Page:Salem - a tale of the seventeenth century (IA taleseventeenth00derbrich).pdf/127

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committed to jail to await further examinations.

These followed upon the second, third, fifth, and seventh of the month, when they were sent to Boston jail, where Sarah Osburn died in the following May. The child of Sarah Good, a little girl of five years of age, who had also been accused, died while in confinement.

As to the other two—Sarah Good and Tituba—as they will have no further connection with our story, we shall not return to them, and it may be as well to finish their histories here.

At one of the subsequent examinations of Sarah Good, one of the afflicted girls cried out that the prisoner, Good, had just stabbed her, and had broken the knife in so doing, in corroboration of which statement she produced a piece of a broken knife-blade. Upon which a young man then present produced the rest of the knife, which the court then examined, and declared to be the same. He then affirmed that he had broken the knife the day before, and had thrown away the piece, the accusing girl being present at the