8 Metaphors for full

The "Watcher and the Holy One" that visited Nebuchadnezzar come to Sir Eustace in vision and pronounce his fate: "Full be his cup, with evil fraught Demons his guides, and death his doom.

And full of peaceful charm were those little cruises through this Levantic world, which, truly, is rather like a light sketch in water-colours done by an angel than like the dun real earth; and full of self-satisfaction and pious contentment would I return to Imbros, approved of my conscience, for that I had surmounted temptation, and lived tame and stainless.

Stay, 't is rashness Here to come, for, full of wonders, Full of terrors is this garden.

p. 157.), it may be noted that Full is the Welsh word for "haste," and, if the derivatur, must allude to the original structure having been hastily erected.

He fancied that the full of the moon was the most propitious time for study, and would often sit up and write the whole night by moonlight.

The hall contained a library whose shelves, indeed, were more full than choice; but, amid folios of theological controversy and civil law, there might be found the first editions of most of the celebrated writers of the reign of Anne, which the contemporary proprietor of Cherbury, a man of wit and fashion in his day, had duly collected in his yearly visits to the metropolis, and finally deposited in the family book-room.

No tenderest female bosom that ever panted at injustice done to her offspring was more full than hers of pity, love, and desire.

" With literary ventures stowed As full as ship can be, The good ship "Author" holds her way Over the fickle sea; Now sings the wind, and, all serene, The ripples forth and back Lap lightly round her gleaming sides And whiten on her track.

8 Metaphors for  full