Potential Titles: Play
Apr. 7th, 2011 02:59 pmLoses by refusing to play - Rasha Abdulhadi "The Obstacle Bargainer's Lorica"
To play the role of Tantalus - Harold Acton "The Prodigal Son"
Chilled our laughter, stilled our play - Conrad Aiken "The Vampire"
The kettles and pans would play and prance - Ellen Tracy Alden "Jungenthor, the Giant"
When the south wind plays soft music through the trees - George Leonard Allen "Portrait" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
Like thoughtful fairies in a Shakespeare play - Julia Alvarez "Bad Weather Friends"
Serpent belts that coil and play - Alexander Anderson "A Blackbird's Nest" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.28-v.I, 12 July 1884]
Nights when sleep plays coy - Maya Angelou "Insomniac"
They play a trombone in my heart - Peter Balakian "Day of the Dead"
Playing cards with machine guns - Mary Jo Bang "Ghost and Grays"
The mice play their games of croquet - Mary Jo Bang "In the Quieter Aftermath"
Hive magic plays along my skin - Devan Barlow "A Moon Witch at the Party"
played till time had tired - Elizabeth Bartlett "maturity"
Busy with other kinds of play - William E. Barton "The Story of a Pumpkin Pie"
Where the wild cat'ract in the sunlight plays - Alex. Lacey Beard, M.D. "A Sketch" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]
Where Ocean plays with his amaranthian ships - Stephen Vincent Benet "Talk"
A game played with cool hands and slim fingers - Gwendolyn B. Bennett "Hatred" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
And Eurydice has played the role of both - Rebecca Bennett "Eurydice Stands with Attitude"
Played in one breath - Jen Bervin "shakuhachi repertoire, handwritten from liner notes"
Playing buccaneer among the minnows - Edmund Blunden "Perch-Fishing"
Play a game of dead dolls - Cecil Bodker "Fury's Field" transl. by Nadia Christensen
While Discord plays on life's guitar - John Philip Bourke "The Golden Age"
Because he played with Beauty for a toy - William Stanley Braithwaite "October XXIX, 1795 (Keats' Birthday)" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
The wind plays tricks on the eyes - Russell Brakefield "Field Recordings"
The song of a cello played by flame - William Brewer "Appalachia, Your Genesis"
Trapped in an attic with rats that play Monopoly - Fleda Brown "Afternoons at the Lake"
Would never actually say I don't like playing - Stacey Lynn Brown "Polaroid: Links"
Out in the greenwood to romp and play - L.A.B.C. "Our May-Day at the South" [Our Young Folks at Home and Abroad (ed. by Daphne Dale), 1894]
Drift with the stream where the rapids play - Frank Oliver Call "Hidden Treasure"
All of us playing cribbage on the lawn - Gabrielle Calvocoressi "An Inn for the Coven"
To play regardless both of time and space - Edward Carpenter "The Great Peepshow"
In the fields the rabbits play - J.E.A. Carver "Evening"
Where childhood plays and ponders - Robert Chambers "To Scotland" [Spirit of Chambers' Journal, 1834, Project Gutenberg]
Playing games with sunlight - M.C. Childs "Snow Man"
A game played by chemicals - Cody-Rose Clevidence "This Household of Earthly Nature; An Essay"
A game played by myth - Cody-Rose Clevidence "This Household of Earthly Nature; An Essay"
Play no tricks upon thy soul - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"
And played for ale and cakes - "Come Lasses and Lads"
meteors streaming from playful immortal hands - E. E. Cummings "Amores (IV)"
Moist eyes are at kisses playing - E. E. Cummings "Songs (IV)"
Proud of the skill with which you play this game - Waring Cuney "Dust" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
Used to play it on the banks of the Tigris and the Euphrates - Waring Cuney "Dust" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
The wizard harpers play for me - Olive Custance "The Changeling"
Play traitor to my soul - H.D. "At Ithaca"
Ill that follows after foolish play - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Most noble ladies, cherish your fair fame]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
The crystal pond where gold-fish play - Mrs. Elizabeth Dimond "Thoughts on Creation"
Music in the hemlocks playing - Irving Sidney Dix "An Idyll of the Hills part 1: January"
And your pipe sweetly playing - "Do You Remember that Night?" transl. by Eleanor Hull [Written down by O'Curry for Dr. George Petrie.]
