somethingdarker (
somethingdarker) wrote2010-02-04 05:28 pm
Entry tags:
Potential Titles: Bitter/Bitterness
Stuffed with something bitter - Brooke Abbey "How to Adult"
Winter sunshine cheered the bitter sky - Lascelles Abercrombie "Ryton Firs: The Voices in the Dream"
Your vampire of bitterness - Delmira Agustini "The Vampire" (translated by Alejandro Caceres)
The bitter pennies that I saved - Conrad Aiken "Parasite"
Season of snows and bitter rain - Conrad Aiken "Romance"
Had poured him a bitter grief - Anna Akhmatova [Untitled] transl. by Robert Tracy
Same bitter origin - Francisco X. Alarcon "Sal de la Tierra/Salt of the Earth"
At the gates of a bitter hell - Mary Aldis and Arthur Davison Ficke "Chloroform"
bitter oranges unafraid of cosmic dust - Alise Alousi "Burnished in Future Time"
A reason his love tastes bitter - Alise Alousi "Pandemic"
On that same spot the bitterest rue and wormwood - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry LXXII: Unhappy Bride" transl. by Sir John Bowring
Gather wormwood into boiling water press its bitters - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry LXXX: Youth and Age" transl. by Sir John Bowring
Kissing a bitter mouth - Homero Aridjis (transl. by George McWhirter) "The ways to see and be an angel"
The bitter symbiosis of couples - Rae Armantrout "Two, Three"
And unite with your bitter love - Zahir-Ud-Din Muhammad Babur "Poems of Babur (2)" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun
Warm, sugar sweet, and wormwood bitter - Mary Jo Bang "Dark Smudged the Path Untrammeled"
Appeasement turned bitter - Mary Jo Bang "This Supposed Alchemy"
Every flower brings bitter meed - Maurice Baring "Diffugere Nives, 1917"
Urged some bitter secret - Djuna Barnes "From Fifth Avenue Up"
earned through bitterness of need - Elizabeth Bartlett "challenge"
Sweet and bitter waters - Ellen Bass "Sink Your Fingers into the Darkness of My Fur"
Memory of the bitter flood - Charles Baudelaire "The Eyes of Beauty" transl. not credited
Beneath the bitter tooth accursed - Charles Baudelaire "The Irreparable" transl. not credited
Only the bitterness of harvest wind - Lucius Beebe "Autumn Lament"
larvae ravening the bitter vine - Amy Beeder "My Poisonous Cousin the Pipevine Swallowtail"
To wipe the bitter tear from Sorrow's eye - Blanche Benairde "Angels on Earth" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
Pour your rain on the bitter tree - Stephen Vincent Benet "8:30 A. M. on 32nd Street"
Give us drink for our bitter thirst - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Last Vision of Helen"
A fog that came like bitter smoke - Stephen Vincent Benet "Three Days' Ride"
The cry of the bitter clay to the God who devised it carrion - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Walkers"
Wavering on the sudden brink of jaded bitterness - Maxwell Bodenheim "To Orrick Johns"
And feed on bitter fruit - Arna Bontemps "A Black Man Talks of Reaping"
A wild bird riding the wind and screaming bitterly - Arna Bontemps "Homing"
The stones have scored you bitterly - Arna Bontemps "To a Young Girl Leaving the Hill Country"
More blithe than bitter - Geoffrey Brock "Ovid Old"
With broken hopes and bitter fears - Ruth Margaret Muskrat [Bronson] "The Trail of Tears"
Bitter partings at its gate - Charlotte Bronte "The Teacher's Monologue"
Very bitter with the ashes - Stopford A. Brooke "Song (From 'Six Days')"
A cry of bitter dead men - Gwendolyn Brooks "Gay Chaps at the Bar"
Ruined by an ever-bitter extremity - Jericho Brown "Of the Swan"
The bitterness of days like these - Sterling A. Brown "Salutamus"
What if the bread be bitter - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "Cheerfulness Taught by Reason"
Oblivion of my bitterness - Gerald Bullett "Rest"
What depth of bitterness is ours - Olivia Ward Bush-Banks "Heart-Throbs"
That must contend to the dark and bitter end - Charles Wm. Butler "North and South" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.2, Feb. 1864]
From all the bitter corners of the earth - Witter Bynner "The New World II"
To drink this last and bitter cup - Thomas Campbell "The Last Man"
Rouses the bitter armies of the cold - W. Wilfred Campbell "September in the Laurentian Hills"
That bitter hour drained the life from me - Ethna Carbery "The Love-Talker"
Somewhere on the bitter tide - Edward Carpenter "As Round a Lighthouse to--"
Sweet life given to a soul in bitterness clad - Edward Carpenter "The Complaint of Job chap. III"
Rising to greet the bitter air - Willa Cather "I Sought the Wood in Winter"
Bitter was the bread of song - Willa Cather "The Poor Minstrel"
To taste our bitterest woe - "Centos and Suggestions" transl. and arranged by Rev. John Brownlie in Hymns from the Greek Offices
The bitter root of love - Jennifer Chang "Episteme 12"
Abundant bitterness - Jennifer Chang "A Horse Named Never"
The bitter truth about your deeds - May Chong "Catering"
How many a bitter blast - John Clare "Address to Plenty: In Winter"
dry mornings and bitter nights - Lucille Clifton "dear fox"
To style it the religious bitter - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"
My wind is turned to bitter north - Arthur Hugh Clough "A Song of Autumn"
With the measures of a bitter song - Leonard Cohen "I Draw Aside the Curtain"
For the dust blows bitterly - Arthur Colton "Arcadie. I"
Never dreamed of the bitter end - Katherine Eleanor Conway "The Heaviest Cross of All"
Ere I wore proud chains of diamonds, forged of bitter, frozen tears - Mrs. Martha W. Cook "Ethel: Fitz Fashion's Wife" [The Continental Monthly v.III - April, 1863 - no.IV]
Why do I shrink to own the bitter truth? - Mrs. Martha W. Cook "A Spirit's Reproach" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.2, August 1863]
A faint, dim breath of bitter lies - Susan Coolidge "My White Chrysanthemum"
Bitter drop in bloom and sweet - Susan Coolidge "Solstice"
Its wages and its bitter bread - Susan Coolidge "When Love Went"
Eat from every plant except for the bitter one - Giorgiomaria Cornelio "La specia storta (The Bent Species)" transl. by Moira Egan
You can harvest the bitter tomato - "Counsel to a Bridegroom" transl. from Mandinka by Bala Saho
Bitter outtakes from tar - Maxe Crandall "Sappho for Everybody"
Or is the truth bitter as eaten fire? - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"
Stern stands and bitter runs for glory - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"
In all drink he detected the bitter - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"
And drink, themselves, the bitter cup they mix - Rev. William Crowe "Verses Intended to Have Been Spoken in the Theatre to the Duke of Portland, at His Installation as Chancellor of the University of Oxford, in the Year 1793"
A well drained bitter by the sky - Countee Cullen "In Memory of Col. Charles Young"
All bitter yesterdays I knew - Countee Cullen "Oh, for a Little While Be Kind"
How strangely cold these few yet bitter words - Charlotte Cushman "Duchess de la Valliere"
This bitter power of song - H.D. "Cassandra"
These ripe pears are bitter to the taste - H.D. "The Gift"
Your coaxing will only make a bitter fruit - H.D. "Sheltered Garden"
Set some seal on my bitter heart - H.D. "Toward the Piraeus"
Chewing bitter rowanberries - Krystyna Dąbrowska "Confession" transl. by Karen Kovacik
The bitter smart of sorrow - T.A. Daly "To a Robin"
Makes bitter poison into sweet - Russell W. Davenport "Five Sonnets I"
Bitter with remembrance of the spring - Russell W. Davenport "Poems XII"
There is a smile of bitter scorn - Lucretia Maria Davidson "The Smile of Innocence"
To the bitter border of divorce - Geffrey Davis "What I Mean When I Say Truck Driver"
The bitter taste of your commanding - Kwame Dawes "Eat"
Of unforgottenness a bitter draught - Walter de la Mare "The Revenant"
All her sorrows, bitter rue - Walter de la Mare "The Sunken Garden"
Tears of an antique bitterness - Walter de la Mare "They Told Me"
A sip of coffee before I knew bitter - Monica de la Torre "Equivalences"
My heart is broken down with bitter pain - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Since, O my Love, I may behold no more]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
Bitter as raw olives - Diane DeCillis "Milk"
Bitter contested farthings - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Life XI: Compensation"
My long wound, my bitter sorrow - Dark Eileen "Dirge on the Death of Art O'Leary, Shot at Carraganime, Co. Cork, May 4, 1773" transl. by Eleanor Hull
Until the battlefields bittered our pollen - Tarik Dobbs "Mad Honey"
Your bitter lot shall be - James B. Dollard "The Soul of Karnaghan Buidhe"
Preempted by three bitter decades - Chris Dombrowski "Hammock Poem"
Skies of snow and bitter air - Edward Dowden "Burdens"
Unallied to bitter things or barren - Edward Dowden "In the Galleries: II. The Venus of Melos"
Utter bitterness shall be your wage - John Drinkwater "Persuasion"
'Tis bitter thus to lose thee - Alice Dunbar-