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The Story Of A Valentine
by
“I am afraid I take your time, doctor,” said Hubert.
“Oh, no, I am giving up practice to my partner, Dr. Beck, and shall give it all to him in a year or two.”
“To him and Miss Cornelia?” queried Hubert, laughing. For it was currently reported that the young doctor and Cornelia were to form a partnership in other than professional affairs.
Either because he wished to attract her attention, or for some other reason, Hubert soon managed to turn the conversation to the subject of woman’s rights, and the old doctor and the young parson were soon hurling at each other all the staple and now somewhat stale arguments about woman’s fitness and woman’s unfitness for many things. At last, perhaps because he was a little cornered, Hubert said:
“Now, doctor, there was a queer thing happened to a student in my class in the seminary. I don’t suppose, doctor, that you are much interested in a love story, but I would just like to tell you this one, because I think you dare not apply your principles to it in every part. Theories often fail when practically applied, you know.”
“Go on, Hu, go on; I’d like to hear the story. And as for my principles, they’ll bear applying anywhere!” and the old doctor rubbed his hands together confidently.
“This friend of mine, Henry Gilbert,” said Hu, “was, like myself, poor. A long time ago, when he was a boy, the son of a poor widow, the lot on which he lived joined at the back the lot on which lived a Mr. Morton, at that time a thriving merchant, now the principal capitalist in that part of the country. As there was a back gate between the lots, my friend was the constant playmate from earliest childhood of Jennie Morton. He built her playhouses out of old boards, he molded clay bricks for her use, and carved tiny toys out of pine blocks for her amusement. As he grew larger, and as Jennie’s father grew richer and came to live in greater style, Henry grew more shy. But by all the unspoken language of the eyes the two never failed to make their unchanging regard known to each other.
“Henry went to college early. At vacation time the two met. But the growing difference in their social position could not but be felt. Jennie’s friends were of a different race from his own. Her parents never thought of inviting him to their entertainments. And if they had, a rusty coat and a lack of money to spend on kid gloves would have effectually kept him away. He was proud. This apparent neglect stung him. It is true that Jennie Morton was all the more kind. But his quick and foolish pride made him fancy that he detected pity in her kindness. And yet all this only made him determined to place himself in a position in which he could ask her hand as her equal. But you do not understand, doctor, as I do, how irresistible is this conviction of duty in regard to the ministry. Under that pressure my friend settled it that he must preach. And now there was before him a good ten years of poverty at least. What should he do about it?
“In his extremity he took advice of a favorite theological professor. The professor advised him not to seek the hand of a rich girl. She would not be suited to the trials of a minister’s life. But finding that Henry was firm in his opinion that this sound general principle did not in the least apply to this particular case, the professor proceeded to touch the tenderest chord in the young man’s heart. He told him that it would be ungenerous, and in some sense dishonorable, for him to take a woman delicately brought up into the poverty and trial incident to a minister’s life. If you understood, sir, how morbid his sense of honor is, you would not wonder at the impression this suggestion made upon him. To give up the ministry was in his mind to be a traitor to duty and to God. To win her, if he could, was to treat ungenerously her whose happiness was dearer to him a thousand times than his own.”