Playing "tag" in the very midst of the throng - "Dolly's Promenade" [Baby Chatterbox, 1880. On Project Gutenberg]
Chaos plays Jack-in-the-Box - Dom "Number Cruncher: Here's a Crowd"
Playing baseball with the dead - Chris Dombrowski "A History of Barbed Wire"
Playing tetherball alone - Chris Dombrowski "May"
To match the field they thought they were playing on - Rita Dove "Family Reunion"
Playing my tunes all by myself - Rita Dove "The Spring Cricket Considers the Question of Negritude"
Lightnings played beneath his feet - J.E. Dow "Napoleon"
Whose pulses play with fullest life-blood - Edward Dowden "The Inner Life"
The harps whereon the Angels play - Edward Dowden "Musicians"
Six little white ducks running out to play - "The Ducks" [Baby Chatterbox, 1880. On Project Gutenberg]
Played catch with a warm tomato - Denise Duhamel "Poem in Which My Mother Snapped"
Dances and drifts in endless play - Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton "The Phantom Light of the Baie des Chaleurs"
When there's powder, cannons play - William Hodgson Ellis "The Bal Poudre"
Plays the wooden flute of her heart - Forugh Farrokhzad "Born Again" transl. by Jascha Kessler and Amin Banani
The old flute which nobody played - Lawrence Ferlinghetti "A Coney Island of the Mind, 8"
if you play with your shadow, then it will eat you - Mckendy Fils-Aimé "on superstitions"
Bells which the breezes play - John Gould Fletcher "A Distant Song"
The toy-boxes time plays with - John Gould Fletcher "Toy-Boxes"
While the sunbeams played at hide-and-seek - Fanny Forrester "Spring in the Alley" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.21-v.I, 24 May 1884]
Watched the cataract's giant play - "The Fratricide's Death" (from The Knickerbocker, v. 23:3, March 1844)
Airs from the Beggar's Opera on broken fiddles played - Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman "The Beggar King"
Played at the margins of the senses - Elisabeth Frost "The Uncured World"
From babes that play at hide-and-seek - Robert Frost "Revelation"
And played hide-and-seek till the clock struck one - Nellie M. Garabrant "Grandmother's Clock" [Our Young Folks at Home and Abroad (ed. by Daphne Dale), 1894]
In the ripples' purple play - Zona Gale "Exercise in Spenserians"
In the wood play hide-and-seek - R.L. Gales "A Childermas Rhyme"
A shipwreck playing across me - John Gallaher "And the Moon on Its Stem Will Steal You Away"
Or we can play the forgetting game - John Gallaher "In a Landscape: I"
His heir will lavish them with play - John Gay "Fable LXIII: Plutus, Cupid, and Time" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]
Where the mountain waters play - Alfred C. Gellis "To the Wenem Mame River"
And the winds long to play with your hair - Kahlil Gibran "On Clothes"
Whose song on our heart-strings had played - Alfred Perceval Graves "The Sea Singer"
Playing at cards with Death - Robert Graves "To Lucasta on Going to the Wars--for the Fourth Time"
I play your furies back to me at night - Thom Gunn "High Fidelity"
Sometimes I shall play with a soul never born - Katherine Hale "A Fabulous Day"
And played a thousand merry pranks - Rev. J. Wesley Hanson "The Fairy's Gift" [Small Means and Great Ends - PG. 1851. Edited by Mrs. M.H. Adams]
By the pleasant pranks they played us - Thomas Hardy "Budmouth Dears"
Play crack-the-whip in the abyss - Joy Harjo "Day of the Dead"
Playing roulette with my breath - Stephanie Heit "Dear Murderer"
Turns and plays the deuce with Spring - Oliver Herford "The Smoker's Year Book: April"
Play and sing to Birds alone - Oliver Herford "The Wakeful Princess"
And thread the path whereon the lightnings play - Mary E. Hewitt "I Follow" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
Letting the play develop in front of him - Edward Hirsch "Fast Break"
A rusty shadow neither hunting nor playing - Jane Hirshfield "Three Foxes by the Edge of the Field at Twilight"
The hazards of playing at innocence - Tony Hoagland "Ten Questions for the New Age"
Playing music when god is renounced - Carlie Hoffman "After Translating the Women of the Twentieth Century"
Play hypocrite to my own heart - Gerard Manley Hopkins "Peace"
Concentrate on every play - Lee Bennett Hopkins "Endgame"
Played Iscariot to your Pythias - Frank Horne "Letters Found Near a Suicide" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
Hear the drums of morning play - A.E. Housman "A Shropshire Lad IV: Reveille"
Beside them, the shadow children play - Jess Hyslop "After"
The phantoms of the deep at play - Jean Ingelow "Songs on the Voices of Birds: Sea-Mews in Winter Time"
When I am playing more than solitaire - Wallace Irwin "An Inside Con to Refined Guys"
For you are playing favorites again - Wallace Irwin "An Inside Con to Refined Guys"
You played me double and you knew it - Wallace Irwin "An Inside Con to Refined Guys"
Hard and soft sugar playing a supporting role - K. Iver "A Medium Performs Your Visit"
To bring into play that fragrant morsel of rhetoric - Major Jackson "Letters to Brooks [Spring Garden]"
The garden of old men playing checkers - Major Jackson "Letters to Brooks [Spring Garden]"
October's orchestra plays softly - Emily Pauline Johnson "Autumn's Orchestra"
Play in a red moon's dance - Lionel Johnson "In England"
To answer the wind at play - Thomas S. Jones, Jr. "You and I"
