... all maladies, homesickness; and that even after years had passed, no day went by, that his thoughts did not return to his father's house, nor night that did not restore him to the old place. And when age and hardship have furrowed his cheek, and grayed... Home - Page 115by Catharine Maria Sedgwick - 1839 - 158 pagesFull view - About this book
| Henry Ware - Christianity in literature - 1835 - 174 pages
...age and hardship have furrowed his cheek, and grayed and thinned his hair, and bent his sturdy frame, he may be seen travelling hundreds and hundreds of...wonderful growing country, — my house is bigger than Colonel R 's or Doctor P !s," (the palaces of his native village,) " but dear me! it has not the pleasant... | |
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