12 Metaphors for bluffs

Isn't that so?" "I've been told so; but, all the same, Bluff is a good-hearted chap, and I like him first rate.

The bluffs themselves are marvels of formation, very difficult to explain or account for.

but ain't he a beaut?" exclaimed Bluff, bending over.

A man must consider what a blindman's-bluff is this game of conformity.

This Bluff is a remarkable hill, and is distinctly seen from the coast: its position was fixed by Mr. Oxley on his last journey, who passing within a few miles, rode to its summit to gain a view of the country, which he described as very extensive and beautiful, and as having abundantly repaid him for his labour.

I wonder if old Jesse Wilcox has begun to set his traps yet; that's his stamping-ground, you know, during the winter, and he makes quite a haul of muskrats, 'coons, some mink and even an otter once in a long while," said Bluff, enthusiasticallyhe was always a leading spirit in new ventures, but lacked the pertinacity of Frank.

The scenery is impressively grand; the bluffs, if they may be so called, are bold promontories attaining majestic heights.

The bluff is between four and five hundred feet in height, and on its summit lies buried the remains of the great chief, Red Wing.

Then Edd started up, an' thet bluff was a wolf of a place.

Bluff is a good fellow in spite of his butcher instincts, and I guess he'd go out of his way to help me," he said.

Although the little cemetery on the bluff was like scores of others I had seen in Francea bit of rough neglected field with small wooden crosses rising above the long herbage, tangled with flowers that love the waste places, I yielded to the charm of that old simplicity which is ever young and beautiful.

Kanesville was a small Mormon camp, while Council Bluffs was a trading post of a few log cabins on the river bank, inhabited mostly by Indians.

12 Metaphors for  bluffs