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Updated: June 28, 2025
I remember thinking how much better-looking he was than I had anticipated, and wondering that anyone should consider him ugly. His expression was grave and care-worn, but still enlivened with a cheerfulness that gave me instant hope.
Catching sight of Hope and Grace as they ran about the ruin, they went to join them, the one drawn by a vague interest in the exuviae of vanished life, the other by mere curiosity to see inside the care-worn, protesting walls.
At evening the wife was seen in her front door and about its steps, watching in a new, restless way for her husband's coming; and when he came it could be seen, all the way from those upper windows, where one or two faces appeared now and then, that he was troubled and care-worn.
James Gardiner heaved a sigh of relief as he deposited his suit case beside Tom's in the room to which they had been assigned. "Girls are an awful responsibility," he remarked gloomily, with a care-worn expression that made Tom shout with laughter. "I like them all right enough, but not in bunches."
There is plenty of work for you, and you agreed to do it. Cheer up the care-worn traveler on his pilgrimage help the weak and weary, the lonely and sad ones. Time is passing by, and we have none too much of it in which to do our work.
Jack had said, cheerily, as, after expressing his joy and surprise at meeting his friend so unexpectedly, and motioning him to a seat, he noticed the care-worn look upon his face and the set expression upon his mouth. "What makes you look so like a grave-yard? Crossed in love, hey? I thought it would come to that sometime, and knew you would be hard hit when hit at all. Tell me about it, do!
Our fire was the scene of it; or the palpable superiority of Henry Chatillon's experience and skill made him the resort of the whole camp upon every question of difficulty. He was molding bullets at the fire, when the captain drew near, with a perturbed and care-worn expression of countenance, faithfully reflected on the heavy features of Jack, who followed close behind.
And now, Lord Mountdean, tell me, do you think I did wrong?" He raised his care-worn, haggard face as he asked the question and the earl was disturbed at sight of the terrible pain in it. The reason of his separation from his wife revealed, Lord Arleigh again put the question: "Do you think, Lord Mountdean, that I have done wrong?" The earl looked at him.
As Paul descended they were met by a third stranger who strolled forward a man in a heavy travelling coat and a soft Homburg hat. It was the man who had sat behind him earlier in the evening the man with the deep lines upon his care-worn brow, who had laughed so heartily and who a moment later introduced himself as Jules Pierrepont, special commissaire of the Paris Sûreté.
In the corner of the picture, as if just quitting the court Rome finally departing is a group of Romans with care-worn brows, and hands raised to their faces in melancholy meditation. In the foreground of the picture, which is painted with all the sumptuous splendor of Venetian art, is a stately vase, around which hangs a festoon of gorgeous flowers, its end dragging upon the pavement.
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