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The Way to Peace by Margaret Wade Campbell Deland
page 28 of 51 (54%)
that he had settled half his capital upon her, so that she would
have some money to put into the common treasury of the community;
then he added that he had taken a house for himself near
the settlement, and that he would hire out to the Shakers
when they were haying, or do any farm-work that he could get.

"I can take care of myself, I guess," he said; "I used
to camp out when I was a boy, and I can cook pretty well,
mother always said." He looked at her wistfully; but the
uncomfortable-ness of such an arrangement did not strike her.
In her desire for a new emotion, her eagerness to FEEL--
that eagerness which is really a sensuality of the mind--
she was too absorbed in her own self-chosen hardships to think
of his; which were not entirely self-chosen.


"I think I can find enough to do," he said; "the Shakers need
an able-bodied man; they only have those three old men."

"How do you know that?" she asked, quickly.

"I've been to see them twice this winter," he said.

"Why!" she said, amazed, "you never told me!"

"I don't tell you everything nowadays, 'Thalia," he said, briefly.

In those two visits to the Shakers, Lewis Hall had been treated with
great delicacy; there had been no effort to proselytize, and equally
there had been no triumphing over the accession of his wife; in fact,
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