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Definition of Golden glow
1. Noun. Very tall branching herb with showy much-doubled yellow flower heads.
Group relationships: Genus Rudbeckia, Rudbeckia
Generic synonyms: Cutleaved Coneflower, Rudbeckia Laciniata
Lexicographical Neighbors of Golden Glow
Literary usage of Golden glow
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Readers' Guide to Periodical Literature by H.W. Wilson Company (1916)
"11 bit Digest 51:1-123-4 D 18 '15 Goethe, С. М. 57:10-11+ Je 10 '16 golden glow
of victory; story. T: J. Betts, il 7 '16 New wine for old bottles. ..."
2. The Sunday Magazine by Thomas Guthrie, William Garden Blaikie, Benjamin Waugh (1873)
"... The very sun seems not the same, Its golden glow has waxed to flame : But yet
upon the burning sand, I read the writing of Thy hand. " Fear not to come. ..."
3. Woman's Record: Or, Sketches of All Distinguished Women, from "the Beginning by Sarah Josepha Buell Hale (1853)
"... fa- Mournful that Ihou wert »lumbering low, With a dread curtain drawn Between
thee and the golden glow Of this world'« ..."
4. Cuba: And Other Verse by Robert Rutland Manners (1898)
"In the grape's golden glow an oblation To Beauty—supreme paragon! Wanting whom
life would be as in darkness Notwithstanding the light of the sun; ..."
5. Cyclopedia of American Horticulture: Comprising Suggestions for Cultivation by Liberty Hyde Bailey, Wilhelm Miller (1902)
"The best known as a garden plant, and probably the showiest, is golden glow,
which the undersigned considers the best perennial of recent introduction. ..."