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How To Use Cauldron In A Sentence

  • On top of that, they could have a taller Olympic cauldron. Times, Sunday Times
  • It was only when I was on the second sachet and gleefully exhorting the recalcitrant bubbling cauldron to cleanse thyself, that the Gamekeeper ran in gasping and flung all the windows open. 42 entries from November 2007
  • The woman was a seething cauldron of grievances against the man for whom she had sacrificed almost two decades of her life. Times, Sunday Times
  • I set and lit our fire, and filled our small cauldron with water.
  • There was a rocking chair that sat next to a fireplace, which held a medium sized cooking cauldron that was spilling ashes onto the burgundy hearthrug.
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  • But the seething cauldron of resentment that has been uncovered. Times, Sunday Times
  • The crone’s cauldron is a deep part of the Halloween myth that represents the cosmic womb. The Crone and the Cauldron « bindu wiles
  • A vedro [2 3/4 gallons] and a half to the cauldron!" whispered the ex-soldier with a computative grunt as he gained his feet. Through Russia
  • Are we going to be living in some small, dinky shack with no running water and a cast iron cauldron for cooking?
  • The information on 'poetry' I have to advertize, is a bardic prose-poem attributed to Amergin and translated into English first, 1300 years after its composition by an anonymous bard, without title: 'the cauldron of poetry', so called because of the metaphorical conceit in the piece, of poetry being created in a person's three internal cauldrons: Warming, Motion & Wisdom. Poetry: a beautiful renaissance
  • Any parliament is always going to be a seething cauldron of ambition.
  • The current executive and legislative branches are drowning in the former and the judicial branch, which is supposed to be non-partisan, is a cauldron of partisan politics. Axelrod: I'm not thinking about Palin's next move
  • A later warrior grave contained a bronze cauldron and a set of iron weapons.
  • Her birth country lay not far inland, though sheltered from northerly winds and easterly waters -- the Kazan, Cauldron, huge astrobleme on the continent Rodna, a bowl filled with woods, farmlands, rivers, at its middle Lake Stoyan and the capital Zorkagrad. A Knight of Ghosts and Shadows
  • This steamy natural cauldron is a place where chemistry happens in the open air. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • But he knows it will get VERY real when he steps into the cauldron of the first tee come Friday morning. The Sun
  • Living in California, we know certainly that leaders are not lining up to take on the real issues that have turned this state from a beckoning eldorado into a bristling cauldron of hope. Rick Jacobs: Courage for the New Year
  • I answered obediently and went to the fire to stir the thick stew inside the cauldron.
  • I then took some betony and cut it with my dagger and placed it in my cauldron.
  • Their musty old home had been transformed into a cauldron of competing energies, which then spilled over into their lives. Times, Sunday Times
  • And they're so opposite, of course, some of them that as if their oppositeness and the conflict between them makes this cauldron a very turbulent cauldron, makes it bubble and seethe. CNN Transcript Oct 5, 2001
  • His wife Kerry's, on the other hand, was a cauldron of domestic violence and emotional instability.
  • But if you don't drill drain holes in the bottoms of these containers, you could use the cauldron and buckets as cachepots (French for ‘hide pot’) to hold plants already potted in well-draining containers.
  • They will circumambulate the stadium once and then take the torches to the cauldron.
  • His second most prized possession was a magic cauldron that could never be emptied.
  • With a sweeping gesture, she lowered the dipper into the steaming cauldron holding the noxious purple brew that was going to cure Alicia's headaches and Chino's gall-bladder problems.
  • She felt a spark of danger, yet sensed only the tiniest chill of fear as they passed one another: part dread, part a fris son of excitement she associated only with the pleasure of Christmas that was almost upon them: a touch of peace in the boiling cauldron. Bottled Spider
  • Black cats were everywhere and I also spotted a huge cut-out of a witch stirring her evil cauldron!
  • You put the whole concatenation into the largest cauldron you've got, stir well, dance three times moonwise around the nearest deposit of nickel-zinc and ... but enough secrets, lad. A Corridor in the Asylum
  • Antonia's creations had thoroughly intrigued me when I met she and her family at the Palm Sunday Crafts Fair the previous March; I eagerly looked forward to seeing the bubbly cauldron where she cast her magic spells and brought her bewitched creepy-crawlies to life. Antonia Cruz Rafael: the ceramics of Ocumicho, Michoacan
  • One clip even features an actor dressed as a witch doctor dancing around a smoking cauldron.
