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A feast of family recipes - Rasha Abdulhadi "Your Grandma Wishes I Wore Miniskirts"

Wait sadly for the order to serve the feast - Mike Allen "Machine Guns Loaded with Pomegranate Seeds"

After the feast of summer - Julia Alvarez "Disappearing"

The feast spoils while we argue portions - Julia Alvarez "Love Portions"

What remains when the feast is over - Julia Alvarez "Tom"

And the heart in her mouth a feast - Elizabeth Bartlett "Final Performance"

Titian gave feasts under the stars and moon - Clifford Bax "Square Pegs"

The hills where old Titans feast - Stephen Vincent Benet "The First Vision of Helen"

A feasting where mailed kings break bread - Stephen Vincent Benet "Sir John Rimbeck to the Princess of Acre"

Surviving to this feast - John Berryman "Minnesota Thanksgiving"

And only a skull roll from your feast of death - Laurence Binyon "The Sirens: II. Penumbra"

Share the feast and drink his ale - Robert Bloomfield "May-Day With the Muses: The Invitation"

Spoil the power of the feast - "The Book of Odes: No.220. When Guests First Take Their Seats" transl. by Burton Watson

Nothing else for pain to feast upon - Ruth Margaret Muskrat [Bronson] "Nunih Waiyah"

Prepare the feast and pearl the wine - Richard Bruce "Cavalier" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]

A feast for your scholars and sages - C.S. Calverley "Flight"

A feast fit to serve in the bowers of a dream - Calder Campbell "Under the Palms" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal no.455, 18 Sept. 1852]

Go clothed in feasts and flames - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book III. The Harp of Alfred"

To the conqueror's feast - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"

The door stood open at our feast - Mary Coleridge "Unwelcome"

How the wind feasts and spins - Hart Crane "Recitative"

Feasted on the numb bugs - Chris Dombrowski "May"

Singing the Feast of the great Alexander - Catherine Ann Turner Dorset and William Roscoe "The Fancy Fair; of, Grand Gala of the Zoological Gardens"

Had abandon'd the feast and the dance and the song - Catherine Ann Turner Dorset and William Roscoe "The Fancy Fair; of, Grand Gala of the Zoological Gardens"

Cup-bearer at feasts of God - Edward Dowden "In the Mountains"

Where thy feast of shame was spread - Eleanor Downing "The Pilgrim"

Can make a feast out of trouble - R.J. Ellmann "To A Frustrated Poet"

I'll have at my feast a figure of death - "The Emperor's Rout"

Your feast is a song - Enheduana "The Temple Hymns: 8. E-Kishnugal, the Temple of Nanna in Ur" transl. by Sophus Helle

And make a feast on roasted calves - Euripedes "The Cyclops" transl. by Michael Wodhull


A just requital for your impious feast - Euripedes "The Cyclops" transl. by Michael Wodhull

Invites me to partake a vernal feast - Euripedes "The Cyclops" transl. by Michael Wodhull

A wanton ghost lavishing an empty feast - Beulah Field "Rainbow"

The midnight feast in the clover bloom - Eugene Field "Fairy and Child"

While he feasted all the great - "The Fine Old English Gentleman"

Another feast of recognition - Robert Frost "How Hard It Is to Keep from Being King When It's in You and in the Situation"

Across the pauses of the feast the singers' voices fall - Catherine Grant Furley "The Minstrels" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.131-v.III, 3 July 1886]

Pretend our prison is our feast - Nikita Gill "A Mortal Interlude"

A bell calling distant kin to feasting - Lora Gray "My Love Wails in the Mending" [Strange Horizons 6 Oct. 2025]

Remember them whene'er you feast - Grace Greenwood "A Charade [In the wet rice-swamps]"

A splendid flare of crimson on the feast - Katherine Hale "Cun-ne-wa-bum"

The whole of love's rich feast - Eliza Calvert Hall "Possession" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.26, Aug. 1880]

Without fear feast on the music - Arthur Henry Hallam "Sonnet"

Who love the hallowed feast of mind - John Stockdale Hardy "On Reading Wordsworth's Beautiful Lines on Grace Darling"

Know the feast in their eyes - francine j. harris "from the bottom"

