THE Dog, as created, had a rigid tail, but after some centuries of a
cheerless existence, unappreciated by Man, who made him work for his living, he implored the Creator to endow him with a wag.
Hesiod's diction is in the main Homeric, but one of his charms is the use of quaint allusive phrases derived, perhaps, from a pre- Hesiodic peasant poetry: thus the season when Boreas blows is the time when `the Boneless One gnaws his foot by his fireless hearth in his
cheerless house'; to cut one's nails is `to sever the withered from the quick upon that which has five branches'; similarly the burglar is the `day-sleeper', and the serpent is the `hairless one'.
Doubtless it is fancy, but it seems to me now that the remaining distance was made in a chill fog; that I was uncomfortably cold; that the way was longer than ever before, and the town, when we reached it,
cheerless, forbidding, and desolate.
She was stopped by a dreadful sound of laughter--the
cheerless laughter that is heard among the mad.
Cold and
cheerless, the wind beating on our faces, the white seas roaring by, we struggled through the day.
It was a very dubious-looking, nay, a very dark and dismal night, bitingly cold and
cheerless. I knew no one in the place.
It was already night, cold and
cheerless, the heavens being overcast with clouds which seemed to threaten snow.
He ranged far and wide, and slept but little in the lair that had now become
cheerless and miserable.
"Everything is awfully grim and
cheerless, our weather and our houses and our ways of amusing ourselves.
In fact (not to attribute the whole gloom of sky and earth to the one inauspicious circumstance of Phoebe's departure), an easterly storm had set in, and indefatigably apply itself to the task of making the black roof and walls of the old house look more
cheerless than ever before.
Several weeks were consumed in this
cheerless manner, during which the inhabitants of the country gradually changed their pursuits from the social and bustling movements of the time of snow to the laborious and domestic engagements of the coming season, The village was no longer thronged with visitors; the trade that had enlivened the shops for several months, began to disappear; the highways lost their shining coats of beaten snow in impassable sloughs, and were deserted by the gay and noisy travellers who, in sleighs, had, during the winter, glided along their windings; and, in short, everything seemed indicative of a mighty change, not only in the earth, but in those who derived their sources of comfort and happiness from its bosom.
The room looked
cheerless and dingy to Edna as she entered.