somethingdarker: (Default)
[personal profile] somethingdarker
The curious aim of mimic art - Mark Akenside "The Pleasures of Imagination, Book the Third"

Telescope aimed at an angle no other could perceive - Mike Allen "Kandinsky's Garden"

Wafted on without an aim - Martin Armstrong "Miss Thompson Goes Shopping"

Its blazing wheel of great aims lost - Stephen Vincent Benet "Resurrection"

Sum of all jaded aims and drab dissembling - William Rose Benét "The City"

Aimed against the oligarchs - Giosue Carducci "On My Daughter's Marriage" transl. by Frank Sewall

My first ambition and my dearest aim - Luís de Camões "The Lusiad; or, The Discovery of India: Book I. Argument" transl. by William Julius Mickle

An arrow aimed at a wall - Blas Falconer "My Son Wants to Know Who His Biological Father Is"

The moon took silvery aim - Zona Gale "Exercise in Spenserians"

With hostile Aims pursue - Anne Killigrew "The Miseries of Man"

The universe we circled aiming jagged stones - Dorianne Laux "My Mother's Colander"

Aim your steps to the left - Hailey Leithauser "Shoot-Out at the So-So Corral"

Aimed for a heart of steel and stone - Lu Yu "Long Sigh: Written When Spending the Night at Green Mountain Store" transl. by Burton Watson

Aims to smash tradition's crown - George Reginald Margetson "Stanzas from The Fledgling Bard and The Poetry Society"

Why aim for the blue sky? - Mei Yao-ch'en "Back from Green Dragon, Presented to Hsieh Shih-chih" transl. by Burton Watson

An aim beyond the head - George Meredith "Internal Harmony"

Fluorescent heads aimed inward - Caroline Harper New "Ekphrasis"

Aimed litanies at an empty sky - Caroline Harper New "Notes on Devotion"

The wall pour forth without aim - Lola Ridge "Back Yards"

Aimed at me his lightning - Lola Ridge "Firehead part III: Judas 2: Madness in the Field"

Each with undeviating aim - Percy Bysshe Shelley "The Daemon of the World"

Strange winds directed my poor aim - Leonora Speyer "Saul! Saul!"

With shafts by thousands aimed - Algernon Swinburne "Eros"

The aim of envious men - V. "The First Morning of 1860" (in The Cornhill Magazine v.1 no. 1)


Aimless.


Navigation Links:
Go to A word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.

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. 9th, 2026 11:54 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios