hopeward
Appearance
English
[edit]Etymology
[edit]Adverb
[edit]hopeward (not comparable)
- (chiefly poetic) Towards hope. [from 19th c.]
- 1850, G[eorge] Linnæus Banks, “Night in the Capital”, in Staves for the Human Ladder, London, Edinburgh, Dublin: Charles Gilpin; Adam and Charles Black; J. B. Gilpin, →OCLC, page 103:
- With a spectral gleam of joy / Shooting hopeward in the breast,
- 1856, Lydia Louisa Anna Very, “The Day”, in Poems, Andover: W. F. Draper, page 29:
- As flower springs up to catch the breeze, / Smiles in the sunshine warm that fills / Its cup, though seldom falls it 'neath the trees, / So the heart rises hopeward 'mid its ills !
- 1872, John Payne, “Shadow-soul”, in Songs of Life and Death, London: Henry S. King & Co., page 128:
- For though my feet in silence move / Alone across this waste of hours, / My heart strains hopeward like a dove, / My soul bursts out in passion-flowers ;