Aug. 23rd, 2012

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Water.

Potential Titles: Geographic/Landscape Features [category].



Aquifer:
Art's uncharted aquifers - Adrienne Rich "Rusted Legacy"

Atlantic.

Brook.

Canal:
Drink water from the sacred canals - Enheduana "The Temple Hymns: 1. E-Abzu, the Temple of Ea in Eridu" transl. by Sophus Helle

As the dolphin swam the derelict canal - Idra Novey "Nearly"

By a dark canal debating - Francis Brett Young "Testament"

Cascade.

Cataract.

Creek.

Estuary:
this estuary guarded by gurgling sea lions - David Maduli "alameda point"

Gravetree estuaries against the winds of Paradise - Charles Wright "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted..."

Ford.

Fjord:
Deep fjords through the heart - Nava EtShalom "Iteration"

From the fiords of the sunless winter - Rennell Rodd "The Sea-King's Grave"

Freshet:
Jangled freshets to a dewless land - Michael Field "From the Highway"

Salmon race up into the freshet - Robinson Jeffers "Salmon-Fishing"

How these freshets scour our valleys - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Freshet: A Connecticut Idyl"

Geyser:
A dark gas geyser - Steve Denehan "The Crevasse"

Glad geysers, nymphs of the sun - Harriet Monroe "In the Yellowstone"

Divining the heart of the geyser - Marin Sorescu "Fountains in the sea" transl. by Seamus Heaney

A bright geyser of metal-petaled sound - May Swenson "A Bird's Life"

Gulf.

Harbor/Harbour.

Lagoon.

Lake.

Moat:
Yield her moat of pear - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Love IX: Possession"

Moated by mirage - Heid E. Erdich "Just Off the Highway"

Of castle moats and pixie clans - Deborah Ruddell "The Swan"

As one within a moated tower - Edith Wyatt "Sympathy"

Ocean.

Pond.

Pool.

Puddle.

Rill.

Riptide:
Riptide pulling me under - Camisha L. Jones "Tinnitus"

River.

Rivulet.

Runnel:
Water from a thousand runnels - William Carlos Williams "Spring Storm"

Sea.

Strait:
Through the Strait of Violent Returns - Marianne Chan "Counterargument that Goes All the Way Around"

Came to him in straits and travail sore - E. Fonton "A Vigil with St. Louis" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.1, Jan. 1864]

Stream.

Tarn:
In some deepest tarn astray - Arthur Davison Ficke "Ten Grotesques: X. Song of a Very Small Devil"

Through the tarn a lonely cheer - William Wordsworth "Fidelity"

Tidepool:
Then the tidepool of my power fills - Devin Miller "Whale Mothers, Witch Mothers"

Tributary.

Water Hole:
Drops each ghost into a water hole - Hala Alyan "Aleppo"

Thirst at the watering hole - Megan Fernandes "On the One Hand"

Waterfall.

Watershed:
Through the wild watershed of history - Terry Blackhawk "Diptych i. Drawing You In"

Wellspring:
Whose wellsprings fail or flow defiled - William Watson "A Child's Hair"


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For weather related water words, see: Potential Titles: Weather [category].

Water.


Aquarium:
Through the windows of an ancient aquarium - Martin Espada "Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100"

to explain climate change to an aquarium turtle - Angélica Freitas "microwave" [Poetry Jan. 2016] transl. by Tiffany Higgins

Green aquarium of phantom fish - Aldous Huxley "The Reef"

Aqueduct:
Constructed an aqueduct of dreams - Arthur Sze "First Snow"

Bank.

Bay.

Breaker:
And the breakers talked with Death - J.T. Fields "The Captain's Daughter" [Fun and Frolic. No date. Edited by E.T. Roe.]

Spouting breakers were the only thing a-lee - Robert Louis Stevenson "Christmas at Sea"

Coast.

Coastline.

Cofferdam:
The ghostly cofferdam of my own mind - Ada Limon "Fifteen Balls of Feathers"

Coral.

Cove:
From the marl of the earth in a sacred cove - Edward Hirsch "A Greek Island"

Current.

Dam.

Damp.

Deluge.

Dock.

Douse:
The storm that douse the firebird - R.B. Lemberg "Firebird, Stormbird"

A hundred thousand other files doused in kerosene - Catherynne M. Valente "Aquaman and the Duality of Self/Other, America, 1985"

Dyke:
Bursts the dykes of oppression - Emma Lazarus "By the Waters of Babylon"

Like a deluge on the dykes - Thomas Babington Macaulay "The Battle of Naseby"

Eddy.

Erode/Erosion.

Evaporate.

Flood.

Foam.

Ford.

Freshwater:
crocodile at the edge of a freshwater marsh - Raina J. León "making life on a palette"

Froth.

Glacial.

Glacier.

Gyre:
Swirling gyres of unpredictability - Ellen Hinsey "Epistle"

gyre with dead fire alarm tears - Aristilde Kirby "Daria Ukiyo-e"

Harbor/Harbour.

Hydroelectric:
hydroelectric plants to fry your eggs in the microwave - Angélica Freitas "microwave" [Poetry Jan. 2016] transl. by Tiffany Higgins

Ice.

Inlet:
Moving toward the inlets of the fingers - January Gill O'Neil "How to Make a Crab Cake"

Inundate:
Thickened with inundating dark - Francis Thompson "Victorian Ode for Jubilee Day, 1897"

Irrigate:
irrigated by steady streams of cars - Charles Coleman Finlay "Accidental Series"

Jetty:
Abandoned old jetties just under the water - Patrick Philips "Elegy with Oil in the Bilge"

Jettied on the peacock tide - Charles G.D. Roberts "The Unknown City"

Bruised from battered jetty and sea-wall - Leonora Speyer "This City Wind"

Levee:
demands we graffiti on the levee wall - C.T. Salazar "River"

Low-Tide:
Early mist breaking on low tide - John Moncure Wettarau "Morning, Maine Honolulu"

Ghostwriting the low-tide mark - Cynthia Zarin "Orbit"

Maelstrom.

Main.

Meltwater:
Meltwater frozen for millennia - R.B. Lemberg "Firebird, Stormbird"

Moist.

Petrichor:
leaves petrichor as aftertaste - Nnadi Samuel "Someday, I Identify as a Prairie"

Pier:
In slanting piers of light - Arthur Colton "Faustine"

racing childhood to the pier's edge - David Maduli "alameda point"

Dream-dark piers of speech - Robert Pinsky "The Dig"

Beneath the shadows of these piers - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Freshet: A Connecticut Idyl"

Port.

Portage:
Sweating on the portage trail - William Hodgson Ellis "Maskinogewagaming"

Quay:
Creep up the tidal river to the quay - C.A. Dawson "Sketches" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, 12 June 1886]

Reef.

Reservoir:
Returned to the reservoir of the mind - Michael McGriff "Inversion"

Through vast chthonic reservoirs - Stephen Oliver "Zionism"

A small reservoir of furious music - Tracy K. Smith "Duende"

Ripple.

Riverbank.

Sediment.

Shore.

Shower.

Silt.

Sodden:
The ghost that's in his bones dreams in the sodden clay - W.J. Turner "Death"

Spindrift.

Spume:
Who was born of sea spume - Barbara Jane Reyes "Again, She Tells the First Story"

Submerge

Surf.

