Lexicographical Neighbors of Dithyrambically
Literary usage of Dithyrambically
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Poetry by Modern Poetry Association (1916)
"... few words to the much desired girl, but when the truly poetic poet stood
dithyrambically speechifying at,him with the murderous pistol in his hand. ..."
2. The Letters of Elizabeth Barrett Browning by Elizabeth Barrett Browning (1897)
"I have tried to stand on the facts of things before I began to feel 'dithyrambically.'
Thought out coldly, then felt upon warmly. ..."
3. The Expositor edited by Samuel Cox, Sir W Robertson Nicoll, James Moffatt (1889)
"... half dithyrambically, but on observing this, had thought it right to leave
them uncorrected, is there anything incredible or improbable in this ? ..."
4. Degeneration by Max Simon Nordau (1895)
"In Zarathustra the same thought is expressed dithyrambically: ' " Man is wicked,"
so spake to me in consolation all the wisest. ..."
5. The Wild Irishman by Thomas William Hodgson Crosland (1905)
"And the dear young gentleman goes on to assert that it is the chastity of the
Irish people which fills Irish lunatic asylums, and exclaims dithyrambically: ..."
6. My Life and Acts in Hungary in the Years 1848 and 1849 by Artúr Görgey (1852)
"... the intention of rendering one of my personal opponents popular in the
country —had dithyrambically reported, that Guyon at Iglo (just during that fatal ..."