Dawn (disambiguation)

Dawn is the time that marks the beginning of the twilight before sunrise.

Dawn may also refer to:

Literature

  • Dawn (Andrews novel), a 1990 novel by V.C. Andrews and Andrew Neiderman
  • Dawn (comics), a comic book series and the title character
  • Dawn (McLaughlin novel), a 1980 science fiction novel by Dean McLaughlin
  • Dawn (Rider Haggard novel), a novel by H. Rider Haggard
  • Dawn (Warriors), a 2006 Warriors: The New Prophecy novel by Erin Hunter
  • Dawn (Wiesel novel), published in 1961, a short novel about a young Holocaust survivor fighting the British Mandate of Palestine by Elie Wiesel
  • Dawn (Wright novel), a 1929 novel by S. Fowler Wright
  • Dawn, a science fiction novel by Octavia E. Butler, the first part of the Xenogenesis Trilogy
  • Dawn, a young adult novel by Kevin Brooks, alternate name for Killing God
  • Hellsing: The Dawn, a prequel of the manga Hellsing
  • The Dawn (book), an 1881 philosophical book by Friedrich Nietzsche
  • Media

  • Dawn Media Group, a Pakistani media company
    • DAWN (newspaper), Pakistan's oldest and most widely read English-language newspaper
    • Dawn News, a 24-hour English language news channel in Pakistan
  • The Dawn (book)

    The Dawn (German: Morgenröte – Gedanken über die moralischen Vorurteile; historical orthography: Morgenröthe – Gedanken über die moralischen Vorurtheile) is a 1881 book by the German philosopher Friedrich Nietzsche (also translated as "The Dawn of Day" and Daybreak: Thoughts on the Prejudices of Morality).

    Nietzsche de-emphasizes the role of hedonism as a motivator and accentuates the role of a "feeling of power." His relativism, both moral and cultural, and his critique of Christianity also reaches greater maturity. In Daybreak Nietzsche devoted a lengthy passage to his criticism of Christian biblical exegesis, including its arbitrary interpretation of objects and images in the Old Testament as prefigurements of Christ's crucifixion.

    The polemical, antagonistic and informal style of this aphoristic book—when compared to Nietzsche's later treatments of morality—seems most of all to invite a particular experience. In this text Nietzsche was either not effective at, or not concerned with, persuading his readers to accept any specific point of view. Yet the discerning reader can note here the prefigurations of many of the ideas more fully developed in his later books. For example, the materialism espoused in this book might seem reducible to a naive scientific objectivism which reduces all phenomena to their natural, mechanical causes. Yet that is very straightforwardly not Nietzsche's strongest perspective, perhaps traditionally most well-expressed in The Gay Science.

    The Dawn (feminist magazine)

    The Dawn: A Journal for Australian Women was an early feminist journal published monthly in Sydney, Australia between 1888 and 1905. It was first published 15 May 1888 by Louisa Lawson using the pen name of Dora Falconer. The subtitle was later changed to A Journal for the Household. It became the official publication of the Australian Federation of Women Voters.

    History

    Louisa Lawson left her husband in 1883 and relocated her family to Sydney. There she supported her children through various jobs, including working as a seamstress and running a boarding house. During this period she was introduced to women's suffrage. In 1887 she purchased the Republican, a journal dedicated to Australian independence and, the following year, in 1888, she founded the Dawn.

    From the outset the Dawn was intended as a mouthpiece for women. In the first edition, Louisa Lawson, writing under the name of Dora Falconer, wrote:

    Nevertheless, the Dawn soon hit opposition: the Dawn was produced by an all-women team of editors and printers, and this fact angered trade unionists in the New South Wales Typographical Association, in part because women were paid substantially less than men. In fighting the Dawn, the association argued that the discrepancies in pay were such that men would be unable to compete, as women would be "… able to work for half the wages a man would require to keep himself and family in comfort and respectability", as well as arguing that the work was too dangerous for women to engage in. The association attempted to boycott the publication, and at one stage a member visited their offices to "harangue the staff" – only to be removed after having had a bucket of water thrown on them by Lawson. Lawson won the battle through patience and "stern resistance" – eventually the boycott lost momentum, and the Dawn continued as it had before.

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    The Dawn

    by: Dimension F3h

    The dawn, what of the dawn
    We have come to kill, by sun or by moon
    Escalating from the darkest pits of hell
    And gather strength where the fire's dwell
    Behold, the black horseman
    On his winged steed
    The prince of darkness soaring high
    Behold the black horseman
    On his winged steed
    A pitch black shadow
    Against a pale white moon
    The dawn, what of the dawn
    We seek the comfort of the dark
    The plains of battle before us lay
    You will never see another day
    Never Never again
    The dawn, what of the dawn
    We've come to kill, by sun or by moon
    The dawn that you seek will fade
    Can't you see this is the end
    The rain of terror will fall upon thee
    His voice will shatter even the bravest of hearts
    When you fall to the ground in tears
    Behold his glory as you die
    The dawn, what of the dawn
    We have come to kill, by sun or by moon
    Escalating from the darkest pits of hell
    And gather strength where the fire's dwell
    Our army before you will mesmerize you
    Violence to the art
    All life is forsaken
    The dark has awoken
    The fire that burns in our hearts
    We are the glorious
    Mighty warriors come to call your doom
    This night we'll be victorious
    The dawn, what of the dawn
    We've come to kill, by sun or by moon
    The dawn that you seek will fade
    Can't you see this is the end
    The rain of terror will fall upon thee
    His voice will shatter even the bravest of hearts
    When you fall to the ground in tears
    Behold his glory as you die.
    And as the sun is fading high above the battlefields
    Never to be seen again
    At last the fallen angel has the world within his grasp




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