Potential Titles: Woo
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No gun could woo me - Cortney Lamar Charleston "Brown Estate, 2018 Tempranillo"
Wooed by unseen sun - Susan Coolidge "On the Shore"
Waiting spring's warm and wooing breath - Mrs E.L. Cushing "April" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
The fickle crowd another woos - William Hodgson Ellis "Horace, Odes I. i."
Now I woo my dancing fire - Jessie Redmon Fauset "Rain Fugue"
A spendthrift hand to woo - Walter Edwards Houghton, Jr. "Recall"
The future still woos you - Fanny Kemble "An Apology"
Woos you with hands full of flowers - Fanny Kemble "An Apology"
Sends the gentle breeze to woo the flower - "The Lesson of War" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.1, Jan. 1862]
Pale wooer of the solemn night - Robert Morris "The Student's Dream of Fame"
Wooed by the wind's soft word - E. Nesbit "Mummy Wheat"
Nature wooeth back no wanderer to her arms - A. R. "Life's Young Dream" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
Wooed with a wanton ardour - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "The Moon's Message"
The billow which would woo the flowery coast - Thomas Buchanan Read "A Night Thought" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]
Woo all the stars from heaven's blue deep - A former student of the Male Sem. "The Rose of Cherokee" 1855 (per Changing Is Not Vanishing)
To the wooing wind aloof - Alfred, Lord Tennyson "Mariana"
Two nights I wooed in vain - Farnsworth Wright writing as Francis Hard "After Two Nights of the Ear-ache" [Weird Tales, Oct. 1937]
Wooed from the moon's brink - Elinor Wylie "Sunset on the Spire"
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Wooed by unseen sun - Susan Coolidge "On the Shore"
Waiting spring's warm and wooing breath - Mrs E.L. Cushing "April" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
The fickle crowd another woos - William Hodgson Ellis "Horace, Odes I. i."
Now I woo my dancing fire - Jessie Redmon Fauset "Rain Fugue"
A spendthrift hand to woo - Walter Edwards Houghton, Jr. "Recall"
The future still woos you - Fanny Kemble "An Apology"
Woos you with hands full of flowers - Fanny Kemble "An Apology"
Sends the gentle breeze to woo the flower - "The Lesson of War" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.1, Jan. 1862]
Pale wooer of the solemn night - Robert Morris "The Student's Dream of Fame"
Wooed by the wind's soft word - E. Nesbit "Mummy Wheat"
Nature wooeth back no wanderer to her arms - A. R. "Life's Young Dream" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
Wooed with a wanton ardour - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "The Moon's Message"
The billow which would woo the flowery coast - Thomas Buchanan Read "A Night Thought" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]
Woo all the stars from heaven's blue deep - A former student of the Male Sem. "The Rose of Cherokee" 1855 (per Changing Is Not Vanishing)
To the wooing wind aloof - Alfred, Lord Tennyson "Mariana"
Two nights I wooed in vain - Farnsworth Wright writing as Francis Hard "After Two Nights of the Ear-ache" [Weird Tales, Oct. 1937]
Wooed from the moon's brink - Elinor Wylie "Sunset on the Spire"
Navigation Links:
Go to W word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.