46 Metaphors for south

South of the Mason-Dixon Line, self- help is half-scandal.

South of the Carpathians and in the Vilna region there was little disaffection among the Russian troops, and Russia had not yet thrown up her hands, although the situation on the eastern front was disappointing to the Allies.

This was called the "State road," and on it stood Parker's Hotel, a stage-house much frequented, and constituting the centre of a little village, while further south was the extensive trading establishment of Markham & Co., using the name and some of the capital of the Judge, and managed mainly by Roberts and another junior.

Returning to the ship we placed a buoy* on the five-fathom bar at the eastern entrance of the South Channel, the bearings from which are Whale Head South 33 degrees West, and Arthur's Seat South 79 degrees East; Points Nepean and Lonsdale being a little open.

Unfortunately, the Benthamia is not hardy throughout the country, the south and west of England, especially Cornwall, and the southern parts of Ireland being the favoured spots where this handsome shrub or small growing treefor in Cornwall it has attained to fully 45 feet in height, and in Cork nearly 30 feetmay be found in a really thriving condition.

He thought, therefore, that it was better for the Negroes to stay in the South than to go North, as the South was a better market for the black man's labor.

South of Chaeroneia was a hill called Thurium.

But a reforming party, of which South, Babbage, Baily and Beaufort were prominent members, had induced the Admiralty to constitute a new Board, of which the Plumian Professor was a member.

The South will be then an immense powder magazine, to which the first spark will set fire.

South of the river is the Luxembourg, where the Senate meets, and on the Ile de la Cité stands the Palais de Justice and the Conciergerie, one of the oldest Paris prisons.

The South and the West were a unit in demanding that France should not be allowed to establish herself on the lower Mississippi.

There were the deep narrow ruts which the wheels of a chaise, long stationary, had made in the turf at the side of the road; and south of them was a plat of poached ground where the horses had stood and shifted their feet uneasily.

This degree is further illustrated by the height of Pudding-pan Hill in 11 degrees 19 minutes South being only 384 feet.

South of the Potamac in Virginia, and within a gallop of the Long Bridge at Washington, is the confine of a country, in some places wild, which throughout the war it was unsafe for a Union man to traverse except with an armed escort.

South of the Toba were the nineteen tribes of the Hsiung-nu or Huns, as we are now calling them.

The South has not been a paradise to you all the time, and I should think you would be willing to leave it."

South was a higher peak, and to the north it was surely impassible.

And then the time of the mother's first bad illnesshow they had watched and prayed, and Mimo had cried tears like a child, and the doctor had said the South was the only thing to help their angel's recovery.

While the south of Gaul was the scene of serious trouble, Cæsar left the quaestor, Mark Antony, with fifteen cohorts in the country of the Bellovaci.

The South, which assumed to be the exclusive seat of American nationality, while the North was declared given up to sectionalism, with no other lights on its path than "blue lights," became the South so devoted to slavery that it could see nothing else in the country.

South of the marshes were the high moors.

South of the latter is the one great Martial ocean.

South of it were too smaller hills, forming, along with it, landmarks of the utmost consequence to caravans, because they are too considerable in size to be at any time covered by the moving sands.

North is greed and South is blood; within, the coward, and without, the liar.

The south is a tolerable big place to send to.

46 Metaphors for  south