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The Story Of A Valentine
by
“Good!” cried the doctor; “I always advocated giving women every liberty in these matters.”
“But I will stump you yet, doctor,” said Hubert. “That evening Gough was to lecture in the village, and my friend went not to hear Gough but to see Miss Jennie Morton at a distance. Somehow in the stupefaction of revived hope he had not thought of going to the house to see her yet. He had postponed his departure and had thrown away his scruples. Knowing how much opposition he would have to contend with, he thought–if he thought at all–that he must proceed with caution. But some time after the lecture began he discovered the Morton family without Jennie! Slowly it all dawned upon him. She was at home waiting for him. He was near the front of the church in which the lecture was held, and every inch of aisle was full of people. To get out was not easy. But as he thought of Jennie waiting, it became a matter of life and death. If the house had been on fire he would not have been more intent on making his exit. He reached the door, he passed the happiest evening of his life, only to awake to sorrow, for Jennie’s father is ‘dead set’ against the match.”
“He has no right to interfere,” said the doctor vehemently. “You see, I stand by my principles.”
“But if I tell the story out I am afraid you would not,” said Hubert.
“Why, isn’t it done?”
“I beg your pardon, doctor, for having used a little craft. I had much at stake. I have disguised this story in its details. But it is true, I am the hero—-“
The doctor looked quickly towards his daughter. Her head was bent low over her book. Her long hair hung about it like a curtain, shutting out all view of the face. The doctor walked to the other window and looked out. Hubert sat like a mummy. After a minute Dr. Hood spoke.
“Cornelia!”
She lifted a face that was aflame. Tears glistened in her eyes, and I doubt not there was a prayer in her heart.
“You are a brave girl. I had other plans. You have a right to choose for yourself. God bless you both! But it’s a great pity Hu is not a lawyer; he pleads well.” So saying he put on his hat and walked out.
This is the conversation that Hubert repeated to me that day sitting in his own little parsonage in Allenville. A minute after his wife came in. She had been prescribing for the minor ailments of some poor neighbors. She took the baby from her crib, and bent over her till that same long hair curtained mother and child from sight.
“I think,” said Hubert, “that you folks who write love stories make a great mistake in stopping at marriage. The honeymoon never truly begins until conjugal affection is enriched by this holy partnership of loving hearts in the life of a child. The climax of a love story is not the wedding. It is the baby!”
“What do you call her?” I asked.
“Hope,” said the mother.
“Hope Valentine,” added the father, with a significant smile.
“And you spell the Hope with an ‘a,’ I believe,” I said.
“You naughty Hu!” said Mrs. Cornelia. “You’ve been telling. You think that love story is interesting to others because you enjoy it so much!”
1871.