Dust with which the breezes play - Kalidasa "The Birth of the War-God: Canto Fourth: Rati's Lament" transl. by Ralph T.H. Griffith
That sing to sleep the playful twilight - Elsa Kazi "Return to Khairpur"
Wind plays the spy - Jane Kenyon "Small Early Valentine"
Still playing in videos past her presence - Amy King "Ancient Sunlight"
As we played some deadly game for blind gods - Yusef Komunyakaa "Thanks"
Why do you play that long beautiful adagio - Alfred Kreymborg "Improvisation"
Like sound plays the Guitar - Rickey Laurentiis "Hermaphrodite"
Where the sunsets dance and play - Emily Lawless "Wide Is the Shannon"
And all the motley play of lives - Richard Le Gallienne "Ad Cimmerios"
A whirlwind of octaves play'd furious and fast - Henry S. Leigh "The Compact"
Hell's blackest tricks were put in play - Charles G. Leland "The Last Ditch" [The Continental Monthly v.2 no.2, March 1862]
Playing on his disbelief - J. Patrick Lewis "The First"
Rendered laws of my country played before my face - Robin Coste Lewis "Self-Portrait as the Bootblack in Daguerre's Boulevard du Temple"
The strain that the wild band plays - Vachel Lindsay "The Firemen's Ball"
Sinatra always plays on payday - Angela Liu "Dow Jones Dream"
A song of playing at ball - Amy Lowell "Clear, with Light Variable Winds"
Playing hide and seek with stars - Amy Lowell "The Crescent Moon"
Little white skeletons playing the fiddle - Amy Lowell "Katydids"
Some elf in play passed by - James Russell Lowell "At the Burns Centennial"
And check the mimic play of mirth - "Macedoine: By the Author of Other Things I" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]
Prince of Play, King of Guile - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "raven"
Slip into the diabolical roles I've played - Sally Wen Mao "Anna May Wong Rates the Runway"
The wild pipes of witchcraft played - Don Marquis "The Sage and the Woman"
Yesterday I played the knave - Don Marquis "This Is Another Day"
Playing blind amid the clarity of cosmic mind - Harry Martinson "Aniara 31" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
A splintering zither plays songs of the sphinx - Harry Martinson "Aniara 83: The Song of Erosion" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Playing the infinite in mortal chess - Harry Martinson "Aniara 99" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Can you win a game you've played alone? - Donna Masini "My Father Teaches Me to Play Solitaire"
The game the wind plays - George Meredith "The Orchard and the Heath"
Playing a guessing game with their gaze - Joanne Merriam "The Bather"
That play at golden games - Ruth Comfort Mitchell "November Eleventh"
In the wholesome north wind toss and play - S. Weir Mitchell "The Marsh" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.20, Aug. 1877]
Ash and smoke will play fire games - Rajiv Mohabir "Kabira"
Played coy as if everyone didn't already know - Tomás Q. Morín "Bird"
Blues played lefthanded - Harryette Mullen "Page 5/sun goes on shining"
With faithful heart all faithless play - John Napier "Which?" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.126-v.III, 29 May 1886]
Full false has played - E. Nesbit "La Derniere Robe de Soi"
Plays his role to the last whispered word - Robert Nichols "Farewell to Place of Comfort"
Where Pan reclining plays - Robert Nichols "A Faun's Holiday"
Who plays the gelatin piano - Carsten Rene Nielsen "Night"
Play cards at the devil's table - Aaiun Nin "Broken Halves of a Milky Sun"
Playing such tricks on my children three - "Nobody" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]
Play at the edges of knowing - Mary Oliver "Bone"
Where he'll always play defense - January Gill O'Neil "The Rookie"
Reels with the wind's savage play - Caroline F. Orne "A New England Legend" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]
Played with soul-sinews cracking - Herbert E. Palmer "A Game of Chess"
To play with our feelings and injure our peace - James Parkerson "A Poem to the Memory of our late lamented Queen Caroline of England"
Big lagoons where wildfowl play - Andrew Barton 'Banjo' Paterson "Travelling Post Office"
With such play in their hearts - Brad Peacock "A Morning in Thailand"
A squirrel caught at play - H. Perceval "Callirhoe"
Play in truth's eternal sunbeams - J.G. Percival "The Soul"
Your playful and somber accompaniments - Mahealani Perez-Wendt "Lei Kukui, Lei Kuahu"
When again the lambkins play - Ambrose Philips "To the Honourable Miss Carteret"
Play out our fantasies in real life way - Terese Mason Pierre "'Streets,' by Persephone"
Play a tune on xylophonic ribs - Drew Pisarra "Sonnet 8"
Who can play a solo symphony - Drew Pisarra "Sonnet 33 1/3"
Play at leap frog with the grass - Alexander Posey "The Idle Breeze"
Plays tag among the melon vines - Miriam Clark Potter "Thanksgiving Kitchen Song"
Play the desperate chess - Ezra Pound "Near Perigord"
The treetops playing Te Deums strangely sweet - Horatio Nelson Powers "Delectatio Piscatoria" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.26, Sept. 1880]
The motown long plays for the comeback of Osiris - Ishmael Reed "I Am a Cowboy in the Boat of Ra"
The toy withheld is the token of all who refrain from play - Adrienne Rich "A Ball Is for Throwing"
Let David play the harp for Saul - Adrienne Rich "David's Boyhood"
The phoenix are at play on their terrace - Rihaku "Four Poems of Departure: The City of Choan" transl. by Ezra Pound
Played tricks on insanity - Arthur Rimbaud "A Season in Hell" transl. by Bertrand Mathieu
Hide and seek we play in and out the courts of Time - George William Russell "Alter Ego"
The dim uncertain music in the shadows played - V. Sackville-West "The Banquet"
Time for amnesiacs to play - Ida Sadoff "On the Day of Nixon's Funeral"
A kind of gorgeous illusory play - David St. John "Beeches"
A rusted trumpet plays itself - Erika L. Sanchez "Capital"
The play of fountains at night - Carl Sandburg "Choices"
Catching play of sun-fire - Carl Sandburg "In a Breath"
A role played on occasion - Nicole Sealey "legendary"
The water where the silver salmon play - Robert W. Service "The Rhyme of the Remittance Man"
To play the watchman ever - William Shakespeare "Sonnet LXI"
a shiny silver moon-coin to play - Evie Shockley "black love"
A beggar claimed to be playing Nero's fiddle - Charles Simic "Paradise"
While all her thousand fingers play - W. Gilmore Simms "Stanzas"
To make shadow play of their contents on the walls - Kaya Skovdatter "What Beautiful Heavens These"
Give the pinion of passion free play - "The Song of Metrodorus" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCLXI, v.LXXV, March 1854]
Yet play about the darkened door - George Soule "Impression"
Play the herald or the clown - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Flood-Tide"
Plays on the clear viol of her memory - Wallace Stevens "Peter Quince at the Clavier"
Playing through the essential air - Alison Swan "In Medias Res"
Cards packed for storm's play - A.C. Swinburne "John Jones"
Playing faro with no aces - Sonya Taaffe "Last Minute"
Of music played among the stars - Iris Tree "[As a nun's face from her black draperies]"
Playing a pantomime to spectres in the stalls - Iris Tree "[I think myself the fool of tragedy]"
Silver groves of candles playing - Herbert Trench "Musing on a Great Soldier"
Monkeys playing on bare rocks in moonlight - Tu Fu "Captivity" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]
The wind played in his trembling soul - W.J. Turner "The Caves of Auvergne"
She can play with only a row of pins - "Two Little Girls" [A Tale of Two Monkeys, Project Gutenberg]
Like harps the wind plays out of sight - Katherine Tynan "The Old House"
That holds the breath to play all songs to life - Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez "The Eye of the Flute"
Plays his part to no applause - Amy Ludwig VanDerwater "Colorful Actor"
How long the echoes love to play - Henry van Dyke "The After-Echo"
Played at glory's idle game - Henry van Dyke "The Vain King"
Played the makings of a masterpiece off-key - Emily Ruth Verona "A Shiva"
An empty ballad that plays on loop - Vanessa Angelica Villarreal "Cardinals, a Novena"
Blue fingers of the moon still play on my old lute - Wang-Wei "Best Happiness of All" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]
Played against olive and smoky lime - Rosanna Warren "Muse Not Muse"
Playing through my mind - Allison Benis White "Description of Symptoms"
As children play who make no noise - Helen Hay Whitney "As a Pale Child"
We who play with rainbows - Helen Hay Whitney "Love's Legacy"
Heard the hawks at twilight play - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"
A sad song with a sad lute playing beside it - "Wild Geese" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]
Memory playing the clown - William Carlos Williams "Good Night"
The game your mind plays in dreams - Katie Willingham "Darwinist Logic on Unrequited Love"
Where lingering daylight plays with the skirts of night - Huldah Lucile Winsted "North Dakota Sunsets"
You might venture to play with his claws - "Wonders of a Toy-Shop"
My spirits play with kindred motion - William Wordsworth "To a Daisy"
We played the song of her spring - Yee Heng Yeh "Song"
The remnants of music played and played again - James F. Yockey "What If"
Men playing timed chess with themselves - Dean Young "Sleep Cycle"
And shadows of children playing - Francis Brett Young "An Old House"
In a game I kept agreeing to play - Matthew Zapruder "Twenty Poems for Noelle"
Clouds playing dominos - Matthew Zapruder "You Have Astounding Cosmic News"
Playing the whistles of yore - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver
obstruction is a kind of foreplay - Jzl Jmz "Exhibition"
Plastered the whole world with their playbills - Marin Sorescu "Shakespeare" transl. by Michael Hamburger
Green-faced violin players guarding vertical streets - Mike Allen "Chagall's Lamp"
Players with obsidian eyes - Marcus Jackson "40 Ounce"
Outside is a stage & I'm a pretty player - Jzl Jmz "Drenched in Reflection"
As the bass player knocked out the bottom line - David St. John "Los Angeles, 1954"
Football players firing glory-cannons downfield - Catherynne M. Valente "Mouse Koan"
Playful ghosts snagged in the trees - Mike Allen "Carrington's Ferry"
Playfulness Mozart forgot to score - Clive Bell "To Lopokova Dancing"
The labor of its playfulness - Robert Bly "Thomas and the Codfish's Psalm"
Rustles beneath the wind in playful whim - Lord Alfred Douglas "Wine of Summer"
A playlist that unfolded across her decades - Yee Heng Yeh "Song"
Playmate.
Plaything.
