9 Metaphors for brilliants

But the most brilliant of the public festivals I saw here, was the christening of the imperial princess, which took place on the 15th of November, in the Imperial Chapel, which is connected with the palace.

The most brilliant of the whole, however, and that which will best serve to exemplify the taste of the period, was the ballet to which allusion has already been made as given in honour of the King by his royal consort, and in which Marie de Medicis herself appeared.

The most brilliant of these couples were Jermain Fiske, Jr., and Eleanor Hubert.

Brilliant will be the scenes of enchantment in which you will mingle,brilliant indeed, for you are beautiful, my Carolineand admiration on all sides will be your own.

When her place in the literary ranks was so assured that the Saturday Evening Post accepted her stories without so much as reading them; when everybody was asking "Who is this brilliant writer?this combination of O. Henry, Edith Wharton, and W.D. Howells?" then, and only then, would she come out from behind her nom-de-plume and assume her position as Mrs. Jarvis Jocelyn, wife of the famous playwright.

"A great light has gone out,"short but brilliant has been his career; yet let us hope he has but exchanged his worldly fame for unearthly immortality, to shine amidst the never-dying lights of true glory.

Every ship in the harbor displayed all her bunting and at night every house was as brilliant as candles and coal oil could make it.

In a district of the province of Bainoa in the mountains of Daiagon, lying twelve miles from the salt lake of the Caspian, are mines of rock salt, whiter and more brilliant than crystal, and similar to the salts which so enrich the province of Laletania, otherwise called Catalonia, belonging to the Duke of Cardona, who is the chief noble of that region.

Her eyes were as brilliant as stars, and a magnetic atmosphere seemed to emanate from her.

9 Metaphors for  brilliants