After the night of which we have written, the tie of affection

between Mrs. Kennedy and the blind girl was stronger than before,

and when the former said to her husband, "Maude must have an outfit

worthy of a rich man's stepdaughter," he knew by the tone of her

voice that remonstrance was useless, and answered meekly, "I will do

what is right, but don't be too extravagant, for Nellie's clothes

almost ruined me, and I had to pay for that piano yesterday. Will

fifty dollars do?"

"Fifty dollars!" repeated the lady. "Are you crazy?" Then, touched

perhaps by the submissive expression of his face, she added, "As

Maude is blind, she will not need as much as if she were going at

once into society. I'll try and make two hundred dollars answer,

though that will purchase but a meager trousseau."

Mrs. Kennedy's pronounciation of French was not always correct, and

John, who chanced to be within hearing, caught eagerly at the last

word, exclaiming, "Ki! dem trouses must cost a heap sight mor'n

mine! What dis nigger spec' 'em can be?" and he glanced ruefully at

his own glazed pants of corduroy, which had done him service for two

or three years.

Maude was a great favorite with John, and when he heard that she was

going away forever he went up to the woodshed chamber where no one

could see him, and seating himself upon a pile of old shingles,

which had been put there for kindling, he cried like a child.

"It'll be mighty lonesome, knowin' she's gone for good," he said,

"for, though she'll come back agin, she'll be married, and when a

gal is married, that's the last on 'em. I wish I could give her

somethin', to show her my feelin's."

He examined his hands; they were hard, rough, and black. He drew

from his pocket a bit of looking-glass and examined his face--that

was blacker yet; and shaking his head, he whispered: "It might do

for a mulatto gal, but not for her." Then, as a new idea crossed his

mind, he brightened up, exclaiming, "My heart is white, and if I

have a tip-top case, mebby she won't 'spise a poor old nigger's

picter!"

In short, John contemplated having his daguerreotype taken as a

bridal present for Maude. Accordingly, that very afternoon he

arrayed himself in his best, and, entering the yellow car of a

traveling artist who had recently come to the village, he was soon

in possession of a splendid case and a picture which he, pronounced

"oncommon good-lookin' for him." This he laid carefully away until

the wedding-day, which was fixed for the 15th of April. When Mr. De

Vere heard of John's generosity to Maude in giving her the golden

eagles, he promptly paid them back, adding five more as interest,

and at the same time asking him if he would not like to accompany

them to Europe.




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