Where village towers in play-time ring out - Victor Hugo "Truth" transl. by Harry Curwen
A specter's gem in the shadow-playtime - Stephen Vincent Benet "Boarding-House Hall"
And the years replay like a foreign movie - Jessica Abughattas "Failed Poems"
Details unbearably clear in the replay - Janine Joseph "Circuitry"
A quick replay of all my dawns - Mary Karr "For My Children"
This part replays itself - Thomas Lynch "A Dream of Death in the First-Person"
Unplay the summer's blight - Tess Taylor "Mud Season"
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To play the role of Tantalus - Harold Acton "The Prodigal Son"
Chilled our laughter, stilled our play - Conrad Aiken "The Vampire"
The kettles and pans would play and prance - Ellen Tracy Alden "Jungenthor, the Giant"
When the south wind plays soft music through the trees - George Leonard Allen "Portrait" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
Like thoughtful fairies in a Shakespeare play - Julia Alvarez "Bad Weather Friends"
Serpent belts that coil and play - Alexander Anderson "A Blackbird's Nest" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.28-v.I, 12 July 1884]
Nights when sleep plays coy - Maya Angelou "Insomniac"
They play a trombone in my heart - Peter Balakian "Day of the Dead"
Playing cards with machine guns - Mary Jo Bang "Ghost and Grays"
The mice play their games of croquet - Mary Jo Bang "In the Quieter Aftermath"
Hive magic plays along my skin - Devan Barlow "A Moon Witch at the Party"
played till time had tired - Elizabeth Bartlett "maturity"
Busy with other kinds of play - William E. Barton "The Story of a Pumpkin Pie"
Where the wild cat'ract in the sunlight plays - Alex. Lacey Beard, M.D. "A Sketch" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]
Where Ocean plays with his amaranthian ships - Stephen Vincent Benet "Talk"
A game played with cool hands and slim fingers - Gwendolyn B. Bennett "Hatred" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
And Eurydice has played the role of both - Rebecca Bennett "Eurydice Stands with Attitude"
Played in one breath - Jen Bervin "shakuhachi repertoire, handwritten from liner notes"
Playing buccaneer among the minnows - Edmund Blunden "Perch-Fishing"
Play a game of dead dolls - Cecil Bodker "Fury's Field" transl. by Nadia Christensen
While Discord plays on life's guitar - John Philip Bourke "The Golden Age"
Because he played with Beauty for a toy - William Stanley Braithwaite "October XXIX, 1795 (Keats' Birthday)" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
The wind plays tricks on the eyes - Russell Brakefield "Field Recordings"
The song of a cello played by flame - William Brewer "Appalachia, Your Genesis"
Trapped in an attic with rats that play Monopoly - Fleda Brown "Afternoons at the Lake"
Would never actually say I don't like playing - Stacey Lynn Brown "Polaroid: Links"
Out in the greenwood to romp and play - L.A.B.C. "Our May-Day at the South" [Our Young Folks at Home and Abroad (ed. by Daphne Dale), 1894]
Drift with the stream where the rapids play - Frank Oliver Call "Hidden Treasure"
All of us playing cribbage on the lawn - Gabrielle Calvocoressi "An Inn for the Coven"
To play regardless both of time and space - Edward Carpenter "The Great Peepshow"
In the fields the rabbits play - J.E.A. Carver "Evening"
Where childhood plays and ponders - Robert Chambers "To Scotland" [Spirit of Chambers' Journal, 1834, Project Gutenberg]
Playing games with sunlight - M.C. Childs "Snow Man"
A game played by chemicals - Cody-Rose Clevidence "This Household of Earthly Nature; An Essay"
A game played by myth - Cody-Rose Clevidence "This Household of Earthly Nature; An Essay"
Play no tricks upon thy soul - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"
And played for ale and cakes - "Come Lasses and Lads"
meteors streaming from playful immortal hands - E. E. Cummings "Amores (IV)"
Moist eyes are at kisses playing - E. E. Cummings "Songs (IV)"
Proud of the skill with which you play this game - Waring Cuney "Dust" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
Used to play it on the banks of the Tigris and the Euphrates - Waring Cuney "Dust" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
The wizard harpers play for me - Olive Custance "The Changeling"
Play traitor to my soul - H.D. "At Ithaca"
Ill that follows after foolish play - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Most noble ladies, cherish your fair fame]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
The crystal pond where gold-fish play - Mrs. Elizabeth Dimond "Thoughts on Creation"
Music in the hemlocks playing - Irving Sidney Dix "An Idyll of the Hills part 1: January"
And your pipe sweetly playing - "Do You Remember that Night?" transl. by Eleanor Hull [Written down by O'Curry for Dr. George Petrie.]