Tide

Undercurrent.

Undertow.

Underwater.

Waterline:
As hope sunk below the waterline - Fran Wilde "The Ghost Tide Chantey: Iron"

Wave

Wet.

Wharf:
The weed from Lethe wharf - James Russell Lowell "To C. F. Bradford on the Gift of a Meerschaum Pipe"

On the wharves of sleep - Edwin Markham "The Wharf of Dreams"

Where lethe laps the wharf of sleeping streams - Iris Tree "[Winding down the streets in wearied gaiety]"

Upon the wharves of sorrow- W.B. Yeats "They went forth to the Battle, but they always fell"

Whirlpool.


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Ambuscade:
Storm the ghosts in ambuscade - Jean Ingelow "Scholar and Carpenter"

An ambuscade of lights - Francis Thompson "New Year's Chimes"

Ambush.

Armada:
That proud armadas' trampled shards - Stephen Vincent Benet "Resurrection"

Nobody needs your damn armada - Lisa M. Bradley "Nuestra Señora de las Maravillas Lost at Sea, 1527"

Armada of the sky - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Summer Rain"

Beyond the wrecked armadas - Humbert Wolfe "England"

Armaments:
Accumulating stars and armaments - Pablo Neruda "Do Not Ask Me" transl. by Miguel Algarin

Arsenal.

Banner.

Barracks:
The black hole in the barracks - Seamus Heaney "Singing School: 2. A Constable Calls"

Barrage:
The creeping barrage of occupation - Key Ballah "Skin & Sun"

Rippling through the barrage of bubbles - Emma E. Murray "Drowning Machine"

Barricade.

Bastion.

Battlement.

Belligerent.

Breach.

Bulwark.

Camouflage.

Casualties:
Tally the casualties of war - Eric Gamalinda "Factory of Souls"

a war always claims casualties - ire'ne lara silva "blood.sugar.canto"

Cavalcade:
The avenue with its cavalcade of trucks - Rosa Alcala "You Rode a Loop"

That radiant cavalcade - Anna Hempstead Branch “While Loveliness Goes By”

In nodding cavalcade advancing - Walter de la Mare "The Unchanging"

Cavalier:
To be so cavalier with their bliss - Kaveh Akbar "What Seems Like Joy"

La Mancha's cavalier reposes - Benjamin West Ball "Elfin Land"

Chariot.

Citadel.

Convoy:
A convoy of suspended shadows - Pablo Neruda "The Unburied Woman of Paita" transl. by Maria Jacketti

Crossfire:
Another halo to shake loose galloping into the crossfire - Kaveh Akbar "I Wouldn't Even Know What to Do with a Third Chance"

Dreadnought:
The foeman's dreadnoughts ride - Don Marquis "With the Submarines"

Old maid or dreadnought - Kiki Petrosino "Doubloon Oath"

This dreadnought wreck cut loose - Adrienne Rich "Midnight Salvage"

Fort.

Fortress.

Galley:
Galleys miss appointments with the tides - Lola Ridge "Firehead part VI: The Merchant of Babylon 1: Before Dawn"

Those shining galleys of the stars - Lola Ridge "Firehead part VI: The Merchant of Babylon 1: Before Dawn"

Galleys waiting for the gale - George Santayana "A Hermit of Carmel"

Gilded galley-slaves of Mammon - Robert W. Service "The Rhyme of the Remittance Man"

Garrison:
Strange garrisons of emerald-mailed chameleons - Harold Acton "When Frigates from Long Voyages ..."

Militant:
Into this milieu of militant affection - Joy Priest "The Black Outside"

Oriflamme/Oriflame:
Golden oriflames and tents of pearl - Eleanor Downing "The Pilgrim"

Bearing Lucifer's oriflamme - Louis J. McQuilland "Ballade of Fight"

The rose shall be my oriflamme - John Oxenham "The Word that Was Left Unsaid"

Rampart.

Rebel/Rebellion/Rebellious.

Revolt.

Revolution.

Revolutionary.

Ricochet:
Ricocheting towards each other - Ken Chen "Brief Lives: Descartes in Love" [excerpts]

Deflecting the ricochet against that anarchy of dusk - Yusef Komunyakaa "Thanks"

The sun ricocheting off the sea - Jon Pineda "Cinque Terre"

A ricochet from a sea surge - Charles Wright "Outscape"

Shellshock:
Shellshocked at needing anyone - Marilyn Hacker "Untitled [You did say, need me less and I'll want you more]"

Stockade:
The stockade and the bastioned gate - Laura Da' "The Honest Tongue"

Strategy:
A pure cruel strategy - Daisy Aldan "Frozen Frames of a Last Meeting"

Silence itself is strategy - Mary Jo Bang "Gretel"

A strategy for ignoring history - Louise Gluck "Parable for the King"

My strong strategy for the future dystopia - Jameka Williams "Self-Care is a Psy-Op"

Tactic:
Runs on tactical forgiveness - Gabriel Ramirez "Learn Your Song"

Van.


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Acid Rain:
Elegant as marble in acid rain - Zaina Alsous "Reading Darwish in Vermont"

Acid rain from a sky the color of cinders - Brian Hugenbruch "Worlds I Didn't Hear"

Seeding our clouds with acid rain - Edgar Kunz "Squatters"

Effaced from marble by acid rain - Mark Wunderlich "My Local Dead"

Aeolian:
Touched aeolian dulcimers - Sidney Royse Lysaght "The Forest"

Blizzard.

Bluster.

Boreal/Boreas.

Breeze.

Chinook:
Until February's first chinook - Chris Dombrowski "Stubborn Poem"

Cirrus:
I study atlases and cirrus paths in search of traces - Tiffany Higgins "Dance, Dance, While the Hive Collapses" [Poetry Jan. 2016]

Climate/Clime.

Cloud.

Cloudless.

Cumulous:
Piercing the flesh of cumulous dragons - Zilka Joseph "Three Notes to Blue Jays"

Domes of coral cumulus - Sidney Royse Lysaght "Our Homeland"

Cyclone.

Deluge.

Dew.

Downpour.

Drizzle.

Drought.

Dust Devil:
A sudden dust devil spirals in - Timothy Donnelly "The Night Ship"

A dust devil gathering wind - Tyree Daye "The Death of Jimmy as the Dog He Always Was"

East Wind.

Flurry:
A flurry of coronaries in the overnight forecast - Mike Allen "Mrs. Rigsby's Fatecast"

A flurry of notes from Mozart - R.T. Smith "Hardware Sparrows"

Fog.

Forecast:
A flurry of coronaries in the overnight forecast - Mike Allen "Mrs. Rigsby's Fatecast"

Forty-Below:
Forty-below was a good day - Robin Coste Lewis "Using Black to Paint Light: Walking Through a Matisse Exhibit Thinking about the Arctic and Matthew Henson"

Frost.

Gale.

Gust.

Hail.

Hailcloud:
Lashes of white light binding another hailcloud - Adrienne Rich "Peace"

Hailstorm:
Underneath a hailstorm of light - Charles Rafferty "After Hearing There Are Only 7,000 Stars Visible to the Naked Eye"

Haze/Hazy.

