Potential Titles: Change/Changeful
Mar. 4th, 2010 01:55 amThe changes begin to fill the corners of your eyes - Duane Ackerson "The Painting Speaks"
The change that a laugh can alone bring about - Ellen Tracy Alden "Lena Laughed"
Hope changes the outcome of language - Zaina Alsous "Subjunctive"
Look back to the city of change - Aldo Amparan "Aubade at the City of Change"
Watch the firelight change and flit - Alexander Anderson "Wild-flowers from Alloway and Doon" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.26-v.I, 28 June 1884]
The way wood changes to fire - William Archila "El Mozote"
Reach out hungered arms to flowing change - Charles Ashleigh "The Glorious Adventure of Glorious Me" [The Little Review v.1 no.5, July 1914]
To outrun my changing weather - Cameron Awkward-Rich "Theory of Motion (2)"
Blood, too, can change - Rita Banerjee "Sleep"
Where weather was the only change - Mary Jo Bang "Intractable, and Irreversible"
Moody and viewless as the changing wind - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"
Not the calendar changes our season - Elizabeth Bartlett "Prologue to Old Age"
And change life's desert to a living green - Blanche Benairde "Angels on Earth" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
My allegiances could change - Emily Berry "Allegiances"
And quiver in repeated change - Laurence Binyon "The Road Menders"
Without surprise the world might change - Elizabeth Bishop "It Is Marvellous..."
To change the future, change the past - Jenny Blackford "Beneath the Wheeler Centre"
The changeful hours of daylight - Robert Bloomfield "May-Day With the Muses: The Invitation"
Changed to wounds by the desiring heart - Maxwell Bodenheim "Metaphysical Elizabeth"
And change it to raw music - Maxwell Bodenheim "Steel-Mills: South Chicago"
Rhythms of change within the heart begun - Gordon Bottomley "Babel: The Gate of the God"
Change the size of all those memories - Ana Bozicevic "Paris Pride Parade"
Time and change and sorrow - William Stanley Braithwaite "Rhapsody"
Barren purposeless change - Elizabeth Bridges "Sonnets from Hafez & Other Verses 3"
Fury cannot change my mind - Charlotte Bronte "Preference"
The woodland minstrels sing changes of measure - Caris Brooke "[Girdled with gold my little lady's bower]"
Waters blown by changing winds - Rupert Brooke "The Dead"
Change a shape by looking - Molly McCully Brown and Susannah Nevison "Recovery"
Would trash the whole shift with the rattle of pocket change - Nickole Brown "Wild Thing"
Since these be changed since May - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "Change on Change"
Though seeing now those changes that disguise - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Dead Rose"
In the shadow of thy change - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Drama of Exile"
The circle of eternal change - William Cullen Bryant "The Evening Wind"
Can't change my major from drama to global peace - Regie Cabico "Morning After the Election"
I was as changed as I would ever be - Nicole Callihan "Fable"
Pining sore for change to healthful ground - Calder Campbell "By the Sea" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, no.425, 21 Feb. 1852]
Every bay a changing alchemy of colors - Carolyn Chilton Casas "Ocean Love"
Change with changing fortune's wheel - Ceiriog "Change and permanence" transl. by Edmund O. Jones
When the wind changes its mind - Tina Chang "Hybrida: A Zuihitsu"
A golden boat rock onward to its changing destiny - Thomas S. Chard "The Seven Sleepers"
That stings with the changing weather - Tania Chen "Half-Quarter-Life Crisis"
The rain is changed to silver dust - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book I. The Vision of the Kings"
But change them into truth - Leonard Cohen "All My Life"
Changed my style to silver - Leonard Cohen "Came so Far for Beauty"
Could change forever how blossoms fell - Leonard Cohen "For E.J.P."
