somethingdarker: (Default)
[personal profile] somethingdarker
A thousand mocking notes of mirth - H.J.A. "To a Lyre-Bird" [The Anzac Book: Written and Illustrated in Gallipoli by the Men of Anzac, 1916]

To mock black flights of years - Conrad Aiken "Discordants [Dead Cleopatra lies in a crystal casket]"

Mocks sad-eyed Ishtar and her mourning maids - William Talbot Allison "There Sat the Women Weeping for Thammuz"

Where every footstep created mocking acoustics - Mouna Ammar "Azulelos of my Grandmother's Hallway"

How it mocks what is & what is not - William Archila "Little soul lost, little shining ghost"

Our war of mocking words - Matthew Arnold "The Buried Life"

Fireflies mocking the false alchemy of ever and elsewhere - Mary Jo Bang "What Was Seen"

Mock the bonds of the celestial slave - Maurice Baring "Dostoyevsky"

Expressly charged to mock the great - Clive Bell "Letter to a Lady II"

Mock with the thoughtlessness of cloud - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Last Vision of Helen"

Mock whom they were meant to honour - Robert Blair "The Grave"

Mocks the deep, unconscious of the storm - William C.S. Blair "Byzantium"

Mocking me from among the pomegranates - Giosue Carducci "On a Saint Peter's Eve" transl. by Frank Sewall

So Folly mocks at truth - Bliss Carman "Phi Beta Kappa Poem"

The shock and the jostle, the mock and the push - Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey "Vagabondia"

Mocks him with glad sorcery - Madison J. Cawein "Accolon of Gaul"

And dithering echo starts and mocks - John Clare "The Woodman"

Made rare mockery of her broken vow - "Cloud and Sunshine" [The Continental Monthly v.III - June, 1863 - no.VI]

Though the wind of autumn mocked - Virginia Woodward Cloud "The Gate"

Which should mock the might of armies - "Columbia's Safety" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.5, May 1862]

The clear, mocking walls - Susan Coolidge "Gulf-Stream"

Our mockings of the silent seers - James H. Cousins "On Some Twentieth Century Forecasts"

That mocked the poor sparrows - Walter de la Mare "I Saw Three Witches"

Mocking the dark with ecstasies - Walter de la Mare "Mistress Fell"

Hear the thrushes all mocking him - Walter de la Mare "Sam's Three Wishes; or Life's Little Whirligig"

While sneering Demons mocked - Julia C.R. Dorr "1865"

A pale dream of Nature mocking man - Edward Dowden "On the Heights"

When the moon mocks the sad - George Allan England "Hesperides"

Echo mocks the cuckoo's cry - Ieuan Glan Geirionydd "The Shepherd of Cwmdyli" transl. by Edmund O. Jones

Mocking echoes of old nursery rhymes - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Gorse"

That wore a mocking shy disguise - Mona Gould "Traitor"

Fauns who pass in mocking masque among the trees - Mona Gould "You Being Dead (For J.R.T.)"

Which neither mocks nor mimics - Harry Graham "What's in a Name?"

And she mocks the thing you ask - Viscountess Grey "Echo"

And mocks the waste of years - Felicia Hemans "England and Spain; or, Valour and Patriotism"

Mocks the night wind's broken howl - Conrad Hilberry "A Bird"

Mocked by its inverse shadow - Thomas Hood "The Two Swans"

E'en Nature's smile a bitter mockery wore - Mrs. E.N. Horsford "The Deformed Artist" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

The dream that mocks our sleep - Edwin R. Johnson "Who Knows?" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.3, Sept. 1864]

Shadowy forms that mock and flee - Sir Nizamat Jung "Prologue"

Some ghostly queen of spades had come to mock - John Keats "The Eve of Saint Mark"

Whose mock fires for ever dance - Archibald Lampman "To the Prophetic Soul"

Rise to mock the going day - Henry Lawson "Faces in the Street"

With smiles that mock the wearer - Henry Lawson "Faces in the Street"

Mock each sound of human woe - Eugene Lee-Hamilton "An Ode to the Travelling Thunder"

Attract the public's mocking gaze - Henry S. Leigh "The Miseries of Genius"

And mocked the strength of Babylon's haughty wall - "The Lesson of War" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.1, Jan. 1862]

Mock with a light of long dead years - Amy Lowell "To Elizabeth Ward Perkins"

And mocks with various echo - James Russell Lowell "The Cathedral"

A fixed doom that mocks our poor resistance - "Macedoine: By the Author of Other Things II: Song" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]

Mock our own blood on the thorns - Don Marquis "The Tavern of Despair"

Mock the roses flung away - Don Marquis "The Tavern of Despair"

Mock the garnered rue - Don Marquis "The Tavern of Despair"

Taught Punic faith and mocked the laws - J. Fairfax McLaughlin writing as Pasquino "The American Cyclops, the Hero of New Orleans, and Spoiler of Silver Spoons"

That mock the chance of fear - Louis J. McQuilland "The Digger"

Mocks him with a bountiful array - Michael Mesic "Mirror"

To mock the evil years - E. Nesbit "En Tout Cas"

Whose voice would mock me in the mourning bell - Robert Nichols "To ---"

But a mocking echo there - Meredith Nicholson "Where Love Was Not"

And distance mocks your shout - Gregory Orr "River Inside the River"

Thousands of them mocked us with their hymns - Nome Emeka Patrick "Naked"

With mocking voice repeat the sound - Geo. D. Prentice "Unhappy Love"

Answered to mock my sigh - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "The All-Mother's Awakening"

Mock not love so deeply hearted - Mayne Reid "To Her Who Can Understand It" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

Promises made and mocked - Adrienne Rich "An Atlas of the Difficult World"

Nor mock with laughter his most subtle lies - Helen Rowland "The Rubáiyát of a Bachelor"

Unmindful of the mocking hours - George Santayana "Avila"

And mocked by hopeless longing to regain - Siegfried Sassoon "Dreamers"

Where mocks that will-o'-wisp - Robert W. Service "Quatrains"

That mocks the night - Percy Bysshe Shelley "The Flower That Smiles Today"

The mocking echo of woman's weeping - Leonora Speyer "Gulls"

With exquisite, mocking arts - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Estelle"

Whose inlaid marbles mock the flowers - Bayard Taylor "The Odalisque" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXV no.3, Sept. 1849]

That mock the painted bow of Iris - L.A. Wilmer "To Mira" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]

I'll not be mocked by curlews - Humbert Wolfe "The First Airman"


Rage against the mockery of art - Julia Alvarez "Anger and Art"

Sprinkling their stifled mockery - Maxwell Bodenheim "Minna (IX)"

Polluted hands of mockery - William Cullen Bryant "Hymn to Death"

Kiss the sand in wanton mockery - Effie Lee Newsome "O Sea, That Knowest Thy Strength"

In mockery of care - H. Perceval "Callirhoe"

But a painted mockery there - Geo. D. Prentice "Unhappy Love"

Before this stoic mockery - W.M. Shields "Once More the Dream"

The half-cracked shield of mockery - Louis Untermeyer "Monolog from a Mattress"


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

Profile

somethingdarker: (Default)
somethingdarker

March 2026

S M T W T F S
12345 67
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29 30 31    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 7th, 2026 07:59 am
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios