Lexicographical Neighbors of Beglamored
Literary usage of Beglamored
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Dramatic Opinions and Essays, with an Apology: With an Apology by Bernard Shaw (1907)
"To save the situation she put forth all her enchantments, and so beglamored the
play act by act that she forced the audience to accept Sylvia as a witching ..."
2. Three Plays for Puritans by Bernard Shaw (1906)
"Every old patron of the Adelphi pit would, were he not beglamored in a way
presently to be explained, recognize the reading of the will, the oppressed ..."
3. Modern Men and Mummers by Hesketh Pearson (1922)
"How could such a brilliant, witty man be satisfied, beglamored, by such a paltry
thing as a Premiership? His novels are extraordinarily clever—and yet one ..."
4. Borrowed Plumes by Owen Seaman (1902)
"So beglamored was the king by its ravishing melodies that on the ultimate appearance
of the actual warbler he dismissed the latter with contumely as a poor ..."
5. The War for the World by Israel Zangwill (1916)
"And even those who dream the dream of Zion, beglamored by the shining Tower of
David, Like birds that dash themselves against a lighthouse, Shattered and ..."
6. Nixola of Wall Street by Felix Grendon (1919)
"... nights of love, and Sabean odors; an atmosphere that beglamored the senses,
or prostituted the soul, but never denied the body. ..."