1 Mary bent her head low over her work.
2 She glanced over it, and handed it to Mary.
3 Diana and Mary appeared in the chamber once or twice a day.
4 Miss Mary declared she felt, for her part, she never dared venture.
5 Mary and Diana, let us go into the parlour and talk the matter over.
6 Mary was too slim for her height, but Blanche was moulded like a Dian.
7 Lynn; and Mary Ingram listened languidly to the gallant speeches of the other.
8 Meantime, Mary Ingram, Amy and Louisa Eshton, declared they dared not go alone; and yet they all wished to go.
9 Diana and Mary Rivers became more sad and silent as the day approached for leaving their brother and their home.
10 Mary Ann remarked that she supposed some one must be very ill, as Mr. Bates had been sent for at that time of the evening.
11 Mary would sit and watch me by the hour together: then she would take lessons; and a docile, intelligent, assiduous pupil she made.
12 I could join with Diana and Mary in all their occupations; converse with them as much as they wished, and aid them when and where they would allow me.
13 Mr. Frederick Lynn has taken a seat beside Mary Ingram, and is showing her the engravings of a splendid volume: she looks, smiles now and then, but apparently says little.
14 At first I could not make much sense of what I heard; for the discourse of Louisa Eshton and Mary Ingram, who sat nearer to me, confused the fragmentary sentences that reached me at intervals.
15 Diana and Mary relieved me by turning their eyes elsewhere than to my crimsoned visage; but the colder and sterner brother continued to gaze, till the trouble he had excited forced out tears as well as colour.
16 Mr. St. John, when he saw me, merely bowed and passed through; the two ladies stopped: Mary, in a few words, kindly and calmly expressed the pleasure she felt in seeing me well enough to be able to come down; Diana took my hand: she shook her head at me.
17 One evening, in the beginning of June, I had stayed out very late with Mary Ann in the wood; we had, as usual, separated ourselves from the others, and had wandered far; so far that we lost our way, and had to ask it at a lonely cottage, where a man and woman lived, who looked after a herd of half-wild swine that fed on the mast in the wood.
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