From Macbeth.
Double Bubble, toil and trouble
double double toil and trouble
It means that trouble is coming. They sing this in Harry Potter #3
You could ask around on the guild Boards, they usually have a good layout maker on them. Just ask! Search around a request for a layout which has Boil Bubble Toil Trouble on it!
He toiled in the field day after day. In west Java workers toil in the onion fields under armed police guard. Toil to make yourself remarkable by some talent or other. "The slaves toiled in the cotton fields." To toil is to work hard, so an example sentence could be: You will toil for quite some time if you decide to dig your own hole for a backyard pool. While one witch stirred the cauldron another chanted, "Boil, boil, trouble and toil...". A famous British politician once stated: "Blood, sweat, toil and tears...". We toil in the fields while our leaders live in luxury. The night shift will toil until dawn. Bubble, bubble, toil and trouble; cauldron burn and cauldron bubble. The teenage mother felt all she did was toil all day and night caring for her child, while her friends attended school, went to parties, and had fun. To toil means to do labor.
William Shakespeare's "Macbeth". The line is: "Double, double toil and trouble; / fire burn, and caldron bubble."
To perspire violently from toil
The lines "Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn and cauldron bubble" are from William Shakespeare's play "Macbeth". They are spoken by the three witches as they create a potion in Act 4, Scene 1.
Horse Isle Answer ---> MacbethAirTraffic on Roan server.
The couplet repeated by the witches in their chant is "Double, double toil and trouble; Fire burn and cauldron bubble."
"Toil" means "work", which a connotation that the work is physically tiring. "With wealth for toil" suggests that work is well-paid or well-rewarded, suggesting that opportunities are available.