Definition of "spleenful"
spleenful1
adjective
comparative more spleenful, superlative most spleenful
Quotations
The spleenful Pigeons never could create A prince more proper to revenge their hate: Indeed, more proper to revenge, than save; A king, whom in his wrath the Almighty gave: For all the grace the landlord had allow'd, But made the Buzzard and the Pigeons proud; Gave time to fix their friends, and to seduce the crowd.
17th C., John Dryden (1631-1700), “The Hind and the Panther”, in The Poetical Works of John Dryden, Vol I
spleenful2
noun
Quotations
Wyndham Lewis is equipped for his task with an amazing vocabulary of diatribe and derision, a spleenful of gall, and sense for the absurd — the monstrous, the Gargantuan, the preposterously incongruous— which, when disciplined, makes his best passages uproariously effective.
1970, New York Times Saturday Review of Books and Art - Volume 1, page 2
On a sleepless odyssey through the capital's nightspots, cafes, office blocks and bedroom floors, Johnny (something between a slice of John Lydon, and a dose of Mark E. Smith) vents a spleenful of bile on whomever he encounters.
2002, Ali Catterall, Simon Wells, Your Face Here: British Cult Movies Since the Sixties, page 209