267 Metaphors for letter

The letters of Leighton were at once a joy and a sorrow.

His letters are a kind of bills of exchange, in which he draws news and politics upon all his correspondents, who place it to account, and draw it back again upon him; and though it be false, neither cheats the other, for it passes between both for good and sufficient pay.

The letter was as follows: "MY DARLING LITTLE ROSE:

Correspondence, from the first and to the last, was the best OUTCOME of Gray's mindhe felt himself most at home in it; and, next to Cowper's, his letters are the most delightful in the English language.

I felt it to be a good one, but my turn, when I write at all, is perversely to travel out of the record, so that my letters are any thing but answers.

But letters were the passion of Macaulay, from his youth up; and his remarkably tenacious memoryabnormal, as it seems to meenabled him to bring his vast store of facts to support plausibly any position he chose to take.

This letter, when I have it, must be my compass to steer by.

General Lamoricière wished to write to his wife; the only letter which the Commissaries of Police consented to take charge of was a note containing this line: "I am well.

"A letter is the mark of a sound, or of an articulation of sound.

Her people are y-clepèd Angeli, Or, if I miss, a letter is the most occurring a few lines later; also the words of Lachesis:

This letter is only a résumé of many conversations between you and me, and it leads up to the explanation of why I am somewhat dazed and stunned by your announcement that marriage is a possible event in your near future.

His letter is a gemwith his poor blind eyes it has been laboured out at six sittings.

The Kaiser's present letter is simply a repetition of his feverish attempt to probe our intentions.

The letters have been deliveredand I have not received them.

Your letters are not in answer to some I have subsequently sent requesting leave to reside in Paris.

Her letters, her papers, her books, each coming at its appointed hour, were all instruments of pleasure.

Yet all those letters were not writ to all; Nor first intended but occasional, Their absent sermons; nor if they contain 340 All needful doctrines, are those doctrines plain.

This letter is all an egotism.

" All the trees had themhis eyes could see nothing else; and every letter was a dagger that pierced his heart.

HAMILTON, ELIZABETH, novelist and essayist, born, of Scottish parentage, in Belfast; is remembered for her early advocacy of the higher education of women and for her faithful pictures of lowly Scottish life; "Letters of a Hindoo Rajah" and "Modern Philosophers" were clever skits on the prevailing scepticism and republicanism of the time; "The Cottagers of Glenburnie" is her best novel (1758-1816).

The letters of gratitude were a sufficient reward for the hard work.

And the letters are very sensible ones, too.

The letter's a manifest forgery, as I'll prove by confronting Feisul with it.

He wrote, in 1758, to M. de Leyrit, Governor of Pondicherry, "Sir, this letter shall be an eternal secret between you and me, if you furnish me with the means of terminating my enterprise.

But we all hope that these letters may be waste paper.

267 Metaphors for  letter