16 Metaphors for pleasant

These peoplefor the most part a preposterously handsome racewere the pleasantest of companions and their manners were perfection; but there was enough of old Roger Stapylton's blood in Patricia's veins to make her feel, however obscurely, that nobody is justified in living without even an attempt at any personal achievement.

"Yes," says you, "but I'm goin' furder, and can't stay to hear 'm: Pleasant, truly, 's my way, and

" The little girl did as her Bible taught, And pleasant indeed was the change it wrought; For the boy looked up in glad surprise, To meet the light of her loving eyes: His heart was full,he could not speak; But he pressed a kiss on his sister's cheek; And God looked down on that happy mother Whose "little children loved each other.

"I was thinking all this out last night," he said, "and it came to meI wonder if that man, John Phillips, who had, as I hear, my name and address in his pocket, could have been some man who was coming to see me on my father's behalf, orit's an odd thing to fancy, and, considering what's happened him, not a pleasant one!could have been my father himself?" There was silence amongst us for a moment.

For sweet shall my voice be for my friends: pleasant were her friends to Colma!

Pleasant indeed were the hours I passed here; lovely was the climate, beautiful was the landscape, hearty was the welcome: every day found some little plan prepared to make their hospitality more pleasant to the stranger; nature herself seemed to delight in aiding their efforts, for though I arrived in a deluge, I scarce ever saw a cloud afterwards.

Pleasant is her room to see, Carved and painted wondrously.

So infinitely pleasant are such shows, to the sight of which oftentimes they will come hundreds of miles, give any money for a place, and remember many years after with singular delight.

Mt. Pleasant, in Jefferson County, Ohio, was in 1810 a little hamlet of seven families living in cabins.

Oh! pleasant, pleasant were the days, 10 The time, when, in our childish plays, My sister Emmeline [A] and I Together chased the butterfly!

Pleasant were the sounds that accompanied the progress of the train: the jocund laugh, the musical voices of women, the jingling of bridles, the snorting and trampling of steeds, the baying of hounds, the shouts of the varlets, and the winding of horns.

Pleasant, too, is the return home when one swings in at the familiar gate; and then comes the quiet solitary evening when one recounts the hoarded store of delicate impressions.

"Pleasant is the recollection of the joys that are passed," says Ossian; and what a delightful store-house of melody is opened by the remembrance of these songs!

The massive walls of the convent were a welcome sight as I waded through the snow-beds near the summit of the pass, and pleasant also was the courteous salutation of the brother who bade me enter.

I have found place and people here as pleasant as man could wish: but go I must.

"Nothing always means something," says Major, as pleasant as pie; and then she scooched down on the floor and pulled my two hands away, and looked me in the face as bright and honest as ever you see a dandelion look out of the grass.

16 Metaphors for  pleasant