Headwind:
A steady cold channel of headwind - Anne Carson "Wife of Brain"

Heat Wave:
The apples that blossom during a February heat wave - Sarah Freligh "In this Poem, We Will Not Glorify Sunrise"

Hoarfrost:
The hoar-frost crumbles in the sun - D.H. Lawrence "Anxiety"

Hoarfrost sliding its palms across fields - Judy Patterson Wenzel "School Nights at the Farm"

Humid:
Dragons breathing white-hot magnesium across humid skies - Ian Goh "Firework"

Sit in humid acknowledgment of rage - Carly Inghram "Disappearing into a Fiction"

Like death in humid air - Walter Dean Myers "Bill Cash, 30, Boxer"

Passing over humid continents - Pablo Neruda "Ode to Bees" transl. by Margaret Sayers Peden

Lively as a knife deep in their humid lungs - Keith Taylor "Apologia"

Hurricane.

Jet-Stream:
Jet-streams of oxygen spun like pinwheels - Ian Goh "Firework"

Levin:
The chariot wheels of burning levin - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'" ['Levin' is an archaic term for 'lightning']

Sharp levin leaping in the north - Clark Ashton Smith "Saturn"

The levin's blighting fire comes - Miss L. Virginia Smith "The Reconciliation"

The javelin of the far-ravening levin - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"

Lightning.

Low-Pressure System:
A low-pressure system in the abdomen - Amaud Jamaul Johnson "LA Police Chief Daryl Gates Dead at 83"

Meteorology:
Looked to meteorologists for explanations - Stephen Dunn "Moon Song"

Mist.

Monsoon.

Muggy:
Muggy marshes & thick forests of the mind - Adrian Matejka "Central Avenue Beach"

Night-Wind.

North Wind.

Overcast.

Petrichor:
leaves petrichor as aftertaste - Nnadi Samuel "Someday, I Identify as a Prairie"

Rain.

Rainbow.

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

Sandstorm:
A sandstorm whispering in the joints - Samuel A. Adeyemi "Limbs"

Fleeing sandstorms, terror, and splendor - Enheduana "The Exaltation of Inana" transl. by Sophus Helle

The shoreline baked in golden sandstorms - Edwin Torres "The Intermission Clown"

Sheet-Lightning:
Hail blazing in sheet-lightning - H.D. "Simaetha"

With your sheet-lightning apprehension - Adrienne Rich "Noctilucent Clouds"

Shower.

Sirocco:
These the Siroc could not melt - Ralph Waldo Emerson (uncredited) "The Test" [The Atlantic Monthly v.07 no.39, Jan. 1861]

Sleet.

Smog:
A smog that becomes a wraith - Carmen Gimenez "Post-Identity"

All that stayed stuffed in my lungs like smog - Adrienne Rich "Peeling Onions"

Snow.

Snowfall:
Stepping light as snowfall - Emily van Kley "Ways to Hunt Deer"

Snowflake.

Snowstorm.

South Wind.

Squall:
End credits after the squall - Jaswinder Bolina "Municipal Vistas"

If trouble came in shape of squall - Palmer Cox "The Brownies' Yacht-Race"

Among wild squalls of banded clouds - Georgia Heard "Room of Science"

The stronger for the squall - Charles Bertram Johnson "Serenity"

Storm.

Storm-Cell:
Hunt a storm-cell's shifting edge - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "swifts"

Stormcloud.

Temperature.

Tempest.

Thunder.

Thunderclap.

Thunderhead:
And erected temples like thunderheads - Mark Jarman "If I Were Paul"

Thunderheads like doomed zeppelins - Carl Phillips "Character Being a Different Thing from Beauty, Describe the Difference"

Thunderstorm.

Tornado.

Torrid:
Where torrid suns the mountains burn - Lennox Amott "Ah, Hast Thou Gone?"

Tropic/Tropical.

Typhoon:
Hooked to a typhoon's tail - Caitriona O'Reilly "The Airship Era"

Weather.

West Wind.

Whirlwind.

Whiteout:
The whiteout of a spring blizzard - J. Mae Barizo "Indeterminacy"

Whatever unannounced whiteout blizzard hits our blood - Janet Kauffman "Their Books Would Write Us"

A spark crystal in a whiteout - dg nanouk okpik "For-The-Spirits-Who-Have-Rounded-The-Bend IIVAQSAAT"

Wind.

Windless.

Windsock:
A silk windsock of snow blowing - Linda Pastan "Blizzard"

Wind Storm:
Forests of wind storms newly risen - tiana nobile "Moon Yeong Shin"


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Ammunition:
Dirt's ammunition against discipline - Sally Wen Mao "Anna May Wong Stars as Cyborg #86"

Wrapped in ammunition staircases - Valzhyna Mort "Guest"

Arbalast:
Mace, and arblast [sic], and bandoleer - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Armor.

Armory:
All the weapons of Hell's armoury - Maurice Baring "August, 1918"

Arrow.

Artillery:
Not all his dread artillery could breach - Flaccus "Religious Controversy" (The Knickerbocker v.23:5, May 1844)

The tempest's artillery rolled - Hannah Flagg Gould "The Butterfly's Dream"

The whole artillery of hell is brought to bear - "Oration on Charles Sumner, Addressed to Colored People"

Axe.

Bandoleer:
Mace, and arblast, and bandoleer - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Barb.

Bascinet:
Hauberk, and helmet, and bascinet - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Battery:
In the direct path of a battery of signals - Adrienne Rich "Planetarium"

Confront the battery's jaws of flame - Sir Walter Scott "The Field of Waterloo"

Bayonet.

Blade.

Bludgeon:
Bludgeons of light to force your seams - May Swenson "After the Flight of Ranger 17"

Blunderbuss:
Try to fit a blunderbuss into a laptop - Dean Young "I Am But a Traveller in this Land & Know Little of Its Ways"

Bomb.

Bomber:
Where the grey bombers loose their metal thunder - Ruth Lechlitner "Night in August"

Boomerang:
A boomerang flung from your throat - Lauren K. Alleyne "How could I have known I would need to remember your laughter,"

Table tops zinging with boomerangs - Jenny Johnson "In the Dream"

Bow.

Bowstring:
Hangs by a bowstring from heaven's vault - Andy Miller "Diana"

Bullets.

Bullseye:
I can reach the bull's-eye nearer in the dark - "Boy Billy and the Rabbit" [Our Young Folks at Home and Abroad (ed. by Daphne Dale), 1894]

To ring a bull's-eye when he shoots at me - Wallace Irwin "An Inside Con to Refined Guys"

Cannon.

Casque: see Helm/Helmet.

Catapult:
Fiery metamorphosed catapault - Daisy Aldan "Vertical Is Our New Sight"

The catapult from bad to everlasting - Carly Inghram "Last Night I Saw a Boat Just as it Was Exiting My Purview"

A child of some wild catapult - Herbert Randall "Plymouth Rock"

All of life catapulted into one day - Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez "A Light to Do Shellwork By"

Club.

Corslet:
Spear, and corselet [sic], and musketoon - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Scarf athwart my corslet cast - Robert Chambers "The Ladye that I Love" [Spirit of Chambers' Journal, 1834, Project Gutenberg]

With lance, with corslet, casque and sword - Allan Cunningham "The British Sailor's Song" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.10 no.288, supplementary number, 1828]

Prepare your corslet, spear and shield - Humphrey Gifford "For Soldiers"

Crossbow:
Falchion, and gauntlet, and good crossbow - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Crosshair:
how you hold a cottonmouth in a crosshair - C.T. Salazar "River"

Culverin:
Pike, and halberd, and culverin - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Cutlass:
Under the cutlass of her tongue - Shivanee Ramlochan "Witch Hindu"

Dagger.