The ones that feast on grief - Robert Hass "Habits of Paradise"

The ravens feasted far about the open house of war - A.E. Housman "A Shropshire Lad XXVIII"

In greater feast than Priam's sons of Troy - Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey "So Cruel Prison"

In greater feast than Priam's sons of Troy - Henry Howard, Earl of Surrey "So Cruel Prison"

Have come home laughing from the feast for Robert Burns - Mark Jarman "My Parents Have Come Home Laughing"

Alternately at prayers and feasts - "Jolly Father Joe" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXXXIV, v.LIV, Aug. 1843]

While their young enemies feast on milkweed - Tanque R. Jones "Monarch"

How shall the heart be reconciled to its feast of losses? - Stanley Kunitz "The Layers"

After feasting by shining candles - "The Lament of the Old Woman of Beare" transl. by Kuno Meyer

How to wait for the loneliest of feasts - D.H. Lawrence "The Elephant is Slow to Mate"

A little cosy feast to crown the day - Richard Le Gallienne "Home ..."

Feast richly on a little bread - Richard Le Gallienne "Young Love XIII: Met Once More"

The figments feasting on our dreams - Yoon Ha Lee "Equinox"

The feast begins before the guests arrive - Angela Liu "The Machine Family"

Who can blame the ants for feasting? - Cecilia Llompart "Omens"

The family that feasts on pain - Tariq Luthun "I Just Want Everyone to Understand"

Will still survive to spread the mimic feast - J. Fairfax McLaughlin writing as Pasquino "The American Cyclops, the Hero of New Orleans, and Spoiler of Silver Spoons"

Wreathed for feasts not few - George Meredith "Phoebus with Admetus"

Feasts on this banquet of rest - Madeleine Sweeny Miller "Immigrant Motherhood"

We will feast at the honey-bee's board - Beverly Moore "Vacation" [Happy Days for Boys and Girls, 1877]

In a maze of bars invisible I wander far from the feast - William Moore "Dusk Song"

Feast on jade by the clear-watered shore - Mu Hua "Rhyme-Prose on the Sea" transl. by Burton Watson

Canines collect and feast and howl - Robert Nelson "Fragment" [The Fantasy Fan, v.2, no.5, Jan. 1935]

Feast under the hunting moon and light fires to wait for winter - Margaret Noodin "Halfway Away" transl. by the author

Prepare the feast and pearl the wine - Bruce Nugent "Cavalier"

Partake in my persimmon feast - Akilah Oliver "In Aporia"

Will ruin the fleeting pleasure of their feast - Robert Pack "Big Bang" [Poetry, January 1988]

Sought earth's poisoned feasts - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Our Daily Bread"

Neither knew fasting nor feasting - Vita Sackville-West "Insurrection"

Half phantom at our feast - Ann K. Schwader "At the Last of Carcosa"

His feast of plums smothered in the fire - Clinton Scollard "The Yule-Log"

Midnight feast and famished dawn - Robert W. Service "At Thirty-Five"

Full with feasting on your sight - William Shakespeare "Sonnet LXXV"

Our hated foes are feasting - Taras Shevchenko "The Night of Taras" transl. by Alexander Jardine Hunter

A feast of sound and spark - Joyce Sidman "Welcome to the Night"

the goblin queen hosts a feast of oil - Avi Silver "Passing Diamonds"

So grand that a thousand rabbits could feast - Andrew Sinclair "Queer-Pastoral, Somewhere in the Slipstream"

A feast for the hooded crows - Frank E. Smedley "The Enchanted Net"

Feasts and revels of the year - Elizabeth Drew Stoddard "Christmas Comes Again"

Send him empty from the feast - Sara Teasdale "Four Winds"

A feast of moon and men and barking hounds - Jean Toomer "Georgia Dusk" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]

A plentiful feast in the maple-tree shade - Henry van Dyke "A Noon-Song"

And furnish forth a feast - Arthur Weir "L'Ordre de Bon Temps"

We feast on all you take for granted - L. Lamar Wilson "Lauren Oya Olamina Explains Earthseed to Ernest Hemingway"

My cosmic feast has just begun - Allan Wolf "Black Hole"


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