8 Metaphors for bowles

these bowles which we roule and turn in our lower sypher are by use made wodden worldlings right, for every one strives who shall lye neerest the mistris. Ac.

Bowles, Churchill, and Parnell were all clergymen, and all poets; but in other respects differed materially from each other.

Carington Bowles, 69 St. Paul's Churchyard, was the publisher of this print, which was the work of the elder Morland, and was engraved by Philip Dawe, father of Lamb's George Dawe (see the essay "Recollections of a late Royal Academician," Vol. I.).

Mr. Bowles, it appears, is a native of the district in which he resides, and this circumstance introduces some beautiful retrospective feelings:

I conjecture that Mr. Bowles is the friend.

He adds that Mr. Bowles was an active Whig.

If it is a jest that Mr. Bowles should be a parson, and Lord Byron a peer, the world knew this before; there was no need to write a pamphlet to prove it.

Would you be good enough to tell us how we are to reach theerchâteau, and why the devil we can't get anybody to move our luggage?" Mr. Bowles, who had lived in Japat for sixteen years, was a tortuously slow Englishman with the curse of the clime still growing upon him.

8 Metaphors for  bowles