Alone until the times change - Leonard Cohen "Welcome to These Lines"
My borders are changing - Henri Cole "Birthday"
As if he knows all things in the world change - Michael Collier "Goat on a Pile of Scrap Lumber"
Changed my thoughts to laughter - Hilda Conkling "The Green Palm Tree"
Every moment fraught with change - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds: Cumuli. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]
In change of place a change of pain - Martha Walker Cook "The Dove" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.6, June 1864]
The love of soul yields not to change of state - Mrs. Martha W. Cook "A Spirit's Reproach" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.2, August 1863]
In vain the locksmith changes keys - Palmer Cox "The Brownies' Candy-Pull"
To changing quarters was resigned - Palmer Cox "The Brownies Fishing"
To contemplate a changing sky - Countee Cullen "The Shroud of Color"
Swiped change and cracked promises - Jim Daniels "Last Picked"
But never change the words that were within - Mary Carolyn Davies "A Casualty List"
Changing into something even harder to break - Alison Hawthorne Deming "Science"
Acquiescing in the change - Edward Dowden "By the Sea"
And change these pulsing visions - Edward Dowden "Memorials of Travel IV: Άισθητιχή φαντασία"
And shine with a thousand changing dyes - Joseph Rodman Drake "The Culprit Fay"
The earth changing gears - Denise Duhamel "Ego"
Must borrow every changing shape - T.S. Eliot "Portrait of a Lady"
The changing courses of at least seven rivers - Chiyuma Elliott "Dear Transformation"
The constellations counting change - Danielle Emerson "shíma yazhí ahéheeʼ / thank you, auntie"
The light of change is bitter - Joseph Fasano "Testimony"
Changing is the threshold into winter - Joseph Fasano "Testimony"
May not tell the change of time - R.O. Fenwick "The Goblin Groom"
Changed the silence for the glitter - George Blackstone Field "Recalled"
Glowing in wind and change - Annie Finch "A Mabon Crown"
Selling stolen comics for eight bucks and change - Sophie Fink "The Dogs Don't Forgive Us"
The changing power of years - John W. Forney "Time's Changes"
I would not dare to change thee - Fanny Forrester "Not Beautiful!" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.11-v.I, 15 March 1884]
Forever going through their changes - Carrie Fountain "[You Belong to the World]"
Trembling with change and fear of counter-change - John Freeman "The Stars in Their Courses"
A meteor through the changing sky - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"
Change their sweets to bitter burning - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"
No penalty the change attends - Catherine Grant Furley "Quits!" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.20-v.I, 17 May 1884]
The moon that never changed allegiances - Suzanne Gardinier "Mala 50/He broke his sling that killed birds"
Flings its radiance over life's changing way - Mary Gardiner "The Sacrifice" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
His little boxes change the grain - John Gay "The Jugglers"
Like the moon, times change, and hearts - Emanuel Geibel "[There stands the ancient gabled house]" transl. by Edith Wharton
Changed over the course of centuries - Maxwell I. Gold "Where the Moon Smiles"
Light's potential to change us - Kimberly Grey "Conjugating"
Till a harsh change comes edging in - Thomas Hardy "The Dream Is--Which?"
From the broken mask of change - Joy Harjo "Fury of Rain"
Sky tethered to the changing earth - Joy Harjo "She Remembers the Future"
See how fire changes everything - Terrance Hayes "Cocktails with Orpheus"
To change the war-song's pealing note - Felicia Hemans "The Domestic Affections"
No change can destroy - Felicia Hemans "To My Younger Brother"
That's the way the season changes its tense - Edward Hirsch "Fall"
The grief of what hasn't changed yet - Jane Hirshfield "Day Beginning with Seeing the International Space Station and a Full Moon Over the Gulf of Mexico and All Its Invisible Fishes"
By each breath changed - Jane Hirshfield "Zero Plus Anything Is a World"
Nothing changed but my mind - Cynthia Hogue "The Daughter"
With change abroad and cheer at home - A.E. Housman "Last Poems I: The West"
If fortune changes her side - Jean Ingelow "Afternoon at a Parsonage"
the daylight never changes - Katrine Øgaard Jensen "Playing Myst with a Ghost One Week in Spring"
A change to drifting dust - Lionel Johnson "The Dark Angel"
No change upon the deep - Lionel Johnson "Lucretius"
No change upon the earth - Lionel Johnson "Lucretius"
From our hearse of changing dust - Joshua Henry Jones "The Universe"
Beyond the movement of our change and ruse - C.R. Jury "A Sonnet to a Friend"
One spot secure from change - Henry Kendall "After Many Years"
Changed with the soft heat of your dreams - Vandana Khanna "Goddess Banished"
The great change already underway - Joanna Klink "New Year"
The frailest iteration of change - Christopher Kondrich "Placeholder"
Steadfast as small change - Steve Kowit "The Prodigal Son's Brother"