  • This was also the root of the English word "cauldron" and the French word chaudiere - and it is obviously a short hop from there to chowder. Cook sister!
  • And there was a witches' cauldron full of golden soup.
  • But as the controversy continues to mesmerize and roil the cyber miasma, I have come to another conclusion that I believe is worth tossing into the cauldron apologies for mixing my metaphors. Dr. Jim Taylor: Tiger Mom Is A Scaredy Cat
  • Bronze rapiers and gold torcs survive from c. 1000 BC, while from c. 700 BC there are trumpets and cauldrons in bronze, as well as many types of gold ornament.
  • In addition to fragments of at least four tripod cauldrons, the tomb also yielded a number of marine shells and two possible animal bone fragments.
  • But the seething cauldron of resentment that has been uncovered. Times, Sunday Times
  • On an occasion after having stopped for a "nooning," there loomed up suddenly in the northwest a black, ominous cloud, revolving swiftly and threateningly, as might the vapors from some gigantic cauldron; variegated in black, blue and green, bespangled with red streaks of lightning. Crossing the Plains, Days of '57 A Narrative of Early Emigrant Tavel to California by the Ox-team Method
  • An under-cook was supervising the cleaning of the stove around the cauldron and the preparation of fresh ingredients to replace those lost.
  • A unique aspect of this tomb was that it contained the largest group of fragmentary handmade tripod cauldrons in the Early Iron Age cemetery at Torone.
  • The great auks, Purcell reports, were ‘hunted for their feathers… and to loosen their plumage the birds were boiled in large cauldrons over fires fed by oil from auks killed before them.’
  • Inside was a fire with a huge iron cauldron on it.
  • Kirchick "rebuts" the Senate Intelligence report by noting a prior Intelligence Committee report found no evidence that the administration attempted to coerce intelligence analysts to change their judgment, but this merely begs the question since, as Senator Feinstein noted in the report, the "cauldron boiling below the surface" was the question of whether information received from "the intelligence community, whether right or wrong, good or bad, were fairly represented to the Congress and to the American people. Bennet Kelley: Lessons Not Learned: The Media Continues to be MIA on the Truth about Iraq War
  • After filling the cauldron up about halfway, he looked in, swishing the water about, then picking out a few pieces of debris that floated into it.
  • But he knows it will get VERY real when he steps into the cauldron of the first tee come Friday morning. The Sun
  • We were able to get two tickets under the Olympic cauldron, where the flame was burning brightly.
  • She's probably got a hooked nose, a pointed hat, a large black cauldron, a broomstick and a black cat.
  • Instantly, gray smoke erupted, flowing out of the cauldron, as if frozen in time.
  • Most meals would have been some form of stew, soup or pottage cooked in a cauldron over the central hearth of the house.
  • President Bush says U.S. troops are making progress in Iraq, arguing that an early pullout would turn Iraq into what he calls a cauldron of chaos. CNN Transcript May 1, 2007
  • The carronade was a pot of a gun, not a long, elegant and accurate cannon, but a squat cauldron to be charged with powder and metal scraps that flayed out like buckshot. Sharpe's Devil
  • Curzon sat in his room, absently stirring a cauldron with a long metal spoon.
  • This steamy natural cauldron is a place where chemistry happens in the open air. THE EARTH: An Intimate History
  • This article is as unambiguous as it is vile what kind of person hopes that an entire region of the world turns into a "cauldron" -- but leave that to the side for now, because the focus here is Ledeen's lying, not the depraved nature of his views. Archive 2006-11-01
  • He calls to the lords and asks them to add a tripod and a cauldron each to Odysseus' treasures.
  • You could use one large plant in the cauldron or perhaps a group of smaller plants, including sedums, which would tumble over the sides.
  • The earthenware which appears together with the ashes concluded initially is cauldron which the life uses.
  • Newly painted canvas flats would appear, the shepherds" cauldron, the pillars of the Temple. PASSION IN THE PEAK
  • One of the large cauldrons was slowly "walloping" with a mysterious appearance of self-restraint, as if it bided its time to put forth its full energy. The Collected Works of Ambrose Bierce, Volume 8 Epigrams, On With the Dance, Negligible Tales
  • Here were the somatic messages that fed the cauldron; cell reactions by the incredible billion, organic cries, the muted drone of muscletone, sensory sub-currents, blood-flow, the wavering superheterodyne of blood pH ... all whirling and churning in the balancing pattern that formed the girl's psyche. Wild Dreams of Reality, 5
  • The cauldron had probably contained some perishable material such as grain, which had decayed and been replaced by sand from the grave fill, and the lamb chops and the bronze bowl had originally been in some kind of haversack or kit bag, along with some other perishable food perhaps bread or fruit? Archive 2008-07-01
  • If Scotland's shinty players can keep their collective nerve in such a cauldron, then they will have truly earned the right to wear their blue jerseys.
