Potential Titles: Gall
Jul. 2nd, 2010 10:58 pmGalled by the gift of a clock - Mary Jo Bang "Speech Is Designed to Persuade"
In the shade and tears of gall - Charles Baudelaire "Reversibility" transl. not credited
And wit declines to gall - Stephen Vincent Benet "Lost Lights"
Sauterne and quinine, saccharine and gall - Stephen Vincent Benet "Two More Muses"
My heart has known its winter and carried gall - Arna Bontemps "My Heart Has Known Its Winter"
Shed not the tear of acrid gall - Charlotte Bronte "Frances"
In the hyssop, vinegar, and gall - John Castillo "Thoughts on Good Friday"
Who tend my roots with rains of gall - Countee Cullen "Confession"
Rains of gall and suns of prejudice - Countee Cullen "Confession"
All their humour turned to gall - Annie Charlotte Dalton "Marie Bashkirtseff Said"
A sweet with floods of gall - William Drummond "Sonnet"
Venomed with the gall of scorn - Flaccus "Religious Controversy" (The Knickerbocker v.23:5, May 1844)
Free from the ancient gyves that bind and gall - John Northern Hilliard "Iconoclasm" [The Fly Leaf no. 3 v.1 Feb. 1896]
Wine more bitter than the taste of gall - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
Drained the galled dregs of the draught she offered - Emma Lazarus "A March Violet" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.15, no.88, April 1875]
Too indolent for gall - James Russell Lowell "Fitz Adam's Story"
To turn the heart to bitter gall - "The Misanthrope"
The soldier's cup of anguish, blood, and gall - Robert Nichols "Ardours and Endurances: The Dead II. Boy"
Time's galling iron yoke - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "An Interlude"
For but a bowl of vinegar and gall - Adolf Wolff "The Artists"
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In the shade and tears of gall - Charles Baudelaire "Reversibility" transl. not credited
And wit declines to gall - Stephen Vincent Benet "Lost Lights"
Sauterne and quinine, saccharine and gall - Stephen Vincent Benet "Two More Muses"
My heart has known its winter and carried gall - Arna Bontemps "My Heart Has Known Its Winter"
Shed not the tear of acrid gall - Charlotte Bronte "Frances"
In the hyssop, vinegar, and gall - John Castillo "Thoughts on Good Friday"
Who tend my roots with rains of gall - Countee Cullen "Confession"
Rains of gall and suns of prejudice - Countee Cullen "Confession"
All their humour turned to gall - Annie Charlotte Dalton "Marie Bashkirtseff Said"
A sweet with floods of gall - William Drummond "Sonnet"
Venomed with the gall of scorn - Flaccus "Religious Controversy" (The Knickerbocker v.23:5, May 1844)
Free from the ancient gyves that bind and gall - John Northern Hilliard "Iconoclasm" [The Fly Leaf no. 3 v.1 Feb. 1896]
Wine more bitter than the taste of gall - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
Drained the galled dregs of the draught she offered - Emma Lazarus "A March Violet" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.15, no.88, April 1875]
Too indolent for gall - James Russell Lowell "Fitz Adam's Story"
To turn the heart to bitter gall - "The Misanthrope"
The soldier's cup of anguish, blood, and gall - Robert Nichols "Ardours and Endurances: The Dead II. Boy"
Time's galling iron yoke - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "An Interlude"
For but a bowl of vinegar and gall - Adolf Wolff "The Artists"
Navigation Links:
Go to G word index.
Go to Potential Titles: Body Parts (Human & Animal) [category].
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.