time makes change possible - Benjamin Krusling "what can I know what should I do what may I hope"
When the iron year changes - Archibald Lampman "The Song Sparrow"
Here is a world of changing glow - Rose Hawthorne Lathrop "Inlet and Shore"
Derision won't change the Body - Rickey Laurentiis "Hermaphrodite"
The invasive careless hand of change - Emily Lawless "The Inalienable Heritage"
Mother of Change and Fate - Emma Lazarus "1492"
Could change a tree into a wise man - Angel Leal "The Witch Recalls Her Craft"
Change is that rarest light - Ruth Lechlitner "Change Must Be Served"
Or how light changed nothing - Philip Levine "Photography 2"
Limitless and changing everything - Philip Levine "The Sea We Read About"
Hung motionless above the changing winds - Philip Levine "Winter Words"
And through the changing guises - Amy Levy "Sonnet"
Changed into the five-coloured clouds - Li T'ai-Po "The Pleasures within the Palace" translated by Florence Ayscough and adapted by Amy Lowell
In the perpetual round of strange mysterious change - Longfellow "Rain in Summer"
Repeating without change - Amy Lowell "From One Who Stays"
Minstrels of change and of promise - Amy Lowell "The Way"
Change the old dream for new treasure - James Russell Lowell "In the Half-Way House"
The milestones into headstones change - James Russell Lowell "Sixty-Eighth Birthday"
Under a sky fast-blue with change - Alessandra Lynch "Funeral: For Us His Gold"
Began to mark their changes - Thomas Lynch "The Grandmothers"
Dropped a veil of changing light - Sidney Royse Lysaght "Shelter and Fellowship"
bear up beneath the change - Jennifer Mace "Morphology"
A Gorgon grief may change me - Eric MacKay "Letter I. Prelude"
With the changeful wind upon the changeful sea - A.A. Macnichol "The Sea-Rover" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]
You'll wonder if this compass will ever change - Sally Wen Mao "Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles"
Brief lords of the changing soul - Don Marquis "The God-Maker, Man"
The day changes its course - Kettly Mars "Between midnight and eternity" transl. by Nathan H. Dize
The heralds of your fortune's change - John Masefield "King Cole"
Changed the dream of the cat - John Masefield "Reynard the Fox"
Change in hearts grown weary - Edgar Lee Masters "The Landscape"
The names of the leaves before they change - Jamaal May "A Brief History of Hostility"
Even time must change to eternity - James E. McGirt "True Love"
The spirit of change is burning - Louis J. McQuilland "A Song of the Open Road"
The lines of change were etched between - Michael Mesic "Urn"
With change of times and change of air - Alice Meynell "The Lady Poverty"
The tree's traces of changing shade - Tyler Mills "House of Pere Lacroix"
Suffering change over time - Carol Moldaw "Arthritis"
The low tone bells of changing song ring clear - William Moore "Here in the Time of the Winter Morn"
A white fluffy ball changing semblance - Marjorie Moorhead "Head in the Clouds"
Forgets the changes that himself has wrought - Henry Morford "The Record of December" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
His name has changed with human years - Henry Morford "The Record of December" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
What bountiful change inhabits you - Pablo Neruda "The Egoist" transl. by William O'Daly
Changed forever by the light of blood - Pablo Neruda "Madrid (1936)" translated by Richard Schaaf
Like a vast chameleon changed - Alfred Noyes "Lamarck and Cuvier: The Vera Causa"
because it wanted a change of canvas - Brandon O'Brian "Population Changes"
Conceals things I can't change - dg nanouk okpik "Spring Thaw"
Such fabled winds of change - Brenda Marie Osbey "On Contemplating the Breasts of Pauline Lumumba"
Through the changing, coming years - T.S.P. "To a Little Child," [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.745, 6 April 1878]
Before a single leaf has changed - Linda Pastan "The Blackbirds"
Could change the fact of daylight - Carl Phillips "Career"
The forest changes nothing - Carl Phillips "Soundtrack for a Frame of Winter"
Newness a habit, change an addiction - Khadijah Queen "The Rule of Opulence"
What's past resistance to change - Khadijah Queen "Tower"
Swift changed to storm - Theodore H. Rand "The Rain Cloud"
In such a changing world as this - G.A. Raybold "The Joys of Former Years Have Fled"
Paying close attention to the rapidly changing current - Tennessee Reed "Fantasy"
All their changing shadows died - William Renton "Mountain Twilight"
Dreams only change their houses - Lola Ridge "Dreams"
Because giving has changed us - Alberto Rios "When Giving Is All We Have"
Change is earth's inevitable dower - Fayette Robinson "Supplication.--Two Sonnets" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]
That in my life this change have wrought - F.E.S. "The Stray Blossom" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.36-v.I, 6 Sept. 1884]
The changing shores of shadow - Carl Sandburg "At a Window"
Thrust out from the changing shores of shadow - Carl Sandburg "At a Window"
