16 adjectives to describe dim

the urn no longer stands Within the little alcove dim; Gone also are the faithful hands That hung sweet roses on its rim; And vanished even is the bust Which watched above the sacred dust.

Just as she gazed in other lands on some cathedral dim, Whose aisles resounded to the strains of dirges or of hymn.

That tall white shape I looked upon With a mysterious dread, Linking unto the senseless stone The image of the dead The father I never had seen; I remember on dark nights of storm, When our parlor was bright and warm, I would turn away from its glowing light, And look far out in the churchyard dim, And with infinite pity think of him Shut out alone in the dismal night.

This brief moment of rest in the cool, dim courtyardmerely to lie there and waitseemed precious above all other gain or knowledge.

"My blindness give to me once more The gay dim senses that rejoice; The Past's delighted songs are o'er For lips that speak a Prophet's voice.

And motion like a dreaming wave Wafts me in gladness dim Through air just cool enough to lave With sense each conscious limb.

Ay, and the light doth dim, And asleep's the rose, And tired Innocence In dreams is hence ... Come, Love, my lad, Nodding that drowsy head, 'Tis time thy prayers were said!

These were the verses the Tame Rabbit recited: The Grand Old Man was on the stir; MORANT named me to him; He gave me a good character; I thought his meaning dim.

I had already joined the watch forward, aware only of the numerous dim, and shapeless figures about me, busily employed in straightening out the kinks in the heavy cable.

With Tewksbury and Barnet heath In days to come the field shall blend, The story dim and date obscure; In legend all shall end.

Heywood's eyes were oftener dim with tears than radiant with laughter; yet, with all his sympathy for the afflicted and the fallen, he never took a distorted view of society, but preserved untainted to the end a perennial spring of cheerfulness.

Here, "In the great city, pent 'mid cloisters dim," where he "Saw nought lovely but the sky and stars," one of some seven hundred Blue-Coat boys, Coleridge lived for nine years.

All was gold, the surface of the road was like a golden stream, the canal was gold, the thin spire caught into its piercing line all the colour of the swiftly fading afternoon; the wheels of the carriages gleamed, the flower-baskets of the women glittered like shining foam, the snow flung its crystal colour into the air like thin fire dim before the sun.

" The Boy remembered that he had more than suspected that at the time, but the impression had by-and-by waxed dim.

Note the apparent size of the finest fibers; the striation of the fibers, or their markings, consisting of alternate dim and bright cross bands.

Your eyes look wondrous dim.

16 adjectives to describe  dim