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Hamadryad   Listen
noun
Hamadryad  n.  (pl. E. hamadryads, L. hamadryades)  
1.
(Class. Myth.) A tree nymph whose life ended with that of the particular tree, usually an oak, which had been her abode.
2.
(Zool.) A large venomous East Indian snake (Ophiophagus bungarus), allied to the cobras.






Collaborative International Dictionary of English 0.48








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"Hamadryad" Quotes from Famous Books



... into pinnacles, curvatures and graciosities; many statues atop,—three there are, in a kind of grouped or partnership attitude; 'These,' said diligent scandal, 'note them; these mean Maria Theresa, Pompadour and CATIN DU NORD' (mere Muses, I believe, or of the Nymph or Hamadryad kind, nothing of harm in them). In short, you may call it the stone Apotheosis of an old French Beau. Considerably weather-beaten (the brown of lichens spreading visibly here and there, the firm-set ashlar telling you, 'I have stood ...
— History of Friedrich II. of Prussia, Vol. XXI. (of XXI.) • Thomas Carlyle

... jungle of undergrowth was replaced by a slippery carpet of brown needles. The path climbed upward until it ended in a comparatively open space, and there, under the branches of a pine, her white hands clasped upon her knees, he saw a woman sitting alone. If a hamadryad had suddenly thrust her head around the bole of a tree and looked him full in the face, he would not have been more astonished, so absolute was his sense of utter loneliness; but when he saw that the figure was that of Miss Wycliffe, he stood ...
— The Mayor of Warwick • Herbert M. Hopkins

... Wordsworth seldom, treats subjects from the antique! On the contrary, if "the name is graven on the workmanship," "Michael" and "The Brothers" are as classical as "Hyperion" or "Laodamia" or "The Hamadryad"; "bald as the bare mountain-tops are bald, with a baldness full of grandeur." Bagehot expressly singles Wordsworth out as an example of pure or classic art, as distinguished from the ornate art of such poets as Keats and Tennyson. And ...
— A History of English Romanticism in the Nineteenth Century • Henry A. Beers

... woods. On—on—on!—further into the Forest!—and let the awe of imagination be still further tempered by the delight breathed even from any one of the lovely names sweet-sounding through the famous fables of antiquity. Dryad, Hamadryad! Faunus! Sylvanus!—Now, alas! ye are but names, and no more! Great Pan himself is dead, or here he would set up his reign. But what right has such a dreamer to dream of the dethroned deities of Greece? The language they spoke is not his language; ...
— Recreations of Christopher North, Volume 2 • John Wilson



Words linked to "Hamadryad" :   Ophiophagus hannah, genus Ophiophagus, Naja hannah, Ophiophagus, dryad, king cobra



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