Ready for the hammers of changing - Carl Sandburg "Aztec Mask"
The smoke changes its shadow - Carl Sandburg "Smoke and Steel"
The old are changed, deposed or dead - Herman George Scheffauer "The Masque of the Elements"
Follows in the wake of change - "Selections from the 'Nineteen Old Poems of the Han'" transl. by Burton Watson
Then changed from a beacon to a furnace - Wendy A. Shaffer "Icarus"
Nature's changing course untrimm'd - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XVIII"
Not acquainted with shifting change - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XX"
To set a form upon desired change - William Shakespeare "Sonnet LXXXIX"
In this change is my invention spent - William Shakespeare "Sonnet CV"
Learn the strength and change of time - Francis Sherman "A Canadian Calendar: VI. To Autumn"
Change my vagrant longings - Dora Sigerson Shorter "A Vagrant Heart"
In the changing webs of cloud - Clark Ashton Smith "Medusa"
And our bodies changing together - Juliana Spahr "Will There Be Singing"
Part of a storm that changes everything - Kim Stafford "Advice from a Raindrop"
Into the changed look of the afternoon - A.E. Stallings "Evil Eye"
A soul shall change its frame - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Old Love and the New"
Shall find the feet of Change are fast - George Sterling "The Gleaner"
A rose of sorrow and change - George Sterling "Rainbow's End"
A wandering echo in the night of Change - George Sterling "Tasso to Leonora"
The blown banners change to wings - Wallace Stevens "To an Old Philosopher in Rome"
Cascades changing in scale, not shape - Christine Stewart-Nuñez "Credo"
Where the maple changing stands - Elizabeth Drew Stoddard "Autumn"
Each change of love in eyelids and eyebrows - Algernon Charles Swinburne "Before Parting"
Veiled by change that ebbs and flows - Algernon Swinburne "Eros"
Though sight be changed for memory - Algernon Swinburne "In Guernsey: To Theodore Watts"
Mountains and rivers know no season of change - Tao Yuan-ming aka T'ao Ch'ien "Substance, Shadow, and Spirit" transl. by Burton Watson
Waves in the great process of change - Tao Yuan-ming aka T'ao Ch'ien "Substance, Shadow, and Spirit" transl. by Burton Watson
Through infinite changes yet shall I go on - Maurice Thompson "The Final Thought"
Change an object simply by turning - TC Tolbert "felo-de-se-- Melissa"
As each planned path is changed - Edwin Torres "Moroccan Highway"
Would have found reason for change - Edwin Torres "A Most Imperfect Start"
Opalled with the changing colours of unrest - Iris Tree "[I met an Indian underneath a tree]"
The Bible never changes its mind - Peter Twal "This Sunday in Ordinary Time"
The changing sentences and truths of being - Aldrin Regina Valdez "January"
In the turbulent stream of change - "La Vie Poetique" [The Continental Monthly v.II no.VI, Dec. 1862]
Change their idea of heaven - Derek Walcott "Oceano Nox"
Take for a change a narrower range - Arthur Waugh "An Explanation"
The drift and change of things - Maurice Weyland "A Valentine"
Adds sunshine to each changing day - Kate Louise Wheeler "Mother"
As in a dream they change - Walt Whitman "Starting from Paumanox"
Wear its deep impress of changes - Miss S.J.C. Whittlesey "Fadde and Gone" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
A cloak behind which to change one's power - Phillip B. Williams "And Now Upon My Head the Crown"
Can change in its deepest cracks - Yolanda Wisher "west of philly"
An interval of changing shadows - Nancy Wood "The Meaning of Daylight"
Whose garment in the changing seasons - Lynn Xu "[And as the procession]"
From solid state to a state of change - Yang Licai "All Human Beings Who Suffer" transl. by Joshua Edwards and Lynn Xu
Change the clothes in which their soul was born - John Yau "Russian Letter"
Your changing face - W.B Yeats "When You Are Old"
Changed from the spur to the crown - "You'll Come to Our Ball" [Mirror of Literature v.13 issue 358, Feb. 1829. Credited to London Magazine]
And the changing seasons squandered - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"
The reticent change of pigment - Felicia Zamora "This Preparation of All Things Autumnal"
Wearing her changeable season - Ada Limon "The Bird Knows He Is Going to Die and Wishes Not To"
Assume the changeable parts of fate - John McCarthy "At Six I Learned How to Cook"
The wind shall be thy changeful loom - Robert Stephen Hawker "Featherstone's Doom"
Nature in her changeful moods - M.A. Hoare "To Wordsworth" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, no.423, 7 Feb. 1852]
Changeful fancies set afloat - Jean Ingelow "Songs on the Voices of Birds: A Poet in His Youth, and the Cuckoo-Bird"
Chased the changeful hours - Amy Levy "Between the Showers"
Endow with changeful splendors - E. Seton "Mary, Virgin and Mother"
Trembling with change and fear of counter-change - John Freeman "The Stars in Their Courses"
Tangled braids of ever-changing light - C.P. Cranch "Sorrento" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
Unchanged/Changeless.
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The change that a laugh can alone bring about - Ellen Tracy Alden "Lena Laughed"
Hope changes the outcome of language - Zaina Alsous "Subjunctive"
Look back to the city of change - Aldo Amparan "Aubade at the City of Change"
Watch the firelight change and flit - Alexander Anderson "Wild-flowers from Alloway and Doon" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.26-v.I, 28 June 1884]
The way wood changes to fire - William Archila "El Mozote"
Reach out hungered arms to flowing change - Charles Ashleigh "The Glorious Adventure of Glorious Me" [The Little Review v.1 no.5, July 1914]
To outrun my changing weather - Cameron Awkward-Rich "Theory of Motion (2)"
Blood, too, can change - Rita Banerjee "Sleep"
Where weather was the only change - Mary Jo Bang "Intractable, and Irreversible"
Moody and viewless as the changing wind - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"
Not the calendar changes our season - Elizabeth Bartlett "Prologue to Old Age"
And change life's desert to a living green - Blanche Benairde "Angels on Earth" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
My allegiances could change - Emily Berry "Allegiances"
And quiver in repeated change - Laurence Binyon "The Road Menders"
Without surprise the world might change - Elizabeth Bishop "It Is Marvellous..."
To change the future, change the past - Jenny Blackford "Beneath the Wheeler Centre"
The changeful hours of daylight - Robert Bloomfield "May-Day With the Muses: The Invitation"
Changed to wounds by the desiring heart - Maxwell Bodenheim "Metaphysical Elizabeth"
And change it to raw music - Maxwell Bodenheim "Steel-Mills: South Chicago"
Rhythms of change within the heart begun - Gordon Bottomley "Babel: The Gate of the God"
Change the size of all those memories - Ana Bozicevic "Paris Pride Parade"
Time and change and sorrow - William Stanley Braithwaite "Rhapsody"
Barren purposeless change - Elizabeth Bridges "Sonnets from Hafez & Other Verses 3"
Fury cannot change my mind - Charlotte Bronte "Preference"
The woodland minstrels sing changes of measure - Caris Brooke "[Girdled with gold my little lady's bower]"
Waters blown by changing winds - Rupert Brooke "The Dead"
Change a shape by looking - Molly McCully Brown and Susannah Nevison "Recovery"
Would trash the whole shift with the rattle of pocket change - Nickole Brown "Wild Thing"
Since these be changed since May - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "Change on Change"
Though seeing now those changes that disguise - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Dead Rose"
In the shadow of thy change - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Drama of Exile"
The circle of eternal change - William Cullen Bryant "The Evening Wind"
Can't change my major from drama to global peace - Regie Cabico "Morning After the Election"
I was as changed as I would ever be - Nicole Callihan "Fable"
Pining sore for change to healthful ground - Calder Campbell "By the Sea" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, no.425, 21 Feb. 1852]
Every bay a changing alchemy of colors - Carolyn Chilton Casas "Ocean Love"
Change with changing fortune's wheel - Ceiriog "Change and permanence" transl. by Edmund O. Jones
When the wind changes its mind - Tina Chang "Hybrida: A Zuihitsu"
A golden boat rock onward to its changing destiny - Thomas S. Chard "The Seven Sleepers"
That stings with the changing weather - Tania Chen "Half-Quarter-Life Crisis"
The rain is changed to silver dust - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book I. The Vision of the Kings"
But change them into truth - Leonard Cohen "All My Life"
Changed my style to silver - Leonard Cohen "Came so Far for Beauty"
Could change forever how blossoms fell - Leonard Cohen "For E.J.P."