Dart.

Falchion:
Falchion, and gauntlet, and good crossbow - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Gauntlet.

Grenade:
Civilization's slow grenade - Jesus Castillo "Untitled"

Had turned into beds for grenades and shells and shrapnel - Chinua Ezenwa-Ohaeto "In One Sentence"

In her nest a lone grenade - Safiya Sinclair "A Bell, Still Unrung"

Gun.

Gunpowder.

Habergeon:
Demi-pique, helm, and habergeon - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Haft:
A starbeam on the dagger's haft - Don Marquis "Sea Changes III: Moonset"

Halberd:
Pike, and halberd, and culverin - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Hand Cannon:
Wild cat with a hand cannon - Andre F. Peltier "At the Grave of Little Sadie"

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

Hatchet.

Hauberk:
Hauberk, and helmet, and bascinet - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Helm/Helmet.

Hilt:
My hilt lies broken in pieces three - "The Avenging Sword" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

Crimson velvet and a diamond-hilted sword - John Masefield "The Tarry Buccaneer"

Javelin.

Knife/Knives.

Knout:
Heartless pleasure swinging its barbed knout - Charles Baudelaire "Meditation" transl. by David Yezzi

Lance.

Landmines:
Through a tunnel of kid gloves and landmines - Fady Joudah "The Poem as Epiphyte"

Landmines in the garden bed - John McCarthy "Planting"

Mace:
Mace, and arblast, and bandoleer - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Fate stuns as with a mace - James Russell Lowell "Agassiz"

Machete:
Some grand ecosystem of machetes - Gabriel Ramirez "Learn Your Song"

With sharp machete eyes - Mariahadessa Ekere Tallie "Forced Entry"

Machine-Gun:
Playing cards with machine guns - Mary Jo Bang "Ghost and Grays"

Machine-guns, tapping a code in Morse - E.W. Hornung "The Ballad of Ensign Joy"

Of the piano and machine gun - Jack Ridl "American Suite for a Lost Daughter"

Mangonel:
Culvert, and petrel, and mangonel - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Missile:
When rain falls like cold missiles - Anthony Butts "The Landscape for Growth"

A missile's flight away - Jess Hyslop "After"

a wire picking up missiles on the strip - Benjamin Krusling "what can I know what should I do what may I hope"

A missile from Orion's belt - Herbert Randall "Plymouth Rock"

Mushroom Cloud:
Mushroom clouds cluster along the crimson horizon - S.R. Tombran "A Time Traveler's Field Notes"

Musket:
Who bears the sword and handles the musket - "The Good Goddess of Poverty [A Prose Ballad, translated from the French]" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.3, Sept. 1863]

And points a musket at the crows - "The Scarecrow" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]

Musketoon:
Spear, and corselet, and musketoon - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Muzzle:
From the muzzle broke the sound - Palmer Cox "The Brownies' Celebration"

Under the lightning's muzzle fire - Agnes Nemes Nagy "Storm" transl. by Laura Schiff

Pike:
Pike, and halberd, and culverin - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Hung around with pikes and guns and bows - "The Fine Old English Gentleman"

A field of spears, a lake of pikes, a sky of hawks, a hundred winters - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "gorse"

Pistol:
A pistol tucked into a stranger's belt - Sophie Klahr "Like Nebraska"

From a seaborn eternity to a pistol crack - Agnes Nemes Nagy "Storm" transl. by Laura Schiff

Pocketknife:
The pocketknife seducing the orange - Rigoberto Gonzalez "The Bordercrosser's Pillowbook"

Your pocketknife rage and love - Michael Lauchlan "Dad and I, in a Snap"

Rapier:
With a silver rapier by my side - anonymous? "The Famous Flower of Serving-Men"

To give that rapier lightning turn - Mona Gould "Sung in High Dudgeon!"

And the stars are rapier keen - Robert W. Service "The Atavist"

Rifle.

Rocket.

Saber/Sabre:
Flashed with a sabre's azure gleam - Thomas Bailey Aldrich "Monody on the Death of Wendell Phillips"

The black iris with their sabered blooms - Camille T. Dungy "Daisy Cutter"

Of votive goods and sabred fugitives - Seamus Heaney "Kinship"

Hide the sabre's hideous glare - Helen Maria Williams "An Ode on the Peace"

Scabbard:
As the swords ran out of their scabbards - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Last Vision of Helen"

Ribosomes in the scabbard of their maker - Gospel Chinedu "In a Tissue Processing Class the Lecturer Tells the Biafra War Through the Lenses of a Microscope"

A sword in a scabbard of meteors - Pablo Neruda "From Air to Air" transl. by Nathaniel Tarn

Scimitar:
A few stiff branches covered with scimitar thorns - Janet Kauffman "The Devil's Walking Stick"

Scythe.

Sheath.

Shotgun:
Into chrome and sun and shotgun confection - Catherine Bowman "Heart"

Electric fences and silos and shotguns - Laura Cranehill "We Let You Live"

kept her tears where they'd pass for shotgun - Douglas Kearney "The Black Woman's Tears Swap Meet Is Open Every Day"

Shrapnel.

Sling/Slung.

Spear.

Spike:
Spikes in the hostile night - Pablo Neruda "Commoners from Socorro (1781)" transl. by Jack Schmitt

Sten:
From gas and protest to gelignite and sten - Seamus Heaney "Whatever You Say Say Nothing"

Stiletto:
The magnificent extravagance of my beloved stilettos - Yi Lei "A Single Woman's Bedroom" transl. by Tracy K. Smith and Changtai Bi

Submarine:
Khrushchev took a crystal submarine down - Catherynne M. Valente "Aquaman and the Duality of Self/Other, America, 1985"

Sword.

Target.

Throwing Star:
Throwing stars and fortune tellers - R.A. Villanueva "This dark is the same dark as when you close"

Torpedo:
Torpedoes of disinterest - Kay Ryan "Don't Look Back"

Trident:
The trident-flame of the mind fails - Stephen Vincent Benet "Sir John Rimbeck to the Princess of Acre"

Sharp tridents beside private lairs - Paul Cameron Brown "Pondicherry"

Trigger:
Green vapors trigger an olfactory déjà vu - Tory Dent "The Moon and the Yew Tree"

Allowing the thought to stray the trigger - Luisa A. Igloria "Custody"

For fear of triggering a heart attack - Major Jackson "Addiction"

concealing an infinity of hairtrigger malice - Monica Youn "A Guide to Usage: Mine"

Potential Titles: Vehicles [category] includes some military vehicles.

Weapon.


Navigation Links:
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
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somethingdarker: (Default)
Admiral:
Where the Admiral gazes down - Yang Lian "Venice Elegy 2 Rot Poem" transl. by Brian Holton

Archer:
While applying lipstick with an archer's precision - Vincent Toro "¿Que Que La Femme?"

Armada.

Army.

Assassin/Assassination.

Battalion.

