1 You will have as free a command of the park and gardens as ever.
2 Yes, certainly, the sun shines, and the park looks very cheerful.
3 Now we are coming to the lodge-gates; but we have nearly a mile through the park still.
4 It stands in one of the lowest spots of the park; in that respect, unfavourable for improvement.
5 "Well, Fanny, this has been a fine day for you, upon my word," said Mrs. Norris, as they drove through the park.
6 You speak as if you were going two hundred miles off instead of only across the park; but you will belong to us almost as much as ever.
7 After some minutes spent in this way, Miss Bertram, observing the iron gate, expressed a wish of passing through it into the park, that their views and their plans might be more comprehensive.
8 A few steps farther brought them out at the bottom of the very walk they had been talking of; and standing back, well shaded and sheltered, and looking over a ha-ha into the park, was a comfortable-sized bench, on which they all sat down.
9 Mr. Rushworth came back from the Parsonage successful; and Edmund made his appearance just in time to learn what had been settled for Wednesday, to attend Mrs. Rushworth to her carriage, and walk half-way down the park with the two other ladies.
10 Her feelings for one and the other were soon a little tranquillised by seeing the party in the meadow disperse, and Miss Crawford still on horseback, but attended by Edmund on foot, pass through a gate into the lane, and so into the park, and make towards the spot where she stood.
11 They were just returned into the wilderness from the park, to which a sidegate, not fastened, had tempted them very soon after their leaving her, and they had been across a portion of the park into the very avenue which Fanny had been hoping the whole morning to reach at last, and had been sitting down under one of the trees.