French and Oriental Love in a Harem - Page 120/178

As I have become quite intimate with Commodore Montague's party, I

generally join their group, without the smallest fear of raising a

suspicion regarding these encounters. The attention which I pay to

Kondjé-Gul and to Suzannah have caused no little envy, for, as you know,

Kondjé-Gul pretends she does not dance. This peculiarity, together with

her original fascinations with which a certain childish simplicity is

mingled, give rise to the most extraordinary conjectures. What is the

cause of all this reserve? men ask. Is it modesty, bashfulness, or

pride? They know that she can dance splendidly, for she has been seen

dancing occasionally at private parties with Maud and Suzannah. They

think it must be due to some jealous fiancé, her betrothal to whom is

kept secret, and to whom she is devoted.

Lent having interrupted the course of public entertainments, our private

parties which usually took place at Teral House, became the gainers by

it. Maud and Suzannah felt more free and easy there, and Kondjé-Gul

experienced quite a childish delight in holding what she called her

"receptions." Our small circle was soon augmented by a dozen select

friends, picked carefully from the ranks of their young ball-room

acquaintances. There were one or two mothers among them whose presence

did not interfere with the harmony of these charming gatherings, and the

tone of elegant distinction which prevailed in no respect interfered

with their exuberant gaiety.

This break in the giddy circle of fashionable dissipation, afforded

quite a new happiness to Kondjé-Gul and me. In the course of her

initiation into the refinements of our life, her exotic charms had

acquired some new and indescribable embellishments. We spent many a long

evening alone together in that delightful privacy which affords the

sweetest opportunities for communion between loving hearts, and we grew

to feel like a modern Darby and Joan. I was quite proud of my handiwork,

and contemplated with joy this pure and ideal being whose nature I had

inspired, whose soul and whose heart I had moulded. The cultivation of

this young and virgin mind, as I may be permitted to call it, so

possessed by its Oriental beliefs, had produced a charming contrast of

enthusiasm and calm reason which imparted a most original effect to her

frank utterances of new ideas. I was often quite surprised to find in

her mingled with her Asiatic superstitions, and transformed as it were

by contact with a simpler faith, the substance of my own private

sentiments and of my wildest aspirations. One might really think that

she had borrowed her thoughts, nay, her very life, as it were, from me,

and that her tender emotions had their source in my own heart.