Playing "tag" in the very midst of the throng - "Dolly's Promenade" [Baby Chatterbox, 1880. On Project Gutenberg]
Chaos plays Jack-in-the-Box - Dom "Number Cruncher: Here's a Crowd"
Playing baseball with the dead - Chris Dombrowski "A History of Barbed Wire"
Playing tetherball alone - Chris Dombrowski "May"
To match the field they thought they were playing on - Rita Dove "Family Reunion"
Playing my tunes all by myself - Rita Dove "The Spring Cricket Considers the Question of Negritude"
Lightnings played beneath his feet - J.E. Dow "Napoleon"
Whose pulses play with fullest life-blood - Edward Dowden "The Inner Life"
The harps whereon the Angels play - Edward Dowden "Musicians"
Six little white ducks running out to play - "The Ducks" [Baby Chatterbox, 1880. On Project Gutenberg]
Played catch with a warm tomato - Denise Duhamel "Poem in Which My Mother Snapped"
Dances and drifts in endless play - Arthur Wentworth Hamilton Eaton "The Phantom Light of the Baie des Chaleurs"
When there's powder, cannons play - William Hodgson Ellis "The Bal Poudre"
Plays the wooden flute of her heart - Forugh Farrokhzad "Born Again" transl. by Jascha Kessler and Amin Banani
The old flute which nobody played - Lawrence Ferlinghetti "A Coney Island of the Mind, 8"
if you play with your shadow, then it will eat you - Mckendy Fils-Aimé "on superstitions"
Bells which the breezes play - John Gould Fletcher "A Distant Song"
The toy-boxes time plays with - John Gould Fletcher "Toy-Boxes"
While the sunbeams played at hide-and-seek - Fanny Forrester "Spring in the Alley" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.21-v.I, 24 May 1884]
Watched the cataract's giant play - "The Fratricide's Death" (from The Knickerbocker, v. 23:3, March 1844)
Airs from the Beggar's Opera on broken fiddles played - Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman "The Beggar King"
Played at the margins of the senses - Elisabeth Frost "The Uncured World"
From babes that play at hide-and-seek - Robert Frost "Revelation"
And played hide-and-seek till the clock struck one - Nellie M. Garabrant "Grandmother's Clock" [Our Young Folks at Home and Abroad (ed. by Daphne Dale), 1894]
In the ripples' purple play - Zona Gale "Exercise in Spenserians"
In the wood play hide-and-seek - R.L. Gales "A Childermas Rhyme"
A shipwreck playing across me - John Gallaher "And the Moon on Its Stem Will Steal You Away"
Or we can play the forgetting game - John Gallaher "In a Landscape: I"
His heir will lavish them with play - John Gay "Fable LXIII: Plutus, Cupid, and Time" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]
Where the mountain waters play - Alfred C. Gellis "To the Wenem Mame River"
And the winds long to play with your hair - Kahlil Gibran "On Clothes"
Whose song on our heart-strings had played - Alfred Perceval Graves "The Sea Singer"
Playing at cards with Death - Robert Graves "To Lucasta on Going to the Wars--for the Fourth Time"
I play your furies back to me at night - Thom Gunn "High Fidelity"
Sometimes I shall play with a soul never born - Katherine Hale "A Fabulous Day"
And played a thousand merry pranks - Rev. J. Wesley Hanson "The Fairy's Gift" [Small Means and Great Ends - PG. 1851. Edited by Mrs. M.H. Adams]
By the pleasant pranks they played us - Thomas Hardy "Budmouth Dears"
Play crack-the-whip in the abyss - Joy Harjo "Day of the Dead"
Playing roulette with my breath - Stephanie Heit "Dear Murderer"
Turns and plays the deuce with Spring - Oliver Herford "The Smoker's Year Book: April"
Play and sing to Birds alone - Oliver Herford "The Wakeful Princess"
And thread the path whereon the lightnings play - Mary E. Hewitt "I Follow" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
Letting the play develop in front of him - Edward Hirsch "Fast Break"
A rusty shadow neither hunting nor playing - Jane Hirshfield "Three Foxes by the Edge of the Field at Twilight"
The hazards of playing at innocence - Tony Hoagland "Ten Questions for the New Age"
Playing music when god is renounced - Carlie Hoffman "After Translating the Women of the Twentieth Century"
Play hypocrite to my own heart - Gerard Manley Hopkins "Peace"
Concentrate on every play - Lee Bennett Hopkins "Endgame"
Played Iscariot to your Pythias - Frank Horne "Letters Found Near a Suicide" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
Hear the drums of morning play - A.E. Housman "A Shropshire Lad IV: Reveille"
Beside them, the shadow children play - Jess Hyslop "After"
The phantoms of the deep at play - Jean Ingelow "Songs on the Voices of Birds: Sea-Mews in Winter Time"
When I am playing more than solitaire - Wallace Irwin "An Inside Con to Refined Guys"
For you are playing favorites again - Wallace Irwin "An Inside Con to Refined Guys"
You played me double and you knew it - Wallace Irwin "An Inside Con to Refined Guys"
Hard and soft sugar playing a supporting role - K. Iver "A Medium Performs Your Visit"
To bring into play that fragrant morsel of rhetoric - Major Jackson "Letters to Brooks [Spring Garden]"
The garden of old men playing checkers - Major Jackson "Letters to Brooks [Spring Garden]"
October's orchestra plays softly - Emily Pauline Johnson "Autumn's Orchestra"
Play in a red moon's dance - Lionel Johnson "In England"
To answer the wind at play - Thomas S. Jones, Jr. "You and I"
Dust with which the breezes play - Kalidasa "The Birth of the War-God: Canto Fourth: Rati's Lament" transl. by Ralph T.H. Griffith
That sing to sleep the playful twilight - Elsa Kazi "Return to Khairpur"
