still and anon
English
Adverb
still and anon (not comparable)
- (literary) Now and then.
- c. 1596, William Shakespeare, King John, Act IV, Scene 1,
- And like the watchful minutes to the hour,
- Still and anon cheered up the heavy time.
- 1810, John Stagg, “Odo the Proud” in The Minstrel of the North: or, Cumbrian Legends, London: for the author, p. 374,
- It seem’d as if hell had burst forth in a crowd,
- And fury permitted to range;
- When still and anon was re-echo’d aloud—
- “Come forth, thou base tyrant! thou Odo the Proud!
- For Morcar and Hilda, revenge!”
- 1881, Robert Louis Stevenson, “Yes, I remember, and, Still Remember Wailing” published posthumously in George S. Hellman and William P. Trent (eds.), Poems by Robert Louis Stevenson, Chicago, 1921, p. 121,
- And as across the smoothing sea we roam,
- Still and anon we sang our songs of home.
- c. 1596, William Shakespeare, King John, Act IV, Scene 1,
Synonyms
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