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07-08-2010, 09:11 PM
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Behind the glasses his eyes looked look like little bicycle wheels at dizzy speed —William Faulkner
Dull eyes set like pebbles in a puffy, unwholesome-looking face —Eric Ambler Eye/pebble comparisons abound, with examples throughout this section.
Eye-sockets deep as those of a death’s head —Thomas Hardy
Eye-sockets … like dark caves —John Wainwright
Eyeballs like shelled hard-boiled eggs —Ivan Bunin
Eyes as big and as soft and as transparent as ripe gooseberries —Edna O’Brien
Eyes … as cloudy as poisoned oysters —Miles Gibson
Eyes … big and shiny, black as oil —Shirley Ann Grau
Eyes blackly circled like those of a raccoon —Lael Tucker Wertenbaker
Eyes … carefully painted like the eyes on Egyptian frescoes —Anals Nin, Chicago Review, Winter-Spring, 1962
Eyes … deep and dark like mountain nights —Mary Hedin
Eyes … deep as a well —Walter Savage Landor
Eyes flat as glass —James Lee Burke
Eyes … flat gold, like a lemur’s —Sue Grafton
Eyes glazed and almost lightless like the little button eyes of a doll —George Garrett
Eyes … large and gray, and baleful, like glass on fire —Norman Mailer
Eyes large as fifty-cent pieces, but pale, like dusty stones —Ludwig Bemelmans Bemelmans’ subject is William Randolph Hearst.
Eyes … large as saucers —E. N. Slocum, line from lyric of a song written in 1868 entitled “On the Beach at Cape May”
Eyes like a codfish —Frank Swinnerton
Eyes like a couple of wells —William Diehl
Eyes … like an Arizona sunset, and they were supported on pouches as large and shapeless as badly packed duffle bags —Jimmy Sangster
Eyes like a pinwheel —Ann Beattie
Eyes … like a spaniel’s —Ouida
Eyes like a starless winter night —clear, black, bleak —A. E. Maxwell
Eyes … like chestnuts floating on twin pools of milk —William Styron
Eyes like cold cavities in his head —Natascha Wodin
Eyes … like crickets in daylight —Rochelle Ratner
Eyes like crosses burning on a lawn —Rochelle Ratner
Eyes like currants in a half-cooked suet pudding —Robert Graves A simple variation from a short story by Katherine Mansfield: “Little eyes, like currants.”
Eyes like dark searchlights —Ross Macdonald
Eyes like dusty lapis lazuli —S. J. Perelman
Eyes like forest pools —W. Somerset Maugham
Eyes … like forget-me-nots —Mazo De La Roche
Eyes … like ground owls, deep in their burrows —Harold Adams
Eyes like holes burned with a cigar —William Faulkner
Eyes … like holes were poked in a snowbank —Raymond Chandler
Eyes like jelly —Hanoch Bartov
Eyes like licked stones —Virginia Woolf
Eyes like licorice gumdrops —Robert Campbell
Eyes … like lustrous black currants —Frank Swinnerton
Eyes, like marigolds, had sheathed their light —William Shakespeare In Shakespeare’s time ‘sheathed’ was written as ‘sheath’d.’