Brigade:
That nighttime brigade of ghosts now laid to rest - Anthony Butts "All Saints' Day"

Unblest by the brigades of spring - John Drinkwater "Of Greatham"

He's an overpass light brigade soldier - Margaret Noodin "Sometimes" transl. by the author

Captain.

Cavalry:
Under the feet of the ocean cavalry - Robinson Jeffers "To the House"

Which bravely wait the charge of Winter's cavalry - Henry David Thoreau "The Fall of the Leaf"

Cohort.

Crew.

Deserter:
Deserter from the great autumn army - Linda Pastan "Repetitions: After Van Gogh: 1. Yellow"

Dragoon:
The heavy dragoons of the mind - James Russell Lowell "At the Commencement Dinner, 1866, in Acknowledging a Toast to the Smith Professor"

Enemy.

Fleet.

Foe.

General.

Guerrilla:
His children once beggars rise into guerrillas - W.J. Lofton "The Lord is American"

Infantry:
Ugly short infantry of the mind - Ernest Hemingway "Mitraigliatrice"

The craven infantry of roaches - Jamaal May "Things That Break"

Insurgent:
From insurgent deeps impelled - George Sterling "The Testimony of the Suns"

Ever insurgent let me be - Louis Untermeyer "Prayer"

Legion.

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

Marshal:
Marshalled armies in the silent air - Edmund Blunden "The Scythe"

Mercenary:
Outposts filled with Saturn's mercenaries - Dorsey Craft "The Pirate Anne Bonny and I Play Video Games"

Whose hopes are shaped by mercenaries - Marianne Moore "The Paper Nautilus"

Militia:
Dark militia of the southern shore - James Elroy Flecker "Brumana"

Black market gun-runners of militias and drug dealers - Gary Copeland Lilley "War"

Musketeer:
Three musketeers of faithful following - Iris Tree "[Give me, O God, the power of laughter still]"

Navy:
Where the gallant navy rides the deep - James Beattie "The Triumph of Melancholy"

Reckoning up their navies - Emily Lawless "Wide Is the Shannon"

Navy blue around a fake significance - John Moncure Wettarau "On Looking at a Mediocre Painting"

Officer:
Swarms of Officers to harass our people - Tracy K. Smith "Declaration"

Phalanx:
A phalanx of swift song made - Louis Golding "Bird, Bird, Bird"

Crowded close in serried phalanx - Lermontof "Dispute" transl. by John Pollen [probably Mikhail Lermontov]

So could Corruption's phalanx rest composed - Philo "The Tribute"

Platoon:
The ghosts of my platoon - Lou Barrett "Two Poets and a Physician: 1918"

Patrol.

Regiment:
Regimented shards of the Great Order - Mike Allen "Mondrian's War"

Booming drums of the regiment - Stephen Crane "War Is Kind"

Fight a million regiments of wrong - Joaquin Miller "To the Boers"

Draw up his regiment all in a row - Laura Elizabeth Howe Richards "The Baby's Future"

Scout:
While the rat is on the scout - William Cowper "The Cricket"

Sentinel.

Sentry.

Sergeant:
The stubborn sergeant men call Pride - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Etcher"

Daybreak is a drill sergeant - Misha Collins "The Sound and the Ferry"

Sniper.

Soldier.

Spy.

Squad:
Her sunrise scattering squads of shadows - Carl Dennis "Help from the Audience"

Squadron.

Standard-Bearer:
The standard-bearers of the future - Emma Lazarus "By the Waters of Babylon"

Terrorist:
Tools of a terrorist undertaking - June Jordan "The Bombing of Baghdad"

Troop.

Vanguard:
Comes through the blood of the vanguards who dreamed - Rudyard Kipling "Untimely"

The swan's black vanguard told it - Dorothea Mackellar "Swallows"

The fading moon and the vanguard of the sun - N. Scott Momaday "The First Day"

Sent their misty vanguard creeping - Henry van Dyke "The Fall of the Leaves"

Veteran:
Veteran of sheer drops and near misses - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "thrift"

Warrior.


Navigation Links:
Go to author indices.
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somethingdarker: (Default)
Airstrike:
airstrikes littering the litanies of my existence - Tajudeen Muadh "In a Goverment Class, I Discuss My Home"

Ambush.

Armistice:
The grateful armistice of sleep - Joyce Kilmer "The Twelve-Forty-Five"

Assail.

Assassin/Assassination.

Assault.

Attack.

Battle.

Beset.

Blockade:
Spraying black plumes across the blockaded sunset - Philip Schultz "Luxury: One"

Bombard:
Bombarding Earth with heavenly debris - Daisy Aldan "The Cometary Script"

The bombardments and aftermath - Mike Allen "Space War"

Brawl:
Starting a brawl over scone crumbs - Dorothy Chan "Triple Sonnet for My Father's Pet Goose, Pigeon Wars, and Daddy Issues"

Better to clear keep of ev'ry brawl - James Johnson [From the chapter header verses in Sugar and Spice on Project Gutenberg]

Breach:
A breach in the wall of darkness - Helen Keller "The Song of the Stone Wall"

Camouflage.

Cease Fire:
A cease fire for even the wilder kingdom - Russell Brakefield "Pardon, Trout Farm"

Civil War: See Civil/Civil War.

Combat.

Command.

Commandeer:
Commandeering sight like caravans - Lola Ridge "Chinese Print (To E.A.K.)"

Conflict.

Conquer/Conquest.

Conscript:
Conscripted to say what I shouldn't - Dara Barrois/Dixon "We're All Ghosts Now"

Conscripted to their shadows' glow - Hart Crane “The Wine Menagerie”

you're a conscript to this battlefield - Elliott Dunstan "Inherited Battlefield"

Crusade:
The end of the crusade - Kwame Dawes "At Anchor: The Real Situation"

Crusaders from hallucinatory citadels - Mina Loy "Lunar Baedeker"

Shattered in the last crusade - Theodore Maynard "Don Quixote"

The betrayal of the following crusade - Pablo Neruda "Brother Bartolome de Las Casas" transl. by Jack Schmitt

A cotton-cloud nomenclature for crusade - Leslie Contreras Schwartz "A Body's Universe of Big Bangs"

Defuse:
The undefused bombs our bodies hide - Rasha Abdulhadi "Pocketful of Warding Stones"

Detonate:
Acid imbalances that detonate - Carmen Gimenez "Redaction"

Set to detonate into an unknown future - Lorraine Schein "Merlin"

The first lightspray of detonated creation - Catherynne M. Valente "Mouse Koan"

Dodge.

Duel.

Enlist:
Mysteriously enlisted in a V formation of Canadian geese - Duane Ackerson "Three Urban Legends"

Enlists a fresh haunting - Luther Hughes "My Mother, My Mother"

Feint:
In a hands-behind-back colloquy of feints and nods - Michael Collier "Crows in a Fresh Mown Field Before Rain"

The oracular feint of a joke - Dana Levin "You Will Never Get Death/Out of Your System"

Feud.

Fight/Fought.

Flank.

Foment:
Fomenting revolutions on alien planets - David C. Kopaska-Merkel "Jumping into the System"

Fortify:
Your ramparts green with briar fortify - James Elroy Flecker "Brumana"

Fortified by wisdom's splendid armor - Gustav Melby "The Lost Chimes"

And fortify your self in your decay - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XVI"

To outgrow a fortified spiral - Amber Flora Thomas "Shed"

Fray.

