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Huldah, The Help [A Thanksgiving Love Story]
by [?]

[*]

I remember a story that Judge Balcom told a few years ago on the afternoon of Thanksgiving Day. I do not feel sure that it will interest everybody as it did me. Indeed, I am afraid that it will not, and yet I can not help thinking that it is just the sort of a trifle that will go well with turkey, celery, and mince pie.

[*] This is the first story written by me, beyond a few juvenile
tales; and it was the first short story to appear in Scribner’s
Monthly, the present Century Magazine. Mr. Gilder, then
associated with Dr. Holland in editing that newborn periodical,
begged me to write a short story for the second number of the
magazine. I told him that something Helps had written suggested
that a story might be devised in which the hero should marry a
servant. He said it couldn’t be done, and I wrote this, on a
wager, as it were. But a “help” is not a servant. The popularity
of this story encouraged me to continue, but I can not now
account for the popularity of the story.

It was in the judge’s own mansion on Thirty-fourth Street that I heard it. It does not matter to the reader how I, a stranger, came to be one of that family party. Since I could not enjoy the society of my own family, it was an act of Christian charity that permitted me to share the joy of others. We had eaten dinner and had adjourned to the warm, bright parlor. I have noticed on such occasions that conversation is apt to flag after dinner. Whether it is that digestion absorbs all of one’s vitality, or for some other reason, at least so it generally falls out, that people may talk ever so brilliantly at the table, but they will hardly keep it up for the first half-hour afterward. And so it happened that some of the party fell to looking at the books, and some to turning the leaves of the photograph album, while others were using the stereoscope. For my own part, I was staring at an engraving in a dark corner of the parlor, where I could not have made out much of its purpose if I had desired, but in reality I was thinking of the joyous company of my own kith and kin, hundreds of miles away, and regretting that I could not be with them.

“What are you thinking about, papa?” asked Irene, the judge’s second daughter.

She was a rather haughty-looking girl of sixteen, but, as I had noticed, very much devoted to her parents. At this moment she was running her hand through her father’s hair, while he was rousing himself from his revery to answer her question.

“Thinking of the old Thanksgivings, which were so different from anything we have here. They were the genuine thing; these are only counterfeits.”

“Come, tell us about them, please.” This time it was Annie Balcom, the elder girl, who spoke. And we all gathered round the judge. For I notice that when conversation does revive, after that period of silence that follows dinner, it is very attractive to the whole company, and in whatsoever place it breaks out there is soon a knot of interested listeners.

“I don’t just now think of any particular story of New England Thanksgivings that would interest you,” said the judge.

“Tell them about Huldah’s mince pie,” said Mrs. Balcom, as she looked up from a copy of Whittier she had been reading.

I can not pretend to give the story which follows exactly in the judge’s words, for it is three years since I heard it, but as nearly as I can remember it was as follows:

There was a young lawyer named John Harlow practicing law here in New York twenty odd years ago. His father lived not very far from my father. John had been graduated with honors, had studied law, and had the good fortune to enter immediately into a partnership with his law preceptor, ex-Gov. Blank. So eagerly had he pursued his studies that for two years he had not seen his country home. I think one reason why he had not cared to visit it was that his mother was dead, and his only sister was married and living in Boston. Take the “women folks” out of a house, and it never seems much like home to a young man.