We are familiar with the Euphuistic qualities of the Elizabethan prose, especially pervading John Lyly's novel Euphues and Sidney's Arcadia.
"The Literature of Ecstasy"
Albert Mordell
For though Morton, more accustomed to speak than to write French, expressed himself with less precision, and a less Euphuistic selection of phrase, than the authors and elegans who formed her usual correspondents; there was an innate and rough nobleness-a strong and profound feeling in every line of his letter, which increased her surprise and admiration.
"Night and Morning, Volume 3"
Edward Bulwer Lytton
It was justly objected to his clothes, by the Euphuistic Fulke Greville, that a meanborn student of the Inns of Court would have been ashamed to walk about London streets in them.
"History of the United Netherlands, 1594"
John Lothrop Motley