, why the very

first chance visitor to the hut who would see that the loom and the

spinning-wheel and old furniture were gone, and were replaced by the

fine carpet, curtains, chairs, and sofa that you wish to give us, would

go away and tell the wonder. And people would say: 'Where did Hannah

Worth get these things?' or, 'How do they live?' or, 'Who supports those

girls?' and so on. Now, Mr. Brudenell, those are questions I will not

have asked about myself and my sister, and that you ought not to wish to

have asked about your wife!"

"Hannah, you are quite right! You always are! And yet it distresses me

to see you living and working as you do."

"We are inured to it, Mr. Brudenell."

"But it will not be for long, Hannah. Very soon my mother and sisters go

to take possession of their new house in Washington. When they have left

Brudenell I will announce our marriage and bring you and your sister

home."

"Not me, Mr. Brudenell! I have said before that in marrying Nora you did

not marry all her poor relatives. I have told you that I will not share

the splendors of Nora's destiny. No one shall have reason to say of me,

as they would say if I went home with you, that I had connived at the

young heir's secret marriage with my sister for the sake of securing a

luxurious home for myself. No, Mr. Brudenell, Nora is beautiful, and it

is not unnatural that she should have made a high match; and the world

will soon forgive her for it and forget her humble origin. But I am a

plain, rude, hard-working woman; am engaged to a man as poor, as rugged,

and toil-worn as myself. We would be strangely out of place in your

mansion, subjected to the comments of your friends. We will never

intrude there. I shall remain here at my weaving until the time comes,

if it ever should come, when Reuben and myself may marry, and then, if

possible, we will go to the West, to better ourselves in a better

country."




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