6 Metaphors for redwood

She hardly believed that the great redwoods which she was to see to-morrow could be grander than these immense fluted columns of cedar and pine.

It was the same house in which Giant Redwood had been born and in which Herakleophorbia had for the first time been given to a human being, and Redwood had now been a widower and had lived alone in it eight years.

The redwoods in Muir Woods are thousands of years old, and rise from two to three hundred feet in air.

The redwoods on its crown and upper slopes were a mass of rigid shadows, the points, only, sharply etched on the night sky.

" Redwood could feel the loose wave of the arm that he could not see.

Mr. Bensington was a Fellow of the Royal Society and a former president of the Chemical Society, and Professor Redwood was Professor of Physiology in the Bond Street College of the London University, and he had been grossly libelled by the anti-vivisectionists time after time.

6 Metaphors for  redwood