And in Catholic history have not similar facts, from his time down to the Reformation, been incarnadined in human blood too deeply for audacity to deny or time to obliterate?
"Monks, Popes, and their Political Intrigues"
John Alberger
From no point of view could the west look so lovely as from that lattice with the garland of jessamine round it, whose white stars and green leaves seemed now but gray pencil outlines-graceful in form, but colourless in tint-against the gold incarnadined of a summer evening-against the fire-tinged blue of an August sky at eight o'clock p.
"Shirley"
Charlotte Brontë
The dew that used to wet thee, And, white first, grow incarnadined because It lay upon thee where the crimson was,- If dropping now, would darken where it met thee.
"The Ontario Readers: The High School Reader, 1886"
Ministry of Education