Alone until the times change - Leonard Cohen "Welcome to These Lines"
My borders are changing - Henri Cole "Birthday"
As if he knows all things in the world change - Michael Collier "Goat on a Pile of Scrap Lumber"
Changed my thoughts to laughter - Hilda Conkling "The Green Palm Tree"
Every moment fraught with change - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds: Cumuli. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]
In change of place a change of pain - Martha Walker Cook "The Dove" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.6, June 1864]
The love of soul yields not to change of state - Mrs. Martha W. Cook "A Spirit's Reproach" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.2, August 1863]
In vain the locksmith changes keys - Palmer Cox "The Brownies' Candy-Pull"
To changing quarters was resigned - Palmer Cox "The Brownies Fishing"
To contemplate a changing sky - Countee Cullen "The Shroud of Color"
Swiped change and cracked promises - Jim Daniels "Last Picked"
But never change the words that were within - Mary Carolyn Davies "A Casualty List"
Changing into something even harder to break - Alison Hawthorne Deming "Science"
Acquiescing in the change - Edward Dowden "By the Sea"
And change these pulsing visions - Edward Dowden "Memorials of Travel IV: Άισθητιχή φαντασία"
And shine with a thousand changing dyes - Joseph Rodman Drake "The Culprit Fay"
The earth changing gears - Denise Duhamel "Ego"
Must borrow every changing shape - T.S. Eliot "Portrait of a Lady"
The changing courses of at least seven rivers - Chiyuma Elliott "Dear Transformation"
The constellations counting change - Danielle Emerson "shíma yazhí ahéheeʼ / thank you, auntie"
The light of change is bitter - Joseph Fasano "Testimony"
Changing is the threshold into winter - Joseph Fasano "Testimony"
May not tell the change of time - R.O. Fenwick "The Goblin Groom"
Changed the silence for the glitter - George Blackstone Field "Recalled"
Glowing in wind and change - Annie Finch "A Mabon Crown"
Selling stolen comics for eight bucks and change - Sophie Fink "The Dogs Don't Forgive Us"
The changing power of years - John W. Forney "Time's Changes"
I would not dare to change thee - Fanny Forrester "Not Beautiful!" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.11-v.I, 15 March 1884]
Forever going through their changes - Carrie Fountain "[You Belong to the World]"
Trembling with change and fear of counter-change - John Freeman "The Stars in Their Courses"
A meteor through the changing sky - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"
Change their sweets to bitter burning - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"
No penalty the change attends - Catherine Grant Furley "Quits!" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.20-v.I, 17 May 1884]
The moon that never changed allegiances - Suzanne Gardinier "Mala 50/He broke his sling that killed birds"
Flings its radiance over life's changing way - Mary Gardiner "The Sacrifice" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
His little boxes change the grain - John Gay "The Jugglers"
Like the moon, times change, and hearts - Emanuel Geibel "[There stands the ancient gabled house]" transl. by Edith Wharton
Changed over the course of centuries - Maxwell I. Gold "Where the Moon Smiles"
Light's potential to change us - Kimberly Grey "Conjugating"
Till a harsh change comes edging in - Thomas Hardy "The Dream Is--Which?"
From the broken mask of change - Joy Harjo "Fury of Rain"
Sky tethered to the changing earth - Joy Harjo "She Remembers the Future"
See how fire changes everything - Terrance Hayes "Cocktails with Orpheus"
To change the war-song's pealing note - Felicia Hemans "The Domestic Affections"
No change can destroy - Felicia Hemans "To My Younger Brother"
That's the way the season changes its tense - Edward Hirsch "Fall"
The grief of what hasn't changed yet - Jane Hirshfield "Day Beginning with Seeing the International Space Station and a Full Moon Over the Gulf of Mexico and All Its Invisible Fishes"
By each breath changed - Jane Hirshfield "Zero Plus Anything Is a World"
Nothing changed but my mind - Cynthia Hogue "The Daughter"
With change abroad and cheer at home - A.E. Housman "Last Poems I: The West"
If fortune changes her side - Jean Ingelow "Afternoon at a Parsonage"
the daylight never changes - Katrine Øgaard Jensen "Playing Myst with a Ghost One Week in Spring"
A change to drifting dust - Lionel Johnson "The Dark Angel"
No change upon the deep - Lionel Johnson "Lucretius"
No change upon the earth - Lionel Johnson "Lucretius"
From our hearse of changing dust - Joshua Henry Jones "The Universe"
Beyond the movement of our change and ruse - C.R. Jury "A Sonnet to a Friend"
One spot secure from change - Henry Kendall "After Many Years"
Changed with the soft heat of your dreams - Vandana Khanna "Goddess Banished"
The great change already underway - Joanna Klink "New Year"
The frailest iteration of change - Christopher Kondrich "Placeholder"
Steadfast as small change - Steve Kowit "The Prodigal Son's Brother"
