Lexicographical Neighbors of Bestrowing
Literary usage of Bestrowing
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Hymns of faith and hope by Horatius Bonar (1867)
"... Like smiles the face of earth bestrowing, For fragrance and for beauty born ;
My summer-flower has passed away ; 'Tis now a blank, where all was gay,— A ..."
2. Lyra innocentium: thoughts in verse on Christian children, their ways, and by John Keble (1846)
"Haste, or ere the third hour glowing With its eager thirst prevail O'er the moist
pearls, now bestrowing ..."
3. Lectures on the history of the Jewish church by Arthur Penrhyn Stanley (1883)
"Haste, or e'er the third hour glowing With its eager thirst prevail, O'er the
moist pearls, now bestrowing ..."
4. The Harp and the Cross: A Collection of Religious Poetry by American Unitarian Association, Stephen Greenleaf Bulfinch (1861)
"Airs of morning Freshen the bleak, burning land. Haste, or ere the third hour
glowing With its eager thirst prevail O'er the moist pearls, now bestrowing ..."
5. Heavenly Melodies: Being Original and Selected Poems by Henry Jennings (1865)
"The Summer flowers are freshly blowing Beneath glad July's genial morn; Like
smiles the face of earth bestrowing, For fragrance and for beauty born. ..."
6. Lyra Innocentum: Thoughts in Verse on Christian Children, Their Ways, and by John Keble (1850)
"Airs of morning Freshen the bleak burning land. Haste, or ere the third hour
glowing With its eager thirst prevail O'er the moist pearls, now bestrowing ..."