  • They used the method of removing the burning brands from under the boiling cauldron.
  • The original kitchen fireplace remains, retaining its cast-iron cauldron and andirons, but it was refaced during the 1896 renovation with blue tiles purchased from Traitel Brothers, tile suppliers in New York City.
  • On and around them are all sorts of spits, racks, trivets, pans, kettles, cauldrons and hot plates, all fashioned out of black cast iron.
  • Castrogiovanni was off after five minutes and Cole was pitched into the cauldron at Welford Road against those mighty forwards from the Massif Central. Dan Cole the tighthead Tiger who is too good to ditch
  • Another is to carefully brew complex potions in a cauldron. Times, Sunday Times
  • His possessions lay around him, including a bit and bridle from his horse at his head, pairs of stirrup mounts and spurs by his feet, and a handled iron cauldron.
  • From a large cauldron he dipped a small cup of liquid and said, "This cup represents the part of your brain you are using. Love, Medicine and Miracles
  • Madame Speck said they always drank it; and so placing a teaspoonful of bohea in a cauldron of water, she placidly handed out this decoction, which we took with cakes and tartines. The Fitz-Boodle Papers
  • Other tools common in Witchcraft are altars, cauldrons, salt, and herbs or other botanicals, and incantations.
  • The famous Llyn Fawr hoard, found during reservoir construction in the Mid South Wales Valleys in 1911 and 1913, contained two complete bronze cauldrons.
  • In the last panels, the slave was shown being bullwhipped and boiled in a big cauldron.
  • He was taking firewood and a large cauldron into the smithy that adjoined the cottage.
  • Because in the roiling cauldron of activity that galaxy formation, some stars go supernova.
  • A French table is likely to have on it a cauldron of vegetable soup, complete with carrots and chard and tiny pasta shapes such as macaroni.
  • A solitary herring gull, blown in from the south coast, seemed to be playing on the freezing cauldron of air. Times, Sunday Times
  • Out of the unwholesome cauldron of junk science, they have conjured up lawsuits over something called ‘toxic mold.’
  • An actor plays the part of master brewer, explaining the brewing process while stirring a steaming cauldron full of "wort" -- the mash that is mixed with yeast before beer is fermented. CANOE Travel Features
  • They continue to live together, she in the company of ephemeral lovers, and he in a simmering cauldron of internalized anger.
  • In the single room there was an open fire with a cauldron hanging over it which contained broth.
  • There's nothing more homely than a huge cauldron blipping quietly on the backburner. The Sun
  • Levi near the brass cauldrons of the sanctuary, and every now and then plunging in a consecrated hook, and drawing out of the sea, of broth the fattest of heave-shoulders and the fleshiest of wave-breasts. The Professor, by Charlotte Bronte
  • The ingredients were placed in a large cauldron and cooked over a slow fire for a whole afternoon until it turned into a pot of delicious soup.
  • Outside burned a fire over which hung an iron cauldron, ready simmering.
  • The information on 'poetry' I have to advertize, is a bardic prose-poem attributed to Amergin and translated into English first, 1300 years after its composition by an anonymous bard, without title: 'the cauldron of poetry', so called because of the metaphorical conceit in the piece, of poetry being created in a person's three internal cauldrons: Warming, Motion & Wisdom. Poetry: a beautiful renaissance
  • A side with as much Grand Final experience as Bradford should have been able to handle the situation, but they simply wilted in the cauldron-like atmosphere of a packed-out Old Trafford.
  • An under-cook was supervising the cleaning of the stove around the cauldron and the preparation of fresh ingredients to replace those lost.
  • A simmering stew sat in a large cauldron over an open fire; the smell alone made Jack's mouth water.
  • Standing before her bubbling cauldron, the Crone raised her ancient hands and summoned yet another lower-level demon.
  • We didn't all get round our fiery cauldron and throw dead mice in a pot. Times, Sunday Times
  • So now our tinderbox, and cauldron, and roasting fork, and bowls - all of these needful and precious things for our journeying - would lose their importance and become no more than what they were.
  • Had these cauldron carlins been armed with clubs I've no doubt they would've pulped me on the spot.
