1 She walked away, slowly thinking.
2 She put the key in her pocket and walked up and down her walk.
3 He crossed the lawn and turned into the Long Walk by the ivied walls.
4 She walked round and round the gardens and wandered about the paths in the park.
5 Mary had poured out speech as rapidly as she could as they had come down the Long Walk.
6 When I go, none of the gardeners are to be anywhere near the Long Walk by the garden walls.
7 She walked slowly down this place and stared at the faces which also seemed to stare at her.
8 She walked back into the first kitchen-garden she had entered and found the old man digging there.
9 She was a sweet, pretty thing and he'd have walked the world over to get her a blade o grass she wanted.
10 Presently an old man with a spade over his shoulder walked through the door leading from the second garden.
11 She walked under one of the fairy-like gray arches between the trees and looked up at the sprays and tendrils which formed them.
12 And he actually stopped digging, threw his spade over his shoulder and walked off, without even glancing at her or saying good-by.
13 But when at last they turned into the Long Walk by the ivied walls the excited sense of an approaching thrill made them, for some curious reason they could not have explained, begin to speak in whispers.
14 It seemed as if there was no one in all the huge rambling house but her own small self, wandering about upstairs and down, through narrow passages and wide ones, where it seemed to her that no one but herself had ever walked.
15 When the next day they set out on their journey to Yorkshire, she walked through the station to the railway carriage with her head up and trying to keep as far away from her as she could, because she did not want to seem to belong to her.
16 She went to her walk outside the long, ivy-covered wall over which she could see the tree-tops; and the second time she walked up and down the most interesting and exciting thing happened to her, and it was all through Ben Weatherstaff's robin.
17 Then she ran through the kitchen-gardens again and out into the walk outside the long ivy-covered wall, and she walked to the end of it and looked at it, but there was no door; and then she walked to the other end, looking again, but there was no door.
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