"Well, supposing we do; where's the harm?"


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DATE: July 11, 2017, 6:03 p.m.

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  1. For every idle word that men shall speak, they shall give account thereof in the day of judgment."
  2. "A very solemn sermon," said Miss B., shaking her head impressively, as she sat down to table on Sunday noon; then giving a deep sigh, she added, "I am afraid that if an account is to be rendered for all our idle words, some people will have a great deal to answer for."
  3. "Why, Cousin Anna," replied a sprightly young lady opposite, "what do you mean by idle words?"
  4. "All words that have not a strictly useful tendency, Helen," replied Miss B.
  5. "I don't know what is to become of me, then," answered Helen, "for I never can think of any thing useful to say. I sit and try sometimes, but it always stops my talking. I don't think any thing in the world is so doleful as a set of persons sitting round, all trying to say something useful, like a parcel of old clocks ticking at each other. I think one might as well take the vow of entire silence, like the monks of La Trappe."
  6. "It is probable," said Miss B., "that a greater part of our ordinary conversation had better be dispensed with. 'In the multitude of words there wanteth not sin.' For my own part, my conscience often reproaches me with the sins of my tongue."
  7. "I'm sure you don't sin much that way, I must say," said Helen; "but, cousin, I really think it is a freezing business sitting still and reflecting all the time when friends are together; and after all I can't bring myself to feel as if it were wrong to talk and chatter away a good part of the time, just for the sake of talking. For instance, if a friend comes in of a morning to make a call, I talk about the weather, my roses, my Canary birds, or any thing that comes uppermost."
  8. "And about lace, and bonnet patterns, and the last fashions," added Miss B., sarcastically.
  9. "Well, supposing we do; where's the harm?"

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