Citations:aurorean


 * 1819,, “”,&#91;source&#93; lines 20–23:
 * At tender eye-dawn of aurorean love: // The winged boy I knew; // But who wast thou, O happy, happy dove? // His Psyche true!
 * 1860, Owen Meredith, “Lucile”, part II, canto v, § xv ,&#91; source &#93; lines 7–11:
 * […] There, hover’d in light, // That image aloft, o’er the shapeless and bright // And Aurorean clouds, which themselves seem’d to be // Brilliant fragments of that golden world, wherein he // Had once dwelt, a native!
 * 1880,, “Birthday Ode”,&#91;source&#93; lines 337–352:
 * From dawn of man and woman twain and one, // When the earliest dews impearled // The front of all the world // Ringed with aurorean aureole of the sun, // To days that saw Christ’s tears and hallowing breath // Put life for love’s sake in the lips of death, // And years as waves whose brine was fire, whose foam // Blood, and the ravage of Neronian Rome; // And the eastern crescent’s horn // Mightier awhile than morn; // And knights whose lives were flights of eagles’ wings, // And lives like snakes’ lives of engendering kings; // And all the ravin of all the swords that reap // Lives cast as sheaves on heap // From all the billowing harvest-fields of fight; // And sounds of love-songs lovelier than the light.