somethingdarker: (Default)
[personal profile] somethingdarker
Or lute in land of dreams - E.A.L. "To Adhemar" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.6, June 1852]

Until my pulses leap like rills unbound - E.A.L. "To Adhemar" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.6, June 1852]

Softly o'er my weary, thirsting soul - E.A.L. "To Adhemar" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.6, June 1852]

The wind will keep its ancient lullaby - L.L. "The Graves of Gallipoli" [The Anzac Book: Written and Illustrated in Gallipoli by the Men of Anzac, 1916]

And comfort them with whispers of their home - L.L. "The Graves of Gallipoli" [The Anzac Book: Written and Illustrated in Gallipoli by the Men of Anzac, 1916]

That makes the past a dream to me - M.E.L. "A Farewell" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]

Seek to quell its secret burning - M.E.L. "A Farewell" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]

Nor would one memory awaken - M.E.L. "A Farewell" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]

Awful love took flame - Louise Labe sonnet IV

Each thought looming - Louise Labe sonnet IV

Singing pain - Louise Labe sonnet XXI

Hard as my black dawn - Louise Labe sonnet XXIII

The islands of memory - Monique Laederach "Penelope"

Without dust - Monique Laederach "Penelope"

Baring my bones to the whims of demolition - Lam Lai "I, New York"

Filling the night with whispers - Lam Lai "I, New York"

Afraid to blink under oath - Lam Lai "I, New York"

The dawn of day that lifts me out of night - Oscar Laighton "Song [Sweet wind that blows o'er sunny isles]" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.20, no.33, Nov. 1877]

All of life compresses into a single molecule - Kien Lam "Big Bang Theory"

Make a new system for breathing - Kien Lam "Big Bang Theory"

Set against an infinite backdrop of space - Kien Lam "Big Bang Theory"

Tied to everyone before and after me - Alexis LaMantia "Waiting"

My last refuge from humanity - Alexis LaMantia "Waiting"

Never hitting the destined mark - Frances Lamartine "Thistle-Down" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]

Telling of joys that come no more - Frances Lamartine "Thistle-Down" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]

Encompassed all with gentians blue - Alexander Lamont "In a Bernese Valley"

With Edelweiss upon her breast - Alexander Lamont "In a Bernese Valley"

By her head wild thyme and rue - Alexander Lamont "In a Bernese Valley"

Be soft with the light inside you - Alfred K. LaMotte "Gentle"

Where the sun comes up in your chest - Alfred K. LaMotte "Gentle"

Golden honey daubed on the bread of the ordinary - Alfred K. LaMotte "Gentle"

Build a home on the moon - Sade LaNay "Entry 003 from I love you and I'm not dead"

Temptation overcomes the star - Sade LaNay "Entry 003 from I love you and I'm not dead"

New moon in midheaven - Sade LaNay "Entry 003 from I love you and I'm not dead"

Four beets in a bag - Susan Landers "Holly Says Sobriety Is Paying Attention"

A net full of mulberries - Susan Landers "Holly Says Sobriety Is Paying Attention"

The poppy's blocky skeleton - Susan Landers "Holly Says Sobriety Is Paying Attention"

A fall all consuming - Susan Landers "I Don't Know What You're Called, I'll Call You by Your Sounds"

Vast halls and flowing wells - Walter Savage Landor "Gebir"

The evening sun poured a fresh splendour - Walter Savage Landor "Gebir"

A night of memories and of sighs - Walter Savage Landor "Rose Aylmer"

Whom these wakeful eyes may weep - Walter Savage Landor "Rose Aylmer"

Amid the dwellings where dreams go - John Langdon-Davies "Quits!"

With yew-trees bound - John Langdon-Davies "Quits!"

Once again with everything - Dorothea Lasky "The Miscarriage"

Asking me for favors all along - Dorothea Lasky "The Miscarriage"

A forgotten world with rainbow sunrises - Dorothea Lasky "This Beautiful Planet"

We are burning here with no escape - Dorothea Lasky "This Beautiful Planet"

Stampede when we must - Irene Latham "Dear Wandering Wildebeest"

The hour when the sun dreams - Irene Latham "This Is the Hour"

Knows to wait for starshine - Irene Latham "What Rhino Knows"

The soft June days forever done - George Parsons Lathrop "The Child's Wish Granted"

Dull coatings of a time now ambered - Travis Chi Wing Lau "Funeral for Unreturned Ashes"

