meekness
meek
M0196700 (mēk)Meekness
See Also: MODESTY
- (Quivering and) abject … like some unfortunate dog abasing itself before its master —Jean Rhys
The quivering is being done by a young woman in the embrace of a lover, in Rhys’ novel, Quartet
- (Why do you sit there) apologizing to him, as if he were a fuehrer or something —Leslie A. Fiddler
- Bowed to them like a tree in a storm —Edith Wharton
- Complied like hostages with a gun trained on them —Louise Erdrich
- Exist unthinkingly like a slave, like a working animal —Iris Murdoch
- He’s like a bell, that will go for everyone that pulls it —Thomas Fuller
- Humble, friendly eyes looked up timidly, like the yes of a dog that is uncertain whether he is about to receive a pat or a blow —Ellen Glasgow
See Also: EYE EXPRESSIONS, MISCELLANEOUS
- Like an ox, his head bent meekly, he waited for the blow of the axe which was raised over him —Leo Tolstoy
- Lieeke a victim, she waited: meek, like a sacrifice —Margaret Drabble
- Looked humbly about him like a dog slipping into a strange kitchen and afraid of kicks —Honoré de Balzac
- Meek as a hen —Fyodor Dostoevski
- Meek as the dew —Dylan Thomas
- Meekness takes injuries like pills, not chewing, but swallowing them down —Sir Thomas Browne
- A meek soul without zeal, is like a ship in a calm, that moves not as fast as it ought —John M. Mason
- Obedience simulates subordination as fear of the police simulates honesty —George Bernard Shaw
- Obedient as a partner in a dance —Lael Tucker Wertenbaker
- Obedient as a sheep —Robert Browning
- Obediently as a trained seal —Anon
The trained seal comparison has become a common cliche, with many variations such as “Obediently as a puppet on a string” and “Obediently like a trained elephant,” the latter spotted in Aldous Huxley’s After Many a Summer Dies the Swan.
- Servility is like a golden pill which outwardly gives pleasure but inwardly is full of bitterness —Narun Tate
The word ‘gives’ has been modernized from ‘giveth.’
- Waiting upon her whims like a footman —O. Henry
- Went meekly off … like a repentant boy led away to reform school —Harvey Swados
- Yield like a foolish mother —Emily Brontë
Noun | 1. | meekness - the feeling of patient, submissive humbleness |
2. | meekness - a disposition to be patient and long suffering |