Citations:harbinger

English citations of harbinger

1580 1630 1731 1867 2021
ME « 15th c. 16th c. 17th c. 18th c. 19th c. 20th c. 21st c.
  • 1580, Austin Saker, The Laberynth of Libertie [][1], page 133:
    Alas, who was this the harbinger of thy heauinesse, and the Pilot of thy Sea trauaile?
  • 1630, Thomas Adams, “Meditations vpon Some Part of the Creed”, in The Workes of Tho: Adams [], page 1223:
    Iohn was to be such a harbinger of Iesus, and Zachary shall haue such a harbinger of Iohn.
  • 1731, [Roger Flexman?], The Religion of Nature Consider’d [], page 76:
    And what then, I beseech you, could hinder Christianity from making so speedy a Progress, when it was usher’d in by so divine a Harbinger, and this Harbinger so well qualified to make its way through the thickest Crouds, and strongest Oppositions of heathen Theologists?
  • 1867, Justus Doolittle, Social Life of the Chinese [], volume 2, page 329:
    The voice of the owl is universally heard with dread, being regarded as the harbinger of death in the neighborhood.
  • 2021 July 20, Jack Healy, Sophie Kasakove, “A Drought So Dire That a Utah Town Pulled the Plug on Growth”, in The New York Times[2], →ISSN:
    It is one of the first towns in the United States to purposely stall growth for want of water in a new era of megadroughts. But it could be a harbinger of things to come in a hotter, drier West.