1. aglow - Adjective
3. aglow - Adjective Satellite
In a glow; glowing; as, cheeks aglow; the landscape all aglow.
Source: Webster's dictionaryMy paintings [c. 1907] were aglow with colors and so my soul was contended with them. Alexej von Jawlensky
He was mastered by the sheer surging of life, the tidal wave of being, the perfect joy of each separate muscle, joint, and sinew in that it was everything that was not death, that it was aglow and rampant, expressing itself in movement, flying exultantly under the stars. Jack London
Our souls were one, if you must know and never shall they be apart; with splendid dawn, your face aglow i reach for you and find my heart. Nicholas Sparks
Beautiful women, as experienced men know, Are but darkness wrapped in dazzling light aglow. A life of friv'lous youth and worried age, Its futile course to futile death will flow. Al-Mutanabbi
One thing alone my heart requires, - one gleam of living light amid the ashes and the gloom; that into my cell of humiliation the flood of Divine pity should break, and keep aglow the openings of eternal hope, and sustain the hidden strength of an everlasting love. James Martineau
Churchgoers are like coals in a fire. When they cling together, they keep the flame aglow when they separate, they die out. Billy Graham