  • I use the term hedge because she is not a witch in the sense of owning a grimoire, casting spells in a cauldron or brewing potions. Guest Post & Giveaway: Never Judge a Witch by her Leather by Heather Long *~* This giveaway is now closed ~*~
  • Flesh forks for boiled haunches of meat that looked like torture instruments, were forged out of billets of iron, whereas cauldrons were made out of sheets of iron, that were overlapped and riveted.
  • These running gags are pretty funny, but the really standout moments are the longer strips, especially the "What a Witch" strip, in which two witches standing over a cauldron extol the virtues of Kiddee Flakes, which are much more convenient for kidnapped-child-fattening than candy-houses. Grimmer Tales: twisted fairy tale comics Boing Boing
  • Somehow, in the emotional cauldron of Parkhead, that quality is hugely reassuring.
  • Eventually, we're directed to a clapboard hut on the edge of town where a pair of women in bright turbans stir two large cauldrons with paddles.
  • Many inventions of modern warfare were born in the boiling cauldron of the American Civil War.
  • The movie lifts the lid on this seething cauldron of unspoken, unspeakable shame, takes a good long peep within and then drops the lid again with a clang.
  • One of the more remarkable pieces in the collection is a large urali or metal cauldron of over one metre in diameter.
  • Some looked lovingly at their own canvases, others noted with sangfroid the disaster below, letting a drop of inspiration fall from a cauldron or the light of apotheosis beam down from a flashlight.
  • It was also fantastic — a bubbling cauldron of tofu and kimchi and a side of galbi (Korean short ribs) that tasted almost like candy.
  • The stadium was a seething cauldron of emotion.
  • This implies that I saw schools as ‘evil cauldrons of conservatism,’ which does not reflect my views and my experience with very dedicated teachers.
  • A man with a metal detector unearthed a cauldron thought to date back to 50BC.
  • Particle physicists have suggested that other types of particle than baryonic ones might have been produced in the seething cauldron of the early Universe.
  • Antonin prepared the roasts on spits and the cauldrons for boiling meat and fish.
  • He tugged open the warped door and was immediately engulfed by the steam from the cauldron within.
  • And there was a witches' cauldron full of golden soup.
  • Interesting to see how he copes in the Ryder Cup cauldron. Times, Sunday Times
  • The natives are gettin 'restless, they want to put you in a huge cauldron and cook ya!! Obama wins Guam by 7 votes
  • The opening ceremony climax withed the Olympic cauldron being lit jointly by four Canadian sports heroes - all-time hockey great Wayne Gretzky, skier Nancy Greene, speedskater Katrina LeMay Doan and basketball All-Star Steve Nash. Columbiatribune.com stories
  • Lighting the Olympic cauldron, for instance. Times, Sunday Times
  • The Athens pool strikes you as the most unlikely emotional cauldron.
  • According to the canonical recipe, a stew (zirwak, from the medieval Persian zirbag: ‘that which is cooked underneath’) is cooked in the cauldron-like pot qazan.
  • A number of cooking utensils, pans and cauldrons were also made of iron, with the consequence that these things lasted much longer and couldn't be burnt.
  • Peering into the kitchen, they saw the cooking fire, still smouldering, with its cauldron of soup, coagulated and cold.
  • Potter fansite The Leaky Cauldron has been granted a sneak preview of the content and described it as "one of the most amazing, engaging and breathtaking additions to this fandom imaginable".
  • In the days ahead we'll take turns stirring steaming cauldrons over the camp fire.
  • Fifty-five years of rule under the national bourgeoisie has created a cauldron of ethnic and communal strife, poverty and illiteracy.
  • A solitary herring gull, blown in from the south coast, seemed to be playing on the freezing cauldron of air. Times, Sunday Times
  • Or use the cauldron as a water garden and grow horsetail, a water lily or other aquatics.
  • To work on the montage image, we began by selecting a position directly opposite the cauldron to give a nice symmetrical shape. Times, Sunday Times
  • He favours an Aboriginal ceremony, with a flaming boomerang curving majestically into the waiting cauldron as the highlight.
  • The feminist movement proper in France emerged from the cauldron of May 1968.
  • I've never played anywhere like it - it was a septic cauldron of hatred.
  • They used the method of removing the burning brands from under the boiling cauldron.
  • They used the method of removing the burning brands from under the boiling cauldron.
  • The milk is then mixed with the morning's milking in huge copper cauldrons and the rennet is added.
