27 Metaphors for vii

* VII CONCERNING MAN "There is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth.

VII It was a morning in the middle of October when Dent and Pansy were married.

CHAPTER VII I BECOME A TRAITOR

In a similar act of resumption, 1 Henry VII., there is a like saving in favour of Thomas Grove, to whom had been granted the keepership of Boryngwood chase in "Wigmoresland," and "the pokershipp and keping of the diche of the same."

CHAPTER VII. Ant."And, indeed sir, there are cozeners abroad; therefore it behoves men to be wary.

Louis VII. was a feeble monarch, but he hated Henry II. and admired Becket.

CHAPTER VII WAS IT HONORÉ GRANDISSIME?

and vii, are, probably, the Babylonian, the Median, the Persian, the Macedonian.

"IS HE NOT A MAN AND A BROTHER?" VII.

" VII THE UTTERMOST FARTHING Intense was the curiosity with which I turned to the last entry in Humphrey Challoner's "Museum Archives."

But Charles VII. was no longer the blind and indolent king he had been in his youth.

VII THE RIDDLE OF EMPIRE At Halfa one feels the first breath of a frontier.

CHAPTER VII "A WORLD OF FINE FABLING" Solon Denney's home, in charge of Mrs. Delia Sullivan, late of Kerry, was four blocks up the shaded street from my own.

* VII CONCERNING MAN "There is joy in the presence of the angels of God over one sinner that repenteth.

VII THE SENTIMENTALISTS Kent's time from Alameda Square to the capitol was the quickest a flogged cab-horse could make, but he might have spared the horse and saved the double fee.

CHAPTER VII THE NEW YEAR'S GIFT "Happy New Year!" was Jack's salutation to Aunt Rachel, as with an unhappy expression of countenance she entered the sitting room.

VII This is the story of the treasure-box.

CHAPTER VII GETTING HOME Olney was a thriving, busy little town, numbering five hundred inhabitants or thereabouts.

VII THE BERLIN CONGRESS Seventy-eight was a most important year for us in many ways.

COLUMN VII 1 King of Babylon 2 whom Merodach, the Sun, the great Lord, 3 for the holy places of his city 4 Babylon hath called, am I: 5 and Bit-Saggatu and Bit-Zida 6 like the radiance of the Sun I restored: 7 the fanes of the great gods 8 I completely brightened.

Charles VII. was to Jacques Coeur a selfish and ungrateful patron, who contemptuously deserted the man whose brains he had sucked, and ruined him pitilessly after having himself contributed to enrich him unscrupulously.

VII AN OLD MAID One of my neighbours whom I never have chanced to mention before in these writings is a certain Old Maid.

VII, is another recognition of personal propertyit says that at a man's death it is to be divided between his widow and his heirs.

CHAPTER VII THE CHILDREN OF APOLLO 'He is a true poet,' or 'He is a genuine artist,' are phrases which irritate one day after day in modern criticism.

" VII This would be an appropriate place to estimate Michelangelo's professional gains in detail, to describe the properties he acquired in lands and houses, and to give an account of his total fortune.

27 Metaphors for  vii