18 Metaphors for anna

Anna was all joy.

Anna was his wife, to whom he usually referred as "Mrs. Pringle"; but he made an exception in speaking to Mr. Lanley, for she had once been the Lanleys' kitchen-maid.

Miss Anna was not the only woman in the world, he averred, by way of swift indemnification.

But, dear Anna, though I doubt not this is still more the case with you, and that you see far deeper into the realities of life than I do, we have both the consolations that are to be found in Christand these will remain to us when the buoyancy and the youthful spirit have gone from our hearts.

Do cheer and comfort yourself with these thoughts, my dearest Anna, and your sick-room will be the happiest room in your house, as I constantly pray it may be!

Anna was Lizzy Wood, her earliest playmate and friend.

(Anna is an Indian and very proud of being half Indian.)

"Anna's was a very difficult mission," the Comtesse pointed out confidentially.

CRILLY (bitterly) Anna won't be such a fool as her mother.

"Anna is not my first love," mused the earl.

"Why, Anna, what on earth is the matter?" At the first sound of his voice she burst into hysterical sobs.

ANNA Isn't my portion eighty pounds, mother? MRS.

So throughout that year Anna had been to Greenleaf the veiled widow of his lost friend, not often or long, and never blithely met; loved more ardently than ever, more reverently; his devotion holding itself in a fancied concealment transparent to all; he defending and befriending her, yet only as he could without her knowledge, and incurring-a certain stigma from his associates and superiors, if not an actual distrust.

No doubt Miss Anna was a miracle, not belonging to any country, race, or age; being one of those offerings to the world which nature now and then draws from the deeps of womanhood: a pure gift of God.

Such, however, was the popularity of these family groups, and the desire to give them all possible variety, that the ancient version of the story was overruled by the prevailing taste, and St. Anna became an important personage.

St. Anna (sixteen miles distance) is a small place, consisting of only a few poor houses, a little church, and an apothecary's; the last is a necessary appendage to every Brazilian village, even though it only contains twelve or fifteen huts.

ANNA Isn't my portion eighty pounds, mother? MRS.

He says that on two annas a day it is possible to live comfortably, but that one anna is the minimum below which it is impossible to go in order to support life even on the coarsest sorts of food.

18 Metaphors for  anna