simile
he/she is angry and there for their eyes show it!
"Golden slumbers kiss your eyes" uses personification.
A simile in poetry is a figure of speech that compares two different things using the words "like" or "as." It creates vivid imagery and helps readers understand complex ideas by likening them to more familiar objects or concepts. For example, "Her smile was as bright as the sun" is a simile that compares the brightness of a smile to the sun.
it is a simile because it has Like in it.
Her eyes shone like diamonds. Eyes are directly compared to diamonds - Similie
pajama club - diamonds in her eyes, last track on the new album by neil finn and his wife sharon
Her eyes sparkled like diamonds. His eyes were dark as coal. She had blue eyes like a pool. Her eyes sparkled like the stars above.
Pajama Club
Passion Passion for Men White Diamonds Black Pearls Sparkling White Diamonds Diamonds and Rubies Diamonds and Sapphires Diamonds and Emeralds Forever Elizabeth Gardenia Brilliant White Diamonds Violet Eyes (due in April 2010)
No, mothers do not have eyes in the back of their heads. This phrase is a figure of speech used to suggest that mothers have a way of knowing what their children are doing even when they are not looking directly at them.
Usually the figure of speech which is called a simile compares two words, or two objects or ideas, that describe things which normally aren't a bit like one another. An example of a simile is: 'My love is like a red, red rose.' Or, you might say, 'My maths test was as prickly as a holly bush.'
sour eyes