11 Metaphors for fortunate

Fortunate is the youth or maiden whose parents are sensible and wise enough to instruct them concerning the nature and purpose of these functions.

Fortunate was the culprit during whose trial

Fortunate was Dante that he worshipped her afar, that he never knew her well enough to be undeceived, and so walked through life in love with love, sensitive, saintly, sweetly sad and most divinely happy in his melancholy.

Fortunate are the poets when they are not believed.

Fortunate, too, is the adolescent who is permitted to attend a first-class high school taught by sympathetic teachers who understand the needs of adolescent nature.

Fortunate is the prince who will listen to frank and disagreeable advice; and that was one of the virtues of Henry,a magnanimity which has seldom been equalled by generals.

The most fortunate of these adventurers was a certain Pedro Alonzo Nuñez, who sailed towards the south; and it is of his expedition that I will first write.

The fortunate is not the person to be of help to the unfortunate; it is in the nature of man to require ever more and more of himself and others, the more he has received.

Fortunate is the daughter who has not been deprived of that wisest and tenderest of counsellorswhose experience of life, whose prudence and sagacity, whose anxious care and appreciation of her child's sentiments, and whose awakened recollections of her own trysting days, qualify and entitle her above all other beings to counsel and comfort her trusting child, and to claim her confidence.

And so, since, from long usance, the cause of my anguish, instead of growing less, has become greater, the wish has come to me, noble ladiesin whose hearts, mayhap, abides a love more fortunate than mineto win your pity, if I may, by telling the tale of my sorrows.

" Locheill was more fortunate than others of his friends and neighbours.

11 Metaphors for  fortunate