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Hesperian   Listen
noun
Hesperian  n.  A native or an inhabitant of a western country. (Poetic)



Hesperian  n.  (Zool.) Any one of the numerous species of Hesperidae; a skipper.



adjective
Hesperian  adj.  Western; being in the west; occidental. (Poetic)



Hesperian  adj.  (Zool.) Of or pertaining to a family of butterflies called Hesperidae, or skippers.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Hesperian" Quotes from Famous Books



... is also with other things. The flowers scattered on the laureate hearse of Lycidas make a brighter, more various, and withal a homelier display than ever meets the eye in the Hesperian wildernesses of Eden. Or take the world of fairy lore that Milton inherited from the Elizabethans—a world to which not only Shakespeare, but also laborious and arrogant poet-scholars like Jonson and Drayton had free right of ...
— Milton • Sir Walter Alexander Raleigh

... As much as fairest Lillies can surpass A Thorn in Beauty, or in Height the Grass; So does my Love among the Virgins shine, Adorn'd with Graces more than half Divine; Or as a Tree, that, glorious to behold, Is hung with Apples all of ruddy Gold, Hesperian Fruit! and beautifully high, Extends its Branches to the Sky; So does my Love the Virgin's Eyes invite: 'Tis he alone can fix their wand'ring Sight, [Among [4]] ten thousand ...
— The Spectator, Volume 2. • Addison and Steele

... civilised I trow,} And wash their teeth with water cleanly— Pure water such as folk might quaff— I would entreat you still—don't laugh. You look so sillily, so meanly, As if you were but witted half. Yet being but a Celtiberian, Holding the custom of your nation, Using that lotion called Hesperian; The more you grin, folk say, forsooth, What pity 'tis the whitest tooth Should have the ...
— Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, Volume 61, No. 380, June, 1847 • Various

... moment slept, The oars were silent for a space, As past Hesperian shores we swept, That were as a remembered face Seen after lapse of hopeless years, In Hades, when the shadows meet, Dim through the mist of many tears, And strange, and ...
— Ballads and Lyrics of Old France: with other Poems • Andrew Lang

... Persons not cured of the fever often become dropsical. There are a few cases of consumption. Syphilis is very virulent, and prevails amongst the troops. Ophthalmia and rheumatism are common complaints. Thus Mourzuk is not quite one of those oases, or Hesperian gardens, where the happy residents quaff the elixir of immortal health and virtue. Contrarily, it is a sink of vice and disease within, and a sere foliage of palms and vegetation without, overhung with an ever forbidding sky, of dull ...
— Travels in the Great Desert of Sahara, in the Years of 1845 and 1846 • James Richardson


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