  • The idea that the carbonates were formed in a Martian cauldron is not heard much today. First Contact
  • The shrimp are protected from the cauldron, though, by seawater drawn up beside the rising plume.
  • On and around them are all sorts of spits, racks, trivets, pans, kettles, cauldrons and hot plates, all fashioned out of black cast iron.
  • We walked straight to the head of the queue and helped ourselves from a huge cauldron which was steaming on top of an oven.
  • Partially fill a plastic cauldron with hot water, and then add dry ice and a glow stick to create an eerie centerpiece for your table.
  • You need those big players, those lionhearts, in an international cauldron. The Sun
  • It can cast hexes, have a cauldron, join a coven, cackle, lay the evil eye on you … And she learns spells (off a custom spell list that has enchants, conjures, and even heals) from her familiar. Paizo APG Playtest Continues « Geek Related
  • Bush: Escalating threats in Iraq and elsewhere, but we're 'safer' yahooBuzzArticleHeadline = 'Bush: Escalating threats in Iraq and elsewhere, but we\'re \'safer\' '; yahooBuzzArticleSummary =' Article: There is a dangerous denial that is being practiced in the administration campaign to portray their invasion and continued occupation of Iraq as a military and ideological success, and conversely, to portray Iraq as a cauldron of terror that would escalate into more of a threat to the U.S. if we withdraw our troops. ' Bush: Escalating threats in Iraq and elsewhere, but we're 'safer'
  • Perseus, I hope your cauldron is back from the cleaners? current mood: pensive current music: Smiths - Louder than Bombs (13 comments | comment on this) 3: 05p The Feepmaster Speaks
  • Leigh Centurions step into the cauldron of the new National League One with a tough double header awaiting them over the Easter holiday.
  • The silver medalist at the Atlanta Games four years ago was the final torch-bearer entrusted with lighting the Olympic cauldron.
  • The identity of the person who will light the Olympic cauldron is being kept secret. Times, Sunday Times
  • Underneath it may be a seething cauldron of resentment. Times, Sunday Times
  • This is the cauldron where requirements are rendered into something useful.
  • They've been flooded with supplies: pies and cakes, bottles of vodka, huge cauldrons of soup.
  • Or, in another metaphor common at the time, minority nationalisms were what bubbled over when the end of the cold war knocked the lid off “a cauldron of long-simmering hatreds.” The Return
  • A wayward camera does not help student wizards to catapult malevolent plants at poisonous mushrooms or send explosive cauldrons flying into barriers.
  • Rarely do I descend to that cauldron of hissing pipes and clangor of which so few are aware — am I blessed or cursed to have discovered it within? The Indolent Magician (II)
  • Now, tossed into this cauldron of madness that had possessed Matt’s brain, the name threw a switch, but the wrong one. Thirst No. 3
  • “A vedro [2 3/4 gallons] and a half to the cauldron!” whispered the ex-soldier with a computative grunt as he gained his feet. Through Russia
  • The cauldron-triple spiral triskelion in my masthead is a Celtic symbol of the 3-fold aspect of the Sacred Feminine - as maiden, mother and crone.
  • Partially fill a plastic cauldron with hot water, and then add dry ice and a glow stick to create an eerie centerpiece for your table.
  • The film's ending is both justified and satisfying, a moment of grace in a cauldron of anger and hopelessness.
  • The crone’s cauldron is the place of transmutation. The Crone and the Cauldron « bindu wiles
  • Another is to carefully brew complex potions in a cauldron. Times, Sunday Times
  • Picture a huge cauldron of thick oatmeal being cooked. The Harper Dictionary of Science in Everyday Language
  • Their musty old home had been transformed into a cauldron of competing energies, which then spilled over into their lives. Times, Sunday Times
  • The stadium was a seething cauldron of emotion.
  • I cursed my stupidity as I took the tarry cauldron and whistled it clean.
  • A large cauldron or cooking pot set or suspended above an open fire was in general use.
  • Underneath it may be a seething cauldron of resentment. Times, Sunday Times
  • Even in the fierce cauldron of the sports arena and on the hotplate of romance, she keeps heading back to the middle, where her dialogue sounds roughly as uninflected as a library conversation.
  • The woman was a seething cauldron of grievances against the man for whom she had sacrificed almost two decades of her life. Times, Sunday Times
  • Arriving at the cauldron in 1829 is English lutenist Peter Claire, ready to join the royal orchestra.