Wind plays the spy - Jane Kenyon "Small Early Valentine"
Still playing in videos past her presence - Amy King "Ancient Sunlight"
As we played some deadly game for blind gods - Yusef Komunyakaa "Thanks"
Why do you play that long beautiful adagio - Alfred Kreymborg "Improvisation"
Like sound plays the Guitar - Rickey Laurentiis "Hermaphrodite"
Where the sunsets dance and play - Emily Lawless "Wide Is the Shannon"
And all the motley play of lives - Richard Le Gallienne "Ad Cimmerios"
A whirlwind of octaves play'd furious and fast - Henry S. Leigh "The Compact"
Hell's blackest tricks were put in play - Charles G. Leland "The Last Ditch" [The Continental Monthly v.2 no.2, March 1862]
Playing on his disbelief - J. Patrick Lewis "The First"
Rendered laws of my country played before my face - Robin Coste Lewis "Self-Portrait as the Bootblack in Daguerre's Boulevard du Temple"
The strain that the wild band plays - Vachel Lindsay "The Firemen's Ball"
Sinatra always plays on payday - Angela Liu "Dow Jones Dream"
A song of playing at ball - Amy Lowell "Clear, with Light Variable Winds"
Playing hide and seek with stars - Amy Lowell "The Crescent Moon"
Little white skeletons playing the fiddle - Amy Lowell "Katydids"
Some elf in play passed by - James Russell Lowell "At the Burns Centennial"
And check the mimic play of mirth - "Macedoine: By the Author of Other Things I" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]
Prince of Play, King of Guile - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "raven"
Slip into the diabolical roles I've played - Sally Wen Mao "Anna May Wong Rates the Runway"
The wild pipes of witchcraft played - Don Marquis "The Sage and the Woman"
Yesterday I played the knave - Don Marquis "This Is Another Day"
Playing blind amid the clarity of cosmic mind - Harry Martinson "Aniara 31" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
A splintering zither plays songs of the sphinx - Harry Martinson "Aniara 83: The Song of Erosion" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Playing the infinite in mortal chess - Harry Martinson "Aniara 99" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Can you win a game you've played alone? - Donna Masini "My Father Teaches Me to Play Solitaire"
The game the wind plays - George Meredith "The Orchard and the Heath"
Playing a guessing game with their gaze - Joanne Merriam "The Bather"
That play at golden games - Ruth Comfort Mitchell "November Eleventh"
In the wholesome north wind toss and play - S. Weir Mitchell "The Marsh" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.20, Aug. 1877]
Ash and smoke will play fire games - Rajiv Mohabir "Kabira"
Played coy as if everyone didn't already know - Tomás Q. Morín "Bird"
Blues played lefthanded - Harryette Mullen "Page 5/sun goes on shining"
With faithful heart all faithless play - John Napier "Which?" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.126-v.III, 29 May 1886]
Full false has played - E. Nesbit "La Derniere Robe de Soi"
Plays his role to the last whispered word - Robert Nichols "Farewell to Place of Comfort"
Where Pan reclining plays - Robert Nichols "A Faun's Holiday"
Who plays the gelatin piano - Carsten Rene Nielsen "Night"
Play cards at the devil's table - Aaiun Nin "Broken Halves of a Milky Sun"
Playing such tricks on my children three - "Nobody" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]
Play at the edges of knowing - Mary Oliver "Bone"
Where he'll always play defense - January Gill O'Neil "The Rookie"
Reels with the wind's savage play - Caroline F. Orne "A New England Legend" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]
Played with soul-sinews cracking - Herbert E. Palmer "A Game of Chess"
To play with our feelings and injure our peace - James Parkerson "A Poem to the Memory of our late lamented Queen Caroline of England"
Big lagoons where wildfowl play - Andrew Barton 'Banjo' Paterson "Travelling Post Office"
With such play in their hearts - Brad Peacock "A Morning in Thailand"
A squirrel caught at play - H. Perceval "Callirhoe"
Play in truth's eternal sunbeams - J.G. Percival "The Soul"
Your playful and somber accompaniments - Mahealani Perez-Wendt "Lei Kukui, Lei Kuahu"
When again the lambkins play - Ambrose Philips "To the Honourable Miss Carteret"
Play out our fantasies in real life way - Terese Mason Pierre "'Streets,' by Persephone"
Play a tune on xylophonic ribs - Drew Pisarra "Sonnet 8"
Who can play a solo symphony - Drew Pisarra "Sonnet 33 1/3"
Play at leap frog with the grass - Alexander Posey "The Idle Breeze"
Plays tag among the melon vines - Miriam Clark Potter "Thanksgiving Kitchen Song"
Play the desperate chess - Ezra Pound "Near Perigord"
The treetops playing Te Deums strangely sweet - Horatio Nelson Powers "Delectatio Piscatoria" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.26, Sept. 1880]
The motown long plays for the comeback of Osiris - Ishmael Reed "I Am a Cowboy in the Boat of Ra"
The toy withheld is the token of all who refrain from play - Adrienne Rich "A Ball Is for Throwing"
Let David play the harp for Saul - Adrienne Rich "David's Boyhood"
The phoenix are at play on their terrace - Rihaku "Four Poems of Departure: The City of Choan" transl. by Ezra Pound
Played tricks on insanity - Arthur Rimbaud "A Season in Hell" transl. by Bertrand Mathieu
Hide and seek we play in and out the courts of Time - George William Russell "Alter Ego"
The dim uncertain music in the shadows played - V. Sackville-West "The Banquet"