Genocide:
My genocides folded into my wallet - Roger Reeves "Brazil"

Grapple.

Harry:
Now but a memory to bless and harry me - John Freeman "The Chair"

Hijack:
Hijack the next spaceship and travel to Mars - Julie Babcock "Dick and Jane Burn Down the House"

Hijacked the Doppler radar screen - D.A. Powell "Useless Landscape"

Undertake the hijacking of language - Prageeta Sharma "Poetry Anonymous"

Hit.

Insurrection:
The insurrection of a flea - Maxwell Bodenheim "Inevitable"

Full of hot surges of insurrection - Ivor Gurney "Song at Morning"

Sorrows quell our insurrection - F. Hartmann "Endlich bricht der heisse Tiegel" transl. by James W. Alexander

Invade/Invasion.

Kick.

Maraud:
Marauding mouse and rebellious rat - Edmund H. Yates "The King of the Cats"

March.

Marshal:
Marshalled armies in the silent air - Edmund Blunden "The Scythe"

Martial:
No queen of martial might - Shaemas OSheel "Roma Mater Sempaeterna"

Melee:
In an ancient melee of night flowers - Angela Liu "The witches are without work"

Mission.

Muster:
Truth's bands will be mustered - Rev. J.G. Adams "The Young Soldier" [Small Means and Great Ends - PG. 1851. Edited by Mrs. M.H. Adams]

Mustered from the fevered sky - Edmund Blunden "Sheet Lightning"

A muster of pale stars - Lucie Brock-Broido "Basic Poem in a Basic Tongue"

We called the muster over - Nannie Power O'Donoghue "Missing" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.136-v.III, 7 Aug. 1886]

Mutiny:
Malcontents and mutineers - Charles Cotton "Contentation"

Or thy lips in mutiny - Jeannette Fraser Henshall "The Chastening"

The mutiny of Memory's gloom - "The Ocean Wanderer"

Onslaught:
Lashed by an onslaught of echoes - Mary Jo Bang "Part of a Larger Picture"

Pacify:
So many attempts at pacifying this planet - Mike Allen and Ian Watson "Seventh Coming"

Parry:
That no mortal hand can parry - George Martin "Montreal Carnival Sports"

Patrol.

Punch.

Raid.

Reconnaissance:
Genetic reconnaissance at birth - fahima ife "our general banality"

Recruit:
Must recruit exhausted power - John Clare "The Harvest Morning"

Limitless recruits from Fancy's pack - Thomas Hardy "A Young Man's Exhortation"

Recruited into the legions of evil - J.D. Harlock "I Thought the End of the World Would Be a Bit More Exciting Than This"

Rout.

Sabotage:
Mixing kindness and sabotage - Chia-Lun Chang "Vote Your Way to Hell"

Their favorite verb is sabotage - Monica de la Torre "The Script"

Sally:
Swift with satire as with sally - Harry Graham "The Last Horsed 'Bus"

My world too has its sallies and withdrawals - Mei Yao-ch'en "Shih-hou Pointed Out to Me That From Ancient Times There Had Never Been a Poem on the Subject of Lice, and Urged Me to Try Writing One" transl. by Burton Watson

Make brave sallies at the stars - Lola Ridge "Amy Lowell"

Salute.

Scout:
While the rat is on the scout - William Cowper "The Cricket"

Scrimmage:
Scrimmaging the hordes of Hell - J.D. Harlock "I Thought the End of the World Would Be a Bit More Exciting Than This"

Shoot/Shot.

Siege/Besiege.

Skirmish:
The muffled skirmish of the rain - Coningsby Dawson "Remembering in Heaven"

Slash.

Smite.

Spar:
Sparred the light for windows and won - Gaia Rajan "Dent"

Stab.

Strafe:
Strafed by the Milky Way - Leonard Cohen "The Lists"

Ducks strafing the unfrozen pools - Richard Solomon "Ice in Formation"

Surrender.

Surveillance:
Surveillance feeds on death - Farah Habad "And out of the ashes"

Convert surveillance into invasion - Rachel Rodman "The Past Is a Foreign Country"

Caressing surveillance cameras and blowing whisper kisses - Karen A. Romanko "The Invisible Woman Runs for President"

Tournament:
All the achieving of their tournament - H.I. Burt "From Their Dust"

Tourney:
Self with self in secret tourney - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Flood-Tide"

Clash in tourney on the least of points - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Protest of Faith: to Rev. --"

Truce.

Violence/Violent.

Volley:
our small volley of prayers & dreams - upfromsumdirt (Ron Davis) "As The Universe Yawns Brer Rabbit Spins A Yarn"

Vollied lightnings cleave the air - Henry Kirk White "Time"

Wallop:
Crops walloped in their places of birth - Nancy Mercado "I Come to See for Myself"

War.


Navigation Links:
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.
somethingdarker: (Default)
Accent.

Adjective:
That skims the lips of many adjectives - Maxwell Bodenheim "Portraits. II: Waitress"

Adverb:
Adverbs from the leaf-talk of the elves - Stephen Vincent Benet "Talk"

Alphabet.

Ampersand:
Ampersands of storage compounds - Brenda Hillman "To Mycorrhizae Under Our Mother's Garden"

Form & light, extra space in the ampersand - Brenda Hillman "Unendangered Moths of the Mid-Twentieth Century"

Annotate:
Spiders in ceremony annotating the windows - Zaina Alsous "On having begun"

Tombs of silence in an annotated landscape - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 13" transl. by Katherine Silver

Claw marks annotate awakening - Ann K. Schwader "Cave Bear Dreams"

Antecedent:
The motive antecedent to the act - Thomas M. Disch "The Clouds"

Had no antecedents for doubt - Fanny Wheeler Hart "Harry: Part 1"

an antecedent of many things - Tajudeen Muadh "In a Goverment Class, I Discuss My Home"

Apostrophe:
Turning away inside the apostrophe - Aditi Machado "Experiment with Aspic"

Article:
Deserving of the definite article - Sean Hill "Hello"

Definite article of the body - Christopher Kondrich "Definite Article"

Articles of their own impermanence - Thomas Lynch "Lessons from Berkeley"

Articulate/Inarticulate.

Asterisk:
Asterisk of the sun, hyphen of the moon - Faylita Hicks "Coded Binaries"

Braille:
braille on silken canvas - Tahnia Barrie "I Am Scabs, One and Legion"

Calligraphy.

Chapter:
Giving back a scattered chapter - Hart Crane "At Melville's Tomb"

A final chapter no one reads - Frank O'Hara "Meditations in an Emergency"

Remember how light dawned in chapters - Kiki Petrosino "Happiness"

Character.

Cipher/Cypher.

Clause:
Hide between clauses and commas - Brandy Nālani McDougall "On Finding My Father's First Essay"

A conditional clause hanging from something to do with spring - Noah Warren "Cut Lilies"

Cliche:
a well of intentions and cliche - Ruth Ellen Kocher "She Manifests Her Own Ineffable"

An example of cliché so profuse it touched my heart - David St. John "The Park"

Code.

