aving anything to
say."
"Were you thinking of your company?" said Belle.
"What company?" said I.
"The present company."
"The present company! oh, ah!--I remember that I said one only feels
uncomfortable in being silent with a companion, when one happens to be
thinking of the companion. Well, I had been thinking of you the last two
or three minutes, and had just come to the conclusion, that to prevent us
both feeling occasionally uncomfortably towards each other, having
nothing to say, it would be as well to have a standing subject, on which
to employ our tongues. Belle, I have determined to give you lessons in
Armenian."
"What is Armenian?"
"Did you ever hear of Ararat?"
"Yes, that was the place where the ark rested; I have heard the chaplain
in the great house talk of it; besides, I have read of it in the Bible."
"Well, Armenian is the speech of people of that place, and I should like
to teach it you."
"To prevent--"
"Ay, ay, to prevent our occasionally feeling uncomfortable together. Your
acquiring it besides might prove of ulterior advantage to us both; for
example, suppose you and I were in promiscuous company, at Court, for
example, and you had something to communicate to me which you did not
wish any one else to be acquainted with, how safely you might communicate
it to me in Armenian."
"Would not the language of the roads do as well?" said Belle.
"In some places it would," said I, "but not at Court, owing to its
resemblance to thieves' slang. There is Hebrew, again, which I was
thinking of teaching you, till the idea of being presented at Court made
me abandon it, from the probability of our being understood, in the event
of our speaking it, by at least half a dozen people in our vicinity.
There is Latin, it is true, or Greek, which we might speak aloud at Court
with perfect confidence of safety, but upon the whole I should prefer
teaching you Armenian, not because it would be a safer language to hold
communication with at Court, but because, not being very well grounded in
it myself, I am apprehensive that its words and forms may escape from my
recollection, unless I have sometimes occasion to call them forth."
"I am afraid we shall have to part company before I have learnt it," said
Belle; "in the meantime, if I wish to say anything to you in private,
somebody being by, shall I speak in the language of the roads?"
"If no roadster is nigh, you may," said I, "and I will do my b
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