Time for amnesiacs to play - Ida Sadoff "On the Day of Nixon's Funeral"
A kind of gorgeous illusory play - David St. John "Beeches"
A rusted trumpet plays itself - Erika L. Sanchez "Capital"
The play of fountains at night - Carl Sandburg "Choices"
Catching play of sun-fire - Carl Sandburg "In a Breath"
A role played on occasion - Nicole Sealey "legendary"
The water where the silver salmon play - Robert W. Service "The Rhyme of the Remittance Man"
To play the watchman ever - William Shakespeare "Sonnet LXI"
a shiny silver moon-coin to play - Evie Shockley "black love"
A beggar claimed to be playing Nero's fiddle - Charles Simic "Paradise"
While all her thousand fingers play - W. Gilmore Simms "Stanzas"
To make shadow play of their contents on the walls - Kaya Skovdatter "What Beautiful Heavens These"
Give the pinion of passion free play - "The Song of Metrodorus" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCLXI, v.LXXV, March 1854]
Yet play about the darkened door - George Soule "Impression"
Play the herald or the clown - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Flood-Tide"
Plays on the clear viol of her memory - Wallace Stevens "Peter Quince at the Clavier"
Playing through the essential air - Alison Swan "In Medias Res"
Cards packed for storm's play - A.C. Swinburne "John Jones"
Playing faro with no aces - Sonya Taaffe "Last Minute"
Of music played among the stars - Iris Tree "[As a nun's face from her black draperies]"
Playing a pantomime to spectres in the stalls - Iris Tree "[I think myself the fool of tragedy]"
Silver groves of candles playing - Herbert Trench "Musing on a Great Soldier"
Monkeys playing on bare rocks in moonlight - Tu Fu "Captivity" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]
The wind played in his trembling soul - W.J. Turner "The Caves of Auvergne"
She can play with only a row of pins - "Two Little Girls" [A Tale of Two Monkeys, Project Gutenberg]
Like harps the wind plays out of sight - Katherine Tynan "The Old House"
That holds the breath to play all songs to life - Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez "The Eye of the Flute"
Plays his part to no applause - Amy Ludwig VanDerwater "Colorful Actor"
How long the echoes love to play - Henry van Dyke "The After-Echo"
Played at glory's idle game - Henry van Dyke "The Vain King"
Played the makings of a masterpiece off-key - Emily Ruth Verona "A Shiva"
An empty ballad that plays on loop - Vanessa Angelica Villarreal "Cardinals, a Novena"
Blue fingers of the moon still play on my old lute - Wang-Wei "Best Happiness of All" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]
Played against olive and smoky lime - Rosanna Warren "Muse Not Muse"
Playing through my mind - Allison Benis White "Description of Symptoms"
As children play who make no noise - Helen Hay Whitney "As a Pale Child"
We who play with rainbows - Helen Hay Whitney "Love's Legacy"
Heard the hawks at twilight play - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"
A sad song with a sad lute playing beside it - "Wild Geese" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]
Memory playing the clown - William Carlos Williams "Good Night"
The game your mind plays in dreams - Katie Willingham "Darwinist Logic on Unrequited Love"
Where lingering daylight plays with the skirts of night - Huldah Lucile Winsted "North Dakota Sunsets"
You might venture to play with his claws - "Wonders of a Toy-Shop"
My spirits play with kindred motion - William Wordsworth "To a Daisy"
We played the song of her spring - Yee Heng Yeh "Song"
The remnants of music played and played again - James F. Yockey "What If"
Men playing timed chess with themselves - Dean Young "Sleep Cycle"
And shadows of children playing - Francis Brett Young "An Old House"
In a game I kept agreeing to play - Matthew Zapruder "Twenty Poems for Noelle"
Clouds playing dominos - Matthew Zapruder "You Have Astounding Cosmic News"
Playing the whistles of yore - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver
obstruction is a kind of foreplay - Jzl Jmz "Exhibition"
Plastered the whole world with their playbills - Marin Sorescu "Shakespeare" transl. by Michael Hamburger
Green-faced violin players guarding vertical streets - Mike Allen "Chagall's Lamp"
Players with obsidian eyes - Marcus Jackson "40 Ounce"
Outside is a stage & I'm a pretty player - Jzl Jmz "Drenched in Reflection"
As the bass player knocked out the bottom line - David St. John "Los Angeles, 1954"
Football players firing glory-cannons downfield - Catherynne M. Valente "Mouse Koan"
Playful ghosts snagged in the trees - Mike Allen "Carrington's Ferry"
Playfulness Mozart forgot to score - Clive Bell "To Lopokova Dancing"
The labor of its playfulness - Robert Bly "Thomas and the Codfish's Psalm"
Rustles beneath the wind in playful whim - Lord Alfred Douglas "Wine of Summer"
A playlist that unfolded across her decades - Yee Heng Yeh "Song"
Playmate.
Plaything.
Where village towers in play-time ring out - Victor Hugo "Truth" transl. by Harry Curwen
A specter's gem in the shadow-playtime - Stephen Vincent Benet "Boarding-House Hall"
And the years replay like a foreign movie - Jessica Abughattas "Failed Poems"
Details unbearably clear in the replay - Janine Joseph "Circuitry"
A quick replay of all my dawns - Mary Karr "For My Children"
This part replays itself - Thomas Lynch "A Dream of Death in the First-Person"
Unplay the summer's blight - Tess Taylor "Mud Season"
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