Comma:
Hide between clauses and commas - Brandy Nālani McDougall "On Finding My Father's First Essay"

Expose a spine of cursed commas - Nicholas Wong "On Insertion"

Comment:
Riding the waves without comment - Duane Ackerson "Various Horses"

The stars in secret influence comment - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XV"

Commentaries on borrowing practices - Eunsong Kim "Disclaimers for Debt"

Conjugation:
The roiling sea of vowels, conjugations, tenses - Usha Akella "Breaking bread with phonemes"

Fit for the conjugation of joy - Meena Alexander "Darling Coffee"

Conjugating the squandered night - Shara McCallum "A Grammar for War"

The conjugation of the paramecium - Muriel Rukeyser "The Conjugation of the Paramecium"

Conjunction:
Whose courses and conjunctions govern us - Dana Gioia "Psalm of the Heights"

The sweet conjunctions that astonish us - Conrad Hilberry "Zero"

The Conjunction of the Mind - Andrew Marvell "The Definition of Love"

From landscape to unsuppressed conjunction - Charles Wright "Homage to What's-His-Name"

Connote:
Used to connote a blank space - Mary Jo Bang "Speech Is Designed to Persuade"

Context.

Contradiction.

Countersign:
To solve the doubt, watchword and countersign - John G. Nicolay, Private Secretary to President Lincoln "On Guard" [The Continental Monthly v.II no.VI, Dec. 1862]

She passes with her perfect countersign - Leonora Speyer "April on the Battlefields"

Creole:
a pidgin picking its way into a creole - Malcolm Friend "Caliban Theory"

Cuneiform:
A maze of cuneiform streets - Sandy Florian "Our Big City"

Curse.

Cursive.

Decipher:
Truth deciphered from life's scroll - Mary Cornelia Hartshorne "Sonnet [The whirling stars that shower swift-winged light]"

When we decipher memory - Fady Joudah "Carbon Copies"

Decipher the language of insects - W.S. Merwin "After the Alphabets"

That barely deciphers you - Pablo Neruda "Pottery Shop" transl. by Jack Schmitt

Denote:
Ashes denote that fire was - Emily Dickinson "Book 3: Life XXX: Fire"

Description:
A description of hundreds of years - Lucy Ives "First Husband"

Dialect.

Dialectic:
Dark's velvet dialectic - Adrienne Rich "Rusted Legacy"

Dialogue:
Threadbare as a dialogue assumed - Edwin Torres "E.G. as I.E."

Fit his tongue to dialogues of business, love, or strife - William Wordsworth "Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood"

Dictionary.

Digit/Digital.

Ellipsis:
The verbed streetlights make ellipsis - Adrian Matejka "16 Bars Poetica"

Eloquence.

Epithet:
An angry epithet baring its teeth - Mouna Ammar "1 Zmagria Place"

Etymology:
The etymology of necessity - Rae Gouirand "Quince Suite"

Look up the etymology of melancholia - Amie Whittemore "Lunar Eclipse"

Etymon:
Who will reconstruct the etymon of hunger - Giorgiomaria Cornelio "La consegna delle braci [The Distribution of Embers]" transl. by Moira Egan

Euphemism:
Never meant to live in euphemism - Randall Mann "Realtor"

Falsehood.

Figurative:
Figurative dreams that now haunt us - Paisley Rekdal "Philip Larkin's Koan"

Fluent.

Glossary:
Their glossary of knocks - Traci Brimhall "Aubade on a Ghost Hunt"

While these trees held a glossary of stars - Dorianne Laux "Redwoods"

Glyph:
Not a glyph hollowed out - Rebecca Dunham "Field Note, 2011"

To read as a glyph of hope - Angela Penaredondo "to hold these contradictions in kinship"

Parsing the dust motes into glyphs - Rachel Pittman "The Quickening"

Chaos written plain in fossil glyphs - Ann K. Schwader "Desert Nocturne"

Grammar.

Handwriting:
Who know my left-handed handwriting - Danni Quintos "Quintos"

Hashtag:
Hashtags of interiority - Becca Klaver "Manifesto of the Lyric Selfie"

Hieroglyph.

Hyperbole:
Metaphoric explosion and grotesque hyperbole - Bruce Boston "Surreal People"

Hyphen:
Asterisk of the sun, hyphen of the moon - Faylita Hicks "Coded Binaries"

Iambic:
My rib cage expanding and contracting in iambics - Daisy Aldan "Everywhere in Constancy, He Is Intoning, Look! Look!"

Its iambic pulse of light - Jamaal May "Better Devices"

Iconography:
That radiates iconographic images - Bruce Boston & Robert Frazier "A Compass for the Mutant Rain Forest"

Of administrative iconography - Michael Leong "from Transmitting the Vertical Immensity of Coniferous Light"

Ideogram:
Between ideograms depicting darkness - Christopher Kondrich "Layer of Ash"

Idiom:
Strain'd with many strange idioms - Bulwer Lytton publishing as Owen Meredith "Lucile: Part I Canto II"

To ask for a crystalline idiom - Prageeta Sharma "The Imperishable and Perishable Family"

Illegible:
I am trying to become illegible - Igor Gulin "Kontur" transl. by Your Language My Ear

Blurs to illegible serenity - Robert Pinsky "The Great Nauset Buddha"

On Memory's page inscribed in letters large and legible - Sylvester "The Dream" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]

Index.

Inscribe.

Insult.

Interpret.

Inuendo/Innuendo:
Innuendoes of your inverse dawn - Mina Loy "Moreover, the Moon--"

Pink inuendoes hooded in gray - Lola Ridge "Manhattan Lights"

Invective:
Invectives of the wind - Harold Acton "Ventilation"

Irony.

Jargon:
The jargon of the howling main - Lewis Carroll "The Three Voices: The Third Voice"

No blackbird bates his jargoning - Emily Dickinson "Book 1: Nature XX: Two Worlds"

The jargon of engines quiet - Lola Ridge "The Everlasting Return"

Loud-spoken in the jargon of the day - Iris Tree "[Among the crumbling arches of decay]"

Jest/Jester.

Jibe:
Now all vanishes in plots and gibes - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Last Banquet"

To cast his jibes and scoffs - Cardinal John Henry Newman "The Dream of Gerontius"

How they jibe at loss - William Carlos Williams "Hic Jacet"

Koan:
Speak to the same want of nature's koan - Michael Meyerhofer "Theodote"

Label:
Our yellowed labels all spell doom - Boris Dralyuk "Emigre Library"

Moral machinery is not labelled - Marianne Moore "Reinforcements"

A false prophet robed in attitude and labels - Emanuel Xavier "Legendary"

Language.

Letter.

Lexicon:
A lexicon of crimes they do in my name - Tania Chen "A Toast from Santisima Muerte"

The lexicon of wilds goes on - RK Fauth "Playing with Bees"

In order to enter a new lexicon - Mary Hickman "Helen"

Liar.

Lie/Lying.

Lowercase:
Allowing lowercase sand to spill from me - Christopher Kondrich "Ruin Valley"

Mantra:
My lips' chapped mantra of mud - Vandana Khanna "Parvati Tires of Waiting"

Bone marrow and unsung mantras - Fiona Lu "Turing Test"

To pour his mantras on our heads - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 175: The Bee Messenger" transl. by John Stratton Hawley

Hear the mantra of the mouse-god sounding - Catherynne M. Valente "Mouse Koan"

Maxim:
All those thousand good maxims we coin - Bulwer Lytton publishing as Owen Meredith "Lucile: Part I Canto I"

Message.