time makes change possible - Benjamin Krusling "what can I know what should I do what may I hope"
When the iron year changes - Archibald Lampman "The Song Sparrow"
Here is a world of changing glow - Rose Hawthorne Lathrop "Inlet and Shore"
Derision won't change the Body - Rickey Laurentiis "Hermaphrodite"
The invasive careless hand of change - Emily Lawless "The Inalienable Heritage"
Mother of Change and Fate - Emma Lazarus "1492"
Could change a tree into a wise man - Angel Leal "The Witch Recalls Her Craft"
Change is that rarest light - Ruth Lechlitner "Change Must Be Served"
Or how light changed nothing - Philip Levine "Photography 2"
Limitless and changing everything - Philip Levine "The Sea We Read About"
Hung motionless above the changing winds - Philip Levine "Winter Words"
And through the changing guises - Amy Levy "Sonnet"
Changed into the five-coloured clouds - Li T'ai-Po "The Pleasures within the Palace" translated by Florence Ayscough and adapted by Amy Lowell
In the perpetual round of strange mysterious change - Longfellow "Rain in Summer"
Repeating without change - Amy Lowell "From One Who Stays"
Minstrels of change and of promise - Amy Lowell "The Way"
Change the old dream for new treasure - James Russell Lowell "In the Half-Way House"
The milestones into headstones change - James Russell Lowell "Sixty-Eighth Birthday"
Under a sky fast-blue with change - Alessandra Lynch "Funeral: For Us His Gold"
Began to mark their changes - Thomas Lynch "The Grandmothers"
Dropped a veil of changing light - Sidney Royse Lysaght "Shelter and Fellowship"
bear up beneath the change - Jennifer Mace "Morphology"
A Gorgon grief may change me - Eric MacKay "Letter I. Prelude"
With the changeful wind upon the changeful sea - A.A. Macnichol "The Sea-Rover" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]
You'll wonder if this compass will ever change - Sally Wen Mao "Riding Alone for Thousands of Miles"
Brief lords of the changing soul - Don Marquis "The God-Maker, Man"
The day changes its course - Kettly Mars "Between midnight and eternity" transl. by Nathan H. Dize
The heralds of your fortune's change - John Masefield "King Cole"
Changed the dream of the cat - John Masefield "Reynard the Fox"
Change in hearts grown weary - Edgar Lee Masters "The Landscape"
The names of the leaves before they change - Jamaal May "A Brief History of Hostility"
Even time must change to eternity - James E. McGirt "True Love"
The spirit of change is burning - Louis J. McQuilland "A Song of the Open Road"
The lines of change were etched between - Michael Mesic "Urn"
With change of times and change of air - Alice Meynell "The Lady Poverty"
The tree's traces of changing shade - Tyler Mills "House of Pere Lacroix"
Suffering change over time - Carol Moldaw "Arthritis"
The low tone bells of changing song ring clear - William Moore "Here in the Time of the Winter Morn"
A white fluffy ball changing semblance - Marjorie Moorhead "Head in the Clouds"
Forgets the changes that himself has wrought - Henry Morford "The Record of December" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
His name has changed with human years - Henry Morford "The Record of December" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
What bountiful change inhabits you - Pablo Neruda "The Egoist" transl. by William O'Daly
Changed forever by the light of blood - Pablo Neruda "Madrid (1936)" translated by Richard Schaaf
Like a vast chameleon changed - Alfred Noyes "Lamarck and Cuvier: The Vera Causa"
because it wanted a change of canvas - Brandon O'Brian "Population Changes"
Conceals things I can't change - dg nanouk okpik "Spring Thaw"
Such fabled winds of change - Brenda Marie Osbey "On Contemplating the Breasts of Pauline Lumumba"
Through the changing, coming years - T.S.P. "To a Little Child," [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.745, 6 April 1878]
Before a single leaf has changed - Linda Pastan "The Blackbirds"
Could change the fact of daylight - Carl Phillips "Career"
The forest changes nothing - Carl Phillips "Soundtrack for a Frame of Winter"
Newness a habit, change an addiction - Khadijah Queen "The Rule of Opulence"
What's past resistance to change - Khadijah Queen "Tower"
Swift changed to storm - Theodore H. Rand "The Rain Cloud"
In such a changing world as this - G.A. Raybold "The Joys of Former Years Have Fled"
Paying close attention to the rapidly changing current - Tennessee Reed "Fantasy"
All their changing shadows died - William Renton "Mountain Twilight"
Dreams only change their houses - Lola Ridge "Dreams"
Because giving has changed us - Alberto Rios "When Giving Is All We Have"
Change is earth's inevitable dower - Fayette Robinson "Supplication.--Two Sonnets" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]
That in my life this change have wrought - F.E.S. "The Stray Blossom" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.36-v.I, 6 Sept. 1884]
The changing shores of shadow - Carl Sandburg "At a Window"
Thrust out from the changing shores of shadow - Carl Sandburg "At a Window"
