1 You always read as a black's a man an a brother.
2 Mary knew the fair young man who looked like a boy.
3 "Awfully," the young man answered in a trembling voice.
4 The young man whose name was Barney looked at her very sadly.
5 Birds is rare choosers an a robin can flout a body worse than a man.
6 Then the old man's face wrinkled itself slowly into a new expression.
7 A neat, thin old man stood near the manservant who opened the door for them.
8 She could not understand how such a surly man could make such a coaxing sound.
9 She was with a fair young man and they stood talking together in low strange voices.
10 The first man who came in was a large officer she had once seen talking to her father.
11 She walked back into the first kitchen-garden she had entered and found the old man digging there.
12 "Here he is," chuckled the old man, and then he spoke to the bird as if he were speaking to a child.
13 Presently an old man with a spade over his shoulder walked through the door leading from the second garden.
14 It is a Yorkshire habit to say what you think with blunt frankness, and old Ben Weatherstaff was a Yorkshire moor man.
15 She had on her best black dress and cap, and her collar was fastened with a large brooch with a picture of a man's face on it.
16 At that very moment such a loud sound of wailing broke out from the servants' quarters that she clutched the young man's arm, and Mary stood shivering from head to foot.
17 He did not know that when she first saw him she spoke to him as she would have spoken to a native, and had not known that a cross, sturdy old Yorkshire man was not accustomed to salaam to his masters, and be merely commanded by them to do things.
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