Metaphor.

Monogram:
Mercury monogrammed with fever - Cynthia Zarin "Orbit"

Monologue:
Dreams down its cadenced monologues - Stephane Mallarme "L'Apres-Midi d'un Faune" (translated by Aldous Huxley)

Hello in a moebius monologue - Sandra McPherson "Driving in Circles with the Blind"

Morse Code:
Machine-guns, tapping a code in Morse - E.W. Hornung "The Ballad of Ensign Joy"

Tapping out my Morse-code alphabet - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "woodpecker"

Motif:
A mirror with a feather motif - Mary Jo Bang "Given to Believe"

Motto:
Nailed it as a motto above my door - Arthur Davison Ficke "Ten Grotesques: II. The Prudent Lover"

The motto of modern-day dowsers - Thomas Lux "Indigo Felix:"

Newsprint:
Swaddled in old newsprint and hope - Toby MacNutt "When You Read this Debris"

Nomenclature:
Our flesh a nomenclature of memories - Jacie Ragan "The Secret Lives of Fingerprints"

A cotton-cloud nomenclature for crusade - Leslie Contreras Schwartz "A Body's Universe of Big Bangs"

Noun:
A verb named for its noun - Dan Chiasson "Bloom (II)"

What happens between the noun and the verb - Rodney Jones "The Language of Love"

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

Smug nouns of dominion - Gregory Orr "Eden and After: To Notice"

Number/Outnumber.

Potential Titles: Numbers [category].

Paragraph:
The great paragraphs of dust - Major Jackson "On Disappearing"

Reading far past the last paragraph into the back blank page - Dean Young "Colophon"

Paraphrase:
The early dark is a paraphrase of Mars - Chen Chen "Night Falls Like a Button"

How ego blossoms in paraphrase - J.P. Grasser "time bending / tongue / entwine / the betwixt"

An exquisite corpse paraphrased - Adrian Matejka "16 Bars Poetica"

Parenthesis.

Parse.

Password:
The password of the leaves upon the cottonwood - Alexander Posey "To Wahilla Enhotulle"

Period.

Phoneme:
A phoneme that will stubbornly assert itself - Usha Akella "Breaking bread with phonemes"

Pidgin:
a pidgin picking its way into a creole - Malcolm Friend "Caliban Theory"

Platitude:
Exchanging vows and other platitudes - Natalie Clifford Barney "Habit"

Teetering into platitudes - Diane Seuss "Poetry"

Pledge.

Plural:
History woven from the plural - Christopher Kondrich "Peace Epic"

The plural pavilion of sardines - Pablo Neruda "Migration" transl. by Jack Schmitt

Post-Script:
The post-script at the end of her letter - Waitman Barbe "The Fly Leaf"

Print.

Prose:
Hard prose by daylight - James Russell Lowell "Agassiz"

Proverb.

Punctuate.

Question Mark:
Curled in an inverse question mark of concentration - Mike Allen "The Journey to Kailash"

Lifted away all the question marks - Victoria Chang "The Trees Witness Everything"

Question mark of candles - Gabrielle Civil "19th Birthday in Paris"

Quote:
Quote each stuttered word - Sarah Titus "The Angels Sip Manhattans Wearing the Faces of Our Dead"

Read

Rhyme.

Riddle.

Runes.

Salutation:
Salutation from a guilty mouth - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Drama of Exile"

Scrawl.

Scribble.

Scribe:
Scribe intentions on the dark - Kevin Goodan "Spot Weather Forecast"

That for a warrior sends a scribe - Edward S. Steele "Armenia Immolata"

Script.

Sentence.

Sigil:
leaving sigils in lipstick on the bathroom mirrors - Amanda Gafford "Tigerlily"

The unending impulse to form a sigil in the sand - Angel Leal "The Witch Recalls Her Craft"

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

Sigma:
The sigmas and taus of constellations - Robert Frost "I Will Sing You One-O"

Sign.

Signal.

Signature.

Simile:
Nothing like our similes - Basho transl. by David Young

I can write similes of serenity & poetic sermons - Regie Cabico "Morning After the Election"

Slang:
my dark surrealism written in slang - upfromsumdirt (Ron Davis) "Bleeding The Calf"

the evisceration of slang on altars made unkind - upfromsumdirt (Ron Davis) "To Stand Down (And To Stand By)"

Slogan:
Slogans and bands and banners - Helen Hoyt "Cheap"

Speak/Spoke.

Speech.

Statement.

Stenography:
Petty stenographers of the crooked rulers - Ammiel Alcalay "My Apologies"

Stop Sign:
sliding through the stop signs - Charles Coleman Finlay "Accidental Series"

Subject.

Subtext:
In the subtext called our lives - Eunsong Kim "On Endings & Longing"

Summary:
Summarize the past by theft and allusion - Lawrence Ferlinghetti "Americus, Book I [excerpt]"

Superscript:
Superscription of bent foam and wave - Hart Crane "Voyages II"

Syllable.

Symbol.

Synonym.

Syntax.

Tag.

Tau:
The sigmas and taus of constellations - Robert Frost "I Will Sing You One-O"

Term.

Terminology:
Sealed by terminology's lacquer - Diane Ackerman "Letter to Dr. B--"

Text.

Thesaurus:
The peacock feather in the open thesaurus - Mukut Borpujari "Stoic"

The color of an ancient thesaurus - Catherine Bowman "Pears"

Take refuge in the deep Thesaurus - Oliver Herford "The Fairy Godmother-in-Law IV: The Ball"

Title:
Their titles to true immortality - Tommaso Campanella "XXXI. To Poland" transl. by John Addington Symonds

As due by many titles - John Donne "Sonnet"

Prove title to your heirship - James Russell Lowell "The Heritage"

The title which those silver tones assigned - P. "Sonnet on My Little Boy's First Trying to Say 'Pa-pa' [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal no.443 June 26, 1852]

Translate.

Translation.

Type.

V [letter]:
Mysteriously enlisted in a V formation of Canadian geese - Duane Ackerson "Three Urban Legends"

Verb.

Vernacular:
In the vernacular of lavender and heather - Richard Blanco "Listening at Reading Farm, an Elegy"

They wear masks and vernacular - Gabriel Ramirez "Learn Your Song"

Vocabulary.

Vowel.

Watchword:
Will be a watchword and a battle hymn - Frank Davis Ashburn "Sonnet [Poor Lucy never laughed much after that]"

The deep watchword of the rushing storm - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"

To solve the doubt, watchword and countersign - John G. Nicolay, Private Secretary to President Lincoln "On Guard" [The Continental Monthly v.II no.VI, Dec. 1862]

The watchword there is Rest - Miriam Clark Potter "Twilight Town"

Word.

Write.

X [letter]:
The accident of understanding what it means to be X - Oliver de la Paz "Solve for X"

Didn't believe an x could equal a y - Thomas Lux "Nullius in Verba (Take Nobody's Word for It)"

XYZs:
In the xyzs of nights and days - Deborah Landau "Ecstasies"

Y [letter]:
Didn't believe an x could equal a y - Thomas Lux "Nullius in Verba (Take Nobody's Word for It)"


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