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Shut out from her the bitter word, And serpent hiss of scorning: Nor let the storms of yesterday Disturb her quiet morning. --_Whittier_. When the funeral ceremonies were over and the mourners were coming away from the grave, Mr. Wynne turned to them and said: "Friends, I wish to have some conversation with Hannah Worth, if you will excuse me." And the humble group, with the exception of Reuben Gray, took leave of Hannah and dispersed to their several homes. Reuben waited outside for the end of the parson's interview with his betrothed. "This is a great trial to you, my poor girl; may the Lord support you under it!" said Mr. Wynne, as they entered the hut and sat down. Hannah sobbed. "I suppose it was the discovery of Mr. Brudenell's first marriage that killed her?" "Yes, sir," sobbed Hannah. "Ah! I often read and speak of the depravity of human nature; but I could not have believed Herman Brudenell capable of so black a crime," said Mr. Wynne, with a shudder. "Sir," replied Hannah, resolved to do justice in spite of her bleeding heart, "he isn't so guilty as you judge him to be. When he married Norah he believed that his wife had been killed in a great railway crash, for so it was reported in all the newspaper accounts of the accident; and he never saw it contradicted." "His worst fault then appears to have been that of reckless haste in consummating his second marriage," said Mr. Wynne. "Yes; and even for that he had some excuse. His first wife was an artful widow, who entrapped him into a union and afterwards betrayed his confidence and her own honor. When he heard she was dead, you see, no doubt he was shocked; but he could not mourn for her as he could for a true, good woman." "Humph! I hope, then, for the sake of human nature that he is not so bad as I thought him. But now, Hannah, what do you intend to do?" "About what?" inquired the poor woman sadly. "About clearing the memory of your sister and the birth of her son from unmerited shame," replied Mr. Wynne gravely. "Nothing," she answered sadly. "Nothing?" repeated the minister, in surprise. "Nothing," she reiterated. "What! will you leave the stigma of undeserved reproach upon your sister in her grave and upon her child all his life, when a single revelation from you, supported by my testimony, will clear them both?" asked the minister, in almost indignant astonishment. "Not willingly, the Lord above k
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