  • A misericord in St. George's Chapel, Windsor, shows four enormous hounds piling into a cauldron, indifferent to the cook just poised to hurl his ladle.
  • She heated a large cauldron for a bath to soothe her aches, and, sighing in contentment, sat down in it for a long soak.
  • By the eighth century the inhabitants included merchants, luxury craftsmen, goldsmiths, members of the professions, cauldron makers, doctors, tailors, builders, and minters.
  • The ingredients were placed in a large cauldron and cooked over a slow fire for a whole afternoon until it turned into a pot of delicious soup.
  • Mother boiled cauldrons of red sugar water daily and filled a motley collection of feeders which were suspended at various locations around the yard.
  • With students and riot police headed for a major confrontation, Seoul was once again a boiling cauldron.
  • Many Wiccans, teens especially, don't have athames, cauldrons, wands… but use substitutes.
  • It was widely predicted that last season's First Division runners-up would melt in the white hot cauldron of Ibrox.
  • Tucked into the corner of the ground, the away end is a bubbling cauldron of noise and bravado. Times, Sunday Times
  • Groups may wish to use two different cauldrons or fire pits.
  • Nobody is napping, it is a cauldron of noise. Times, Sunday Times
  • Premiership grounds that used to be seething cauldrons of humanity now have less atmosphere than a county library.
  • What often emerges out of this seething cauldron is a mutually acceptable way forward.
  • During her drive home, her emotions began to bubble and seethe in the cauldron that was her mind.
  • To work on the montage image, we began by selecting a position directly opposite the cauldron to give a nice symmetrical shape. Times, Sunday Times
  • Toss in peak oil and global warming into the above cauldron and we have an explosive mixture that can only be ameliorated by renewable energy. Patrick Takahashi: Renewable Electricity Is Our Only Viable Option: Part 2
  • Yet, paradoxically, Shanghai flourished, mushrooming from a modest fishing town into a global metropolis, international financial centre, cultural cauldron and creative dynamo.
  • With students and riot police headed for a major confrontation, Seoul was once again a boiling cauldron.
  • Looking out of the picture, presumably watching the cauldron as it boils more water, the laundress immerses clothes in a wooden tub frothed with over-running foam.
  • The settlement of the hostage issue also served to remind us all of the remarkable and humane role Canadian diplomats played in liberating United States citizens from that troubled cauldron of conflicting forces. Canada and the U.S.—Border or Bridge?
  • Sneaking over to the cauldron, she quickly dunked the stale loaf into the cauldron.
  • His second most prized possession was a magic cauldron that could never be emptied.
  • A French table is likely to have on it a cauldron of vegetable soup, complete with carrots and chard and tiny pasta shapes such as macaroni.
  • I guess I'm copping out that what's wrong with me is due to my feminine upbringing, what has developed into my mother and her family living within me, doing didoes on the dancefloors of my plasma, brewing potions within the cauldrons of my bowels, tricking my male brain via the feminine emotions that have bloomed in the hothouse of my solar plexus. Poverty and Love
  • In fact, John Major promises to emerge mildly well from the schemers' cauldron.
  • Greenhill Rapids is a ¾-mile-long cauldron across the backbone of an esker, one of those weird rock formations created by the dragging fingers of a receding glacier. T.
  • These great conjurors are generally sought for in the City; and in truth the cauldrons are kept boiling though the result of the process is seldom absolute rejuvenescence. The Way We Live Now
  • Huge waves were breaking on the barrier reef and the narrows at the eastern entrance of the channel were like a boiling cauldron.
  • The cauldron is the symbol for what we will be brewing this long winter. October « 2009 « bindu wiles
  • The continent appears to be a cauldron of corruption and superstition.
  • They remain seething cauldrons of anger, frustration and discontent that rest on an underlying current of tension and raw violence which can explode without warning at any time.
  • By the eighth century the inhabitants included merchants, luxury craftsmen, goldsmiths, members of the professions, cauldron makers, doctors, tailors, builders, and minters.
  • He shoots a fire ball from the spear head and a small pillar of fire erupts from within the cauldron.
  • The corn and beans, all 200+ lbs of it are divvied into the three cauldrons. And I'm Back!
  • But after a few brittle steps he broke through a layer of burnt-yellow crust and fell into a solfatara, a cauldron of bubbling mud. Richard Bangs: Climbing the Killer Prince -- Merapi Volcano of Java, Part 1
  • Unfortunately both he and Marie fall asleep, and Haimet now spears and steals a piece of bacon from the boiling cauldron.

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