13 Metaphors for turner

No wonder that he left the neighbourhood with a reluctance that was probably too well guessed by his parishioners in the Vale of Belvoir. FOOTNOTES: [Footnote 3: Richard Turner of Yarmouth was a man of considerable culture, and belonged to a family of scholars.

Dr. Turner, speaking of this plant in his Herbal, telleth us, that in his time it was an ordinary receipt among good wives, to give hellebore in powder to ii'd weight, and he is not much against it.

Turner "Yes, I didn' 'spect to git herebut here I is!" Bro.

His eldest brother was Master of Pembroke, Cambridge, and Dean of Norwich: his youngest son was Sir Charles Turner, a Lord Justice of Appeal; and Dawson Turner was his nephew.

Mr. Turner had been witness to the interment here, not long previously, of the wife of a chief, and allied to the royal family.

Nat Turner was a Baptist minister, and the south became exceedingly jealous of all negro preachers.

In brief, Turner's was the purely subjective method of study, a method fatal to any artist of the opposite quality of mind;that of the Pre-Raphaelites is the purely objective, absolutely enslaving to a subjective artist, and no critic capable of following out the first principles of Art to logical deductions could confound the two.

" "Dear Prentiss, you must not say Mrs. Turner is not a lady.

It is true it was painted in 1806, but Lamb does not describe it as a picture of the year and Turner was certainly the most notable neoteric, or innovator, of that time.

Nat Turner was a member of the First Arkansas Volunteers, a regiment organized at Helena and of which Patrick R. Cleburne was colonel.

Richard Turner was the intimate friend of Dr. Parr, Paley, and Canning.]

Joel went back to full, Ned Post taking Clausen's place at right half on the first eleven and Turner becoming once more a spectator.

Turner was, above all, an artist; with him Art stood first, facts secondary;with

13 Metaphors for  turner