Search for a former light - Travis Chi Wing Lau "Funeral for Unreturned Ashes"

Sent regrets by smoke - Travis Chi Wing Lau "Funeral for Unreturned Ashes"

At the cost of systems still breaking - Travis Chi Wing Lau "Funeral for Unreturned Ashes"

But mark the wandering glances of his eye - Miss Mary L. Lawson "The Haunted Heart" [Graham's Magazine v.XXI no.3, Sept. 1842]

The simplest thing that memory endears - Miss Mary L. Lawson "The Haunted Heart" [Graham's Magazine v.XXI no.3, Sept. 1842]

Questi0ns not the justice of his fate - Miss Mary L. Lawson "The Haunted Heart" [Graham's Magazine v.XXI no.3, Sept. 1842]

Wounded pride first taught her how to hate - Miss Mary L. Lawson "The Haunted Heart" [Graham's Magazine v.XXI no.3, Sept. 1842]

Made our calculations pay - Jack LaZebnik "The Day the Tree Fell Down"

Such problems as perplex the day - John Lea "The Simple Way"

Sitting on a heap of barley - Edward Lear "Incidents in the Live of My Uncle Arly"

Went to sea in a sieve - Edward Lear "The Jumblies"

The echoing song of a coppery gong - Edward Lear "The Jumblies"

To sail my paper boats - Albert Lee "My Realm"

Where I was king of all the shore - Albert Lee "My Realm"

Called upon the tide to come - Albert Lee "My Realm"

With the moon in her head - Dennis Lee "Silverly"

When the clouds bent over - Lee Young-ju "Pillow" transl. by Jae Kim

Escaped through the chimney - Lee Young-ju "Pillow" transl. by Jae Kim

Where innumerable sleeps flow - Lee Young-ju "Pillow" transl. by Jae Kim

Smeared in crimson light - Lee Young-ju "Roommate, Woman" transl. by Jae Kim

The urge to reach for your sorrow - Gerri Leen "Final Resting Place"

Terracotta for a lifelong love - Gerri Leen "Final Resting Place"

No chance against the knife - David Lehman "Wedding Song"

The soul of a stranger - David Lehman "Who She Was"

Had moved his table of mirrors - Gary Lehmann "The Heat of the Moon"

The weapons littering his lineage - Eugenia Leigh "Glossolalia"

Absorb the torments buried there - Eugenia Leigh "Glossolalia"

Who marvels at the sky - Eugenia Leigh "Glossolalia"

The enemy stalking at noontide - Margaret Leigh "Sonnet: The Journalist"

By whose hands were sown rank tares - Margaret Leigh "Sonnet: The Journalist"

That gambled with the souls of men - Margaret Leigh "Two Epitaphs: I. On a Diplomat"

Hope never wore a brighter brow - Leila "Stanzas" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]

And weep while I'm confiding - Leila "Stanzas" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]

While counting years by sorrow - Leila "Stanzas" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]

With the tornado of battle stunning - Henry P. Leland "Wounded" [The Continental Monthly v.2 no.2, March 1862]

Coming as no king of terrors - Henry P. Leland "Wounded" [The Continental Monthly v.2 no.2, March 1862]

Under the leafy shadow of lindens - Henry P. Leland "Wounded" [The Continental Monthly v.2 no.2, March 1862]

Possessed a mind of sturdy fabric - Anna Maria Lenngren "Other Fabrics, Other Mores!" transl. by Nadia Christensen and Mariann Tiblin

Strange things to my spirit-eyes lie bare - H.L. Leonard "My Treasure" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.26, July 1880]

In the azure depths of the summer air - H.L. Leonard "My Treasure" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.26, July 1880]

While the winds and the waves their sighs combine - H.L. Leonard "My Treasure" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.26, July 1880]

Open myself to wonder - Paula Gordon Lepp "Can You Hear It?"

Wonder just won't be found - Paula Gordon Lepp "Can You Hear It?"

Grass completely enrobed in ice - Paula Gordon Lepp "Can You Hear It?"

Singing faint little bell-notes of joy - Paula Gordon Lepp "Can You Hear It?"

