Lexicographical Neighbors of Outrolls
Literary usage of Outrolls
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. Library of Southern Literature by Edwin Anderson Alderman, Joel Chandler Harris, Charles William Kent (1909)
"... than are to be felt in the incomparable little love-poem, "Eileen and I," or
thrill to more sonorous organ-tones than the "Song of Moloch" outrolls. ..."
2. Fleet Street Eclogues by John Davidson (1896)
"SANDY Not I; the phrase outrolls As freshly to me this hour, As when on my boyish
sense It struck like a trumpet-blare. You may cringe and cower To critical ..."
3. What Can a Woman Do: Or, Her Position in the Business and Literary World by Martha Louise Rayne (1885)
"Scarce furthermore she knew Of God's great globe that wondrously outrolls a glory
of green earth, And frames it with the restless sea. ..."
4. Russian Poets and Poems: "classics" and "moderns", with an Introduction on by Nadine Jarintzov (1917)
"A highly receptive crowd, and one that could not do without singing, of course:
they are somewhat infirm in walking, but " Their song outrolls in ..."
5. Half-hours with the Best American Authors by Charles Morris (1886)
"Scarce furthermore she knew Of God's great globe that wondrously outrolls a glory
of green earth And frames it with the restless sea. ..."
6. An Epic of the Starry Heaven by Thomas Lake Harris (1855)
"The glory-sphere encircling them outrolls, Forming a lesser sky— A crimson canopy
Above the vast, imperial domain. Here the Ancestral Spirits wisely reign ..."