Eyes like mice peeking into my pockets —Robert Campbell
Eyes like oiled black olives —Frank Tuohy
Eyes … like old pictures of Rachmaninoff s eyes —Henry Van Dyke
Eyes like onions —Donald Barthelme
Eyes … like pale marble in a field of red —Linda West Eckhardt
Eyes … like peas —T. Coraghessan Boyle
Eyes … like pebbles at the bottom of a mountain trout pool, fixed and icy —Donald MacKenzie
Eyes like pebbles, the kind of pebbles which kids call aggies —Ludwig Bemelmans
Eyes like pebbles unwashed by the sea —Kathleen Farrell
Eyes … like pools of oil —T. Coraghessan Boyle
Eyes … like punctuation marks —Geoffrey Wolff
Eyes … like rubber knobs, like they’d give to the touch —William Faulkner
Eyes like searchlights —Donald McCaig
Eyes..like shrewd marbles —Harvey Swados
Eyes like the brown waters of a woodland stream —Henry Van Dyke
Eyes like the deep, blue boundless heaven —Percy Bysshe Shelley
(Watery gray) eyes, like the thick edges of broken skylight glass —Willa Cather
Eyes … like those of a lobster, as if they were on stalks —William James, letter from Germany to sister Alice, January 9, 1868
Eyes … like tiny stone wedges hammer between the lids —Ross Macdonald
Eyes like tunnels —Arthur Miller
Eyes like twin daisies in a bucket of blood —Leonard Washborn, Inter-Ocean, Chicago newspaper, 1880s
Eyes … like two black seeds —Dashiell Hammett
Eyes … like two holes burned in a blanket —Borden Deal
Eyes … like two obeisant satellites —Cynthia Ozick
Eyes … like two pissholes in the snow —American colloquialism
Eyes … like violets by a river of pure water —Oscar Wilde
Eyes like washed pebbles stuck in cement (gave him a slightly aggressive look) —Donald MacKenzie
Eyes like white clay marbles —Randall Jarrell
Eyes limpid and still like pools of water —Robert Louis Stevenson
Eyes … like glass marbles —Herman Wouk
Eye sockets..as flat as saucers —Z. Vance Wilson
Eyes peering between folds of fat like almond kernels in half-split shells —Edith Wharton
Eyes pressed so deep in his head that they seemed … like billiard balls sunk in their pockets —William Styron
Eyes, restless, softly brown like a monkey’s —F. van Wyck Mason
Eyes … round and shiny, like the glass-bead eyes of stuffed animals —Margaret Atwood
Eyes, round as cherries —Ignazio Silone
Eyes … round as quarters —Laurie Colwin
Eyes … round, inane as the blue pebbles of the rain —Dame Edith Sitwell
Eyes shaped like peach pits —Bobbie Ann Mason
Eyes … shiny and flat as mirrors —Shirley Ann Grau
Eyes … small and dark and liquid, like drops of strong coffee —Margaret Millar
Eyes … small and nacreous like painted ornaments —Jean Stafford
Eyes … small and dirty like the eyes of a potato —Ross Macdonald
Eyes … small and hard and shiny like dimes —Ross Macdonald
Eyes soft as a leading lady’s, round as a doe’s —T. Coraghessan Boyle
Eyes, speckled and hard as pebbles at the bottom of a stream —John Yount
Eyes spoked and rimmed with black, like a mourner’s rosette —Edith Pearlman The simile is particularly appropriate as the writer is describing a character who is a widow.
Eyes that looked like imitation jewels —Henry James
Eyes the size of melons —Mary Hood
Eyes were small, so that with the mascara and the shadows painted on their lids they looked like flopping black butterflies —Eudora Welty
Her eyes looked awful [from too much liquor] as though they had been boiled —Christopher Isherwood
Her eyes lost in the fatty ridges of her face, looked like two small pieces of coal pressed into a lump of dough —William Faulkner
His eyes behind his glasses kind of all run together like broken eggs —William Faulkner
His eyes stood in his head like two poached eggs —Erich Maria Remarque
Large eyes like dark pools —Erich Maria Remarque
Little eyes like cigarette-ends —Charles Bukowski
Looked like cat’s eyes do, like a big cat against the wall, watching us —William Faulkner
Lynx-like eyes —O. Henry
Our very eyes are sometimes like our judgements, blind —William Shakespeare
Protruding eyes that looked like two fish straining to get out of a net of red threads —Flannery O’Connor
The pupils of his eyes were like disks of blue fire —Oscar Wilde
Round eyes like blue polka dots in her crimson face —Helen Hudson
Sharp stains like poor coffee under her eyes —V. S. Pritchett
She was wearing so much eyeliner that her eyes looked as if they had been drawn in ink —Jonathan Valin
Small eyes, set like a pig’s in shallow orbits —Francis Brett Young
Their eyes seemed like rings from which the gems had been dropped —Dante Alighieri
Two little eyes like gimlet holes —Émile Zola
The veins in her eyeballs twisted like a map of jungle rivers —Arthur Miller

Mr. Medhat Salah
12-08-2010, 04:12 AM
Great effort