Vivid rays tinged sacred Jordan's breast - Mrs. Leprohon (nee Rosanna Eleanor Mullins) "Abraham's Sacrifice"

And never feared the rain - Winifred M. Letts "Hallows'e'en"

Each time your roughness danced with me - Jessica Lévai "Rochambeau"

With vows that bound the leaf and stone - Jessica Lévai "Rochambeau"

She should have feared my edge - Jessica Lévai "Rochambeau"

Dense violent dreams - Primo Levi "Reveille"

About the structure of rocks - Rachel Levitsky "Audience"

A habit backed in desire - Rachel Levitsky "Audience"

When the storm of misfortune around them did press - E. Anna Lewis "The Orphan's Hymn"

Better to rest in the halls of the dead - E. Anna Lewis "The Orphan's Hymn"

Torn sigils tangled in bones on the lawn - L.D. Lewis "Young Death Is in Love"

The ice cream truck's jingle warped and blaring - L.D. Lewis "Young Death Is in Love"

Who taught Death romantic gestures - L.D. Lewis "Young Death Is in Love"

The future refuses to happen - Paige Lewis "I'm Not Faking My Astonishment, Honest"

Exists to keep audiences unsatisfied - Paige Lewis "Logically, I know the Circus"

Retained its vivid crimson hue - Dr. John Leyden "The Mermaid"

Ruler of the shoreless sea of death - Li Hung-chang "Dragon of the Shoreless Sea" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

Carry her away in your ship of ghosts - Li Hung-chang "Dragon of the Shoreless Sea" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

That we may float forever together on that sea - Li Hung-chang "Dragon of the Shoreless Sea" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

Without bearing away my sorrow - Li Qingzhao "The Wild Swans" transl. from Chinese to French by Judith Gautier and from French to English by James Whitall

Fling these bitter drops to the wild swans - Li Qingzhao "The Wild Swans" transl. from Chinese to French by Judith Gautier and from French to English by James Whitall

The river that flows past me forever - Li Qingzhao "The Wild Swans" transl. from Chinese to French by Judith Gautier and from French to English by James Whitall

Stir the fire with my hairpin of jade - Li Qingzhao "The Wild Swans" transl. from Chinese to French by Judith Gautier and from French to English by James Whitall

Let the dust settle on my dressing-table - Li Yi-hang "Looking into Mist" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

Its rising will cast bitter shadows of sorrow - Li Yi-hang "Looking into Mist" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

From my throat I crush back my cries - Li Yi-hang "Looking into Mist" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

My thoughts must travel the long road to the south - Li Yi-hang "Looking into Mist" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

the only pattern throughout our photographs - Anne Liberton "Dad's Recipe for Never-Keeping"

whenever I was worth your time - Anne Liberton "Dad's Recipe for Never-Keeping"

will make it feel small enough to fit - Anne Liberton "Dad's Recipe for Never-Keeping"

You only get to savor it once - Anne Liberton "Dad's Recipe for Never-Keeping"

Every verb desires to be a noun - Kate Light "There Comes the Strangest Moment"

Your heart's in retrograde - Kate Light "There Comes the Strangest Moment"

Take my nice new wheelbarrow and fill it to the brim - F. Liley-Young "Haying Time" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]

That and my new wheelbarrow soon get the haying done - F. Liley-Young "Haying Time" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]

Hate, a hungry animal that only takes - Ann-Margaret Lim "One Summer"

Against the day's blunt silence - Ann-Margaret Lim "One Summer"

Meeting in a flooded rice field - Lin Ling "Footpaths Cross in the Rice Field" transl. by Kenneth Rexroth and Ling Chung

An egret descends on still wings - Lin Ling "Footpaths Cross in the Rice Field" transl. by Kenneth Rexroth and Ling Chung

Take a dip inside your gene pool - Susan L. Lin "Rap(tors) EP"

I've been treading the sea surface - Akis Linardos "Inside This Egg, We Roll Together"

Measure time using my growing hurt of loneliness - Akis Linardos "Inside This Egg, We Roll Together"

Others approached me from the horizon - Akis Linardos "Inside This Egg, We Roll Together"

Crooked from growing old within a shell - Akis Linardos "Inside This Egg, We Roll Together"

Scenting the air with protective promises - C.H. Lindsay "The Legacy of Granny van Helsing"

Continually brews garlic-flavored moonshine - C.H. Lindsay "The Legacy of Granny van Helsing"

Nor swerves for pain or rue - Ruth Temple Lindsay "The Hunters"

Where the debts of Hell accrue - Ruth Temple Lindsay "The Hunters"

