Sweet as a … cow? Historical simile searches on Books Google

itwassweet


The “flowering” stage of the writing process is a pleasure. I love making historical simile searches on Google. Such a search can provide a sweet detail for a historical scene, that telling detail that reminds the reader that we’re in another world. 


1) Go to Google and type the lead-in to the simile in quotes. For example, “as sweet as a”.


2) Under More select “books.”


3) Click Search tools, and select the time period you want. I select “custom” and type in between 1600 and 1800. 


Here are the treasures that resulted, images that tell you quite a bit about daily life hundreds of years ago.



as sweet as a Parsnip
as sweet as a Nut
as sweet as a Cow (!)
as sweet as a Jordan almond
 as sweet as a Lark
as sweet as a Pistack Nut
(smelled) as sweet as a nosegay
(smelled) as sweet as a per- fum’d Spanish Glove
as sweet as a wild Fig
as sweet as a thin syrup
Her Breath is as sweet as a young Fawn’s
Her Breath is as sweet as a Grecian Captain. (?)

And, of course, a rose. 


Here are some more:



as slender as a Crow’s- quill
as hungry as a Church-mouse
as hungry as a hawk
as tall as a May-pole
as tall as a wild-Goat
as small as a cobweb
as big as a Goose’s egg

I find these simply delightful.



Some recent posts to Baroque Explorations, my research blog:


Happy 376th birthday, Louis XIV!


Honey, figs and red dove feet: cosmetic secrets of the Middle Ages


 

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Published on September 07, 2014 06:36
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message 1: by Christine (new)

Christine I love this. I was just thinking about time-appropriate phrases for the early 1800s (who doesn't think about that, really?) the other night. I never thought of delving that deeply into the customization of searches. Wonderful!


message 2: by Sandra (new)

Sandra Christine wrote: "I love this. I was just thinking about time-appropriate phrases for the early 1800s (who doesn't think about that, really?) the other night. I never thought of delving that deeply into the customiz..."

Let me know aha you find, Christine!


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