Upon arriving at her new home in Wethersfield, Kit explains to her Puritan family how she got there and why she came alone. Kit describes how her grandfather's health had been gradually failing, worsened by the thievery of an overseer named Bryant who had sold off their crops and disappeared with the money. After her grandfather died, Kit was forced to sell off all of his land, his house, his furniture, and his slaves. Even...
Upon arriving at her new home in Wethersfield, Kit explains to her Puritan family how she got there and why she came alone. Kit describes how her grandfather's health had been gradually failing, worsened by the thievery of an overseer named Bryant who had sold off their crops and disappeared with the money. After her grandfather died, Kit was forced to sell off all of his land, his house, his furniture, and his slaves. Even then, she still did not have enough money to pay for her passage to Connecticut, and so she was forced to sell off her personal slave, who had been with her for twelve years. She reveals that she had not come to Wethersfield for a visit, as she had initially claimed, but rather to remain there permanently with the family.
Aunt Rachel is very sympathetic to this story, but Uncle Matthew expresses some serious hesitation in letting this strange and extravagantly dressed girl live with his family. Nonetheless, what is done is done, and since Kit has come so far, she will be allowed to stay.
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