3 Metaphors for marat

M. Marat was a logician of this sort, and M. Romieu is, after all, only a pale imitator of the cracked horse-leech; but as he wrote in the interest of "order," and for the preservation of property, we rarely hear of his thirst for blood.

Believing Marat to be the worst enemy of France, she stabbed him in the bath; was arrested and guillotined.

Marat was, however, the avowed persecutor of priests and religion, and if we attribute any influence to Miss Corday's former habits, we may suppose them to have had some share in the choice of her victim.

3 Metaphors for  marat