¹ Source: wiktionary.com
Definition of Enwalls
1. enwall [v] - See also: enwall
Lexicographical Neighbors of Enwalls
Literary usage of Enwalls
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. From Old Fields: Poems of the Civil War by Nathaniel Southgate Shaler (1906)
"Come to yon butte, that in its castled steep enwalls a far-up plain — land fit
to be Acropolis to 'fend the realm it crowns Against the wide world's siege. ..."
2. The White Mountains: A Guide to the Peaks, Passes, and Ravines of the White by Moses Foster Sweetser (1876)
"Mount Cannon, or Profile, is the long and massive ridge which enwalls the Franconia
Notch on the W., and is separated from Mt. Kinsman by a narrow and ..."
3. The Pilgrim's Wallet; Or, Scraps of Travel Gathered in England, France, and by Gilbert Haven (1869)
"... by a few rich and titled persons, and they enwall the whole land' as carefully
as an American farmer of wealth, taste, and good sense enwalls his acres. ..."
4. Here and There in New England and Canada: Illustrated by Moses Foster Sweetser, Boston & Maine Railroad (1889)
"The great range that enwalls the Crawford valley on the west is eight miles long,
from the Ammonoosuc lowlands to the plateau beyond Mount Willey, ..."
5. The Man on the Hilltop, and Other Poems: And Other Poems by Arthur Davison Ficke (1915)
"... But here where night enwalls my solitude There comes out of the vaults wherein
I brood A speaking mood — And I would now have you forever know I see ..."