Ready for the hammers of changing - Carl Sandburg "Aztec Mask"
The smoke changes its shadow - Carl Sandburg "Smoke and Steel"
The old are changed, deposed or dead - Herman George Scheffauer "The Masque of the Elements"
Follows in the wake of change - "Selections from the 'Nineteen Old Poems of the Han'" transl. by Burton Watson
Then changed from a beacon to a furnace - Wendy A. Shaffer "Icarus"
Nature's changing course untrimm'd - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XVIII"
Not acquainted with shifting change - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XX"
To set a form upon desired change - William Shakespeare "Sonnet LXXXIX"
In this change is my invention spent - William Shakespeare "Sonnet CV"
Learn the strength and change of time - Francis Sherman "A Canadian Calendar: VI. To Autumn"
Change my vagrant longings - Dora Sigerson Shorter "A Vagrant Heart"
In the changing webs of cloud - Clark Ashton Smith "Medusa"
And our bodies changing together - Juliana Spahr "Will There Be Singing"
Part of a storm that changes everything - Kim Stafford "Advice from a Raindrop"
Into the changed look of the afternoon - A.E. Stallings "Evil Eye"
A soul shall change its frame - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Old Love and the New"
Shall find the feet of Change are fast - George Sterling "The Gleaner"
A rose of sorrow and change - George Sterling "Rainbow's End"
A wandering echo in the night of Change - George Sterling "Tasso to Leonora"
The blown banners change to wings - Wallace Stevens "To an Old Philosopher in Rome"
Cascades changing in scale, not shape - Christine Stewart-Nuñez "Credo"
Where the maple changing stands - Elizabeth Drew Stoddard "Autumn"
Each change of love in eyelids and eyebrows - Algernon Charles Swinburne "Before Parting"
Veiled by change that ebbs and flows - Algernon Swinburne "Eros"
Though sight be changed for memory - Algernon Swinburne "In Guernsey: To Theodore Watts"
Mountains and rivers know no season of change - Tao Yuan-ming aka T'ao Ch'ien "Substance, Shadow, and Spirit" transl. by Burton Watson
Waves in the great process of change - Tao Yuan-ming aka T'ao Ch'ien "Substance, Shadow, and Spirit" transl. by Burton Watson
Through infinite changes yet shall I go on - Maurice Thompson "The Final Thought"
Change an object simply by turning - TC Tolbert "felo-de-se-- Melissa"
As each planned path is changed - Edwin Torres "Moroccan Highway"
Would have found reason for change - Edwin Torres "A Most Imperfect Start"
Opalled with the changing colours of unrest - Iris Tree "[I met an Indian underneath a tree]"
The Bible never changes its mind - Peter Twal "This Sunday in Ordinary Time"
The changing sentences and truths of being - Aldrin Regina Valdez "January"
In the turbulent stream of change - "La Vie Poetique" [The Continental Monthly v.II no.VI, Dec. 1862]
Change their idea of heaven - Derek Walcott "Oceano Nox"
Take for a change a narrower range - Arthur Waugh "An Explanation"
The drift and change of things - Maurice Weyland "A Valentine"
Adds sunshine to each changing day - Kate Louise Wheeler "Mother"
As in a dream they change - Walt Whitman "Starting from Paumanox"
Wear its deep impress of changes - Miss S.J.C. Whittlesey "Fadde and Gone" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
A cloak behind which to change one's power - Phillip B. Williams "And Now Upon My Head the Crown"
Can change in its deepest cracks - Yolanda Wisher "west of philly"
An interval of changing shadows - Nancy Wood "The Meaning of Daylight"
Whose garment in the changing seasons - Lynn Xu "[And as the procession]"
From solid state to a state of change - Yang Licai "All Human Beings Who Suffer" transl. by Joshua Edwards and Lynn Xu
Change the clothes in which their soul was born - John Yau "Russian Letter"
Your changing face - W.B Yeats "When You Are Old"
Changed from the spur to the crown - "You'll Come to Our Ball" [Mirror of Literature v.13 issue 358, Feb. 1829. Credited to London Magazine]
And the changing seasons squandered - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"
The reticent change of pigment - Felicia Zamora "This Preparation of All Things Autumnal"
Wearing her changeable season - Ada Limon "The Bird Knows He Is Going to Die and Wishes Not To"
Assume the changeable parts of fate - John McCarthy "At Six I Learned How to Cook"
The wind shall be thy changeful loom - Robert Stephen Hawker "Featherstone's Doom"
Nature in her changeful moods - M.A. Hoare "To Wordsworth" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, no.423, 7 Feb. 1852]
Changeful fancies set afloat - Jean Ingelow "Songs on the Voices of Birds: A Poet in His Youth, and the Cuckoo-Bird"
Chased the changeful hours - Amy Levy "Between the Showers"
Endow with changeful splendors - E. Seton "Mary, Virgin and Mother"
Trembling with change and fear of counter-change - John Freeman "The Stars in Their Courses"
Tangled braids of ever-changing light - C.P. Cranch "Sorrento" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
Unchanged/Changeless.
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