His fairy chain of blooming amaranthine flow'rs - Kirton Lindsey "Fanny" [The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.17 no.481, March 19, 1831]

That distant lands his steps might trace - Kirton Lindsey "Fanny" [The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.17 no.481, March 19, 1831]

The incompleteness of translation - Tanya Lukin Linklater "Ewako"

Our radical love of breath in motion - Tanya Lukin Linklater "Ewako"

Faithful as a cricket's tune - R. Zamora Linmark "On Silence"

Fishing in a pool of rainwater - R. Zamora Linmark "On Silence"

In a universe of crooked orbits - Rachel Linton "Letter to an Android Ex-Lover"

Stand at the portal and knock - John Gunter Lipe "To Miss Vic"

And open the beautiful gate - John Gunter Lipe "To Miss Vic"

The endless innovations of grief - Anni Liu "Lake of Isles"

Against the grain of the earth - Anni Liu "Lake of Isles"

Whatever of ourselves we leave bare - Anni Liu "Lake of Isles"

Wild geese go south again - Liu Ch'e, Emperor Wu of the Han (157-87 B.C.E.) "Song of the Autumn Wind" transl. by Burton Watson

A crosshatch of deletions and smears - Liu Cheng "Poem without a Category" transl. by Burton Watson

Racing the writing brush - Liu Cheng "Poem without a Category" transl. by Burton Watson

Wild ducks and geese at rest - Liu Cheng "Poem without a Category" transl. by Burton Watson

The yellow crane winging home - attributed to Liu Hsi-chun "Song of Sorrow" transl. by Burton Watson

Spilled you on the ancient sea bed - Kenji C. Liu "Gaman: Topaz Concentration Camp, Utah"

Blow their alien breath in you - Kenji C. Liu "Gaman: Topaz Concentration Camp, Utah"

The rich, rich song of my hunger - Kenji C. Liu "Gaman: Topaz Concentration Camp, Utah"

From the trellis of flowering thorn - Liu K'o-chuang "Leaving the City" transl. by Burton Watson

With a wand of living light - Mrs. M.A. Livermore "The Snow-Drop" [Small Means and Great Ends - PG. 1851. Edited by Mrs. M.H. Adams]

Come forth upon the breast of June - Rev. William Livingston "In Cherry Lane"

Walking with radiant ministries - Arthur John Lockhart "The Lonely Pine"

A prophet of sweet oracles - Arthur John Lockhart "The Lonely Pine"

Every bone in the snake is the hipbone - Patricia Lockwood "The Hypno-Domme Speaks, and Speaks and Speaks"

The first word I say is listen - Patricia Lockwood "The Hypno-Domme Speaks, and Speaks and Speaks"

Lookout soldiers who watch the sea - Patricia Lockwood "The Hypno-Domme Speaks, and Speaks and Speaks"

No wanton cares to win with words - D. Lodge "Solitariness" [The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.13, no.365, 11 April 1829]

Nor lurking toys which silly life affords - D. Lodge "Solitariness" [The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.13, no.365, 11 April 1829]

First of all my trust deceived - Thomas Lodge "Cupid Plague Thee for Thy Treason"

Pleasant foe to reason - Thomas Lodge "Cupid Plague Thee for Thy Treason"

The lilac's dim explosion fills the air - Katinka Loeser "Spring Is the Time for Flowers"

Will amaze the earthbound, steady tulip - Katinka Loeser "Spring Is the Time for Flowers"

Their hours are clocked by impulse - Katinka Loeser "Spring Is the Time for Flowers"

An annual guest in other lands - John Logan "Ode to the Cuckoo"

No winter in thy year - John Logan "Ode to the Cuckoo"

Companions of the spring - John Logan "Ode to the Cuckoo"

Inner darkness before ceremony - Manny Loley "Let There Be"

Mountains singing in all directions - Manny Loley "Let There Be"

A border of mist and doubt - Lily A. Long "The Singing Place"

The Dancing Stars grow still - Lily A. Long "The Singing Place"

As the seaweed waits for the lifting tide - Lily A. Long "The Singing Place"

Existing in the middle - James Longe "Thursday"

Continuous as the stars - William Wordsworth Longfellow "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud"

Stretched in never-ending line - William Wordsworth Longfellow "I Wandered Lonely as a Cloud"

The pulsing wings of Armageddon's host - Charles Battell Loomis "A Classic Ode"

Like nascent diamonds - Charles Battell Loomis "A Classic Ode"

Sweet as the songs of Sappho - Charles Battell Loomis "A Classic Ode"

Without fear of our tampering - J. Estanislao Lopez "The Systemic"

Everyone wants to own the birds - Leonel Sánchez Lopez "What the Birds Do"

Strong enough to roost in for the night - Leonel Sánchez Lopez "What the Birds Do"

I'm malnourished in my dreams - Leonel Sánchez Lopez "What the Birds Do"

Just birds in nonstop flight and song - Leonel Sánchez Lopez "What the Birds Do"

The weight of being infinite in a world that isn't - Theo Nicole Lorenz "Steve Irwin and the Unicorn"

Harpoon barbs and arrow points - Theo Nicole Lorenz "Steve Irwin and the Unicorn"

Flew away to line the nests of birds - Lois Lorimer "Rescue Dog"

Hope snapped in the air - Lois Lorimer "Rescue Dog"

Blackboard we scrawled our wishes on - Lois Lorimer "Rescue Dog"

Interrogated by floods - Bojan Louis "Ghazal IV"

Mostly disjointed pieces of my soul - Amanda Lovelace "the princess saves herself in this one"

But still hoping for sugar - Amanda Lovelace "the princess saves herself in this one"

Crafted from ocean waves & starlight - Amanda Lovelace "the princess saves herself in this one"

Pounds her fists on the walls of my dreams - Amanda Lovelace "the princess saves herself in this one"

Clouds of gray engulf the day - Robert Loveman "It's Raining Violet"

A fig for him who frets - Robert Loveman "It's Raining Violet"

The birthplace of jewels and gold - Samuel Lover "The Fairy Tempter"

His promise of gold and of pearl - Samuel Lover "The Fairy Tempter"

Betrayed by the fruit of the garden - Goran Lowie "Skywoman and Eve"

Shrill thunder blares at midnight - Lu Chi "Two Poems Presented to the Gentleman in the Office of Palace Writers Ku Yen-hsien" transl. by Burton Watson

Black clouds oppress the vermilion towers - Lu Chi "Two Poems Presented to the Gentleman in the Office of Palace Writers Ku Yen-hsien" transl. by Burton Watson

Mountains and seas vast between us - Lu Yun "For Ku Yen-hsien, a Poem for Him to Give to His Wife" transl. by Burton Watson

Farther apart than bird and fish - Lu Yun "For Ku Yen-hsien, a Poem for Him to Give to His Wife" transl. by Burton Watson

Silently enjoying isolation - Lu Yun "The Valley Wind" (translated by Arthur Waley)

And stuff my window with roots - Lu Yun "The Valley Wind" (translated by Arthur Waley)

To cry more than the sky - Tatiana Luboviski-Acosta "[Untitled]"

The trappings of desires disguised as needs - Tatiana Luboviski-Acosta "[Untitled]"

Up to the cloud's mouth - Tatiana Luboviski-Acosta "[Untitled]"

Cupid's keenest arrow - Charles Henry Luders "A Kiss"

In three thousand leagues of my spirit - Leopoldo Lugones "Journey" (translated by Muna Lee)

A tree that genuflected before the wind - Leopoldo Lugones "Journey" (translated by Muna Lee)

A city wrought of shadows - William Lumley "Shadows" [Fantasy Fan v.1 no.9, May 1934]

Filled with phantoms flitting furtively from sight - William Lumley "Shadows" [Fantasy Fan v.1 no.9, May 1934]

Tell me of your wrath-built Babel - William Lumley "Shadows" [Fantasy Fan v.1 no.9, May 1934]

A fly stammering against the glass - Emilie Lygren "Meditation"

Break free and transcend the transparent boundary - Emilie Lygren "Meditation"

Offer an opening I am too small to see - Emilie Lygren "Meditation"

Still her woes at midnight rise - John Lyly "The Spring"

None but the lark so shrill and clear - John Lyly "The Spring"

At heaven's gate she claps her wings - John Lyly "The Spring"

The morn not waking till she sings - John Lyly "The Spring"


Navigation Links:
Go to L author index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.
(will be screened)
(will be screened)
(will be screened)
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

somethingdarker: (Default)
somethingdarker

October 2022

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16 171819202122
23242526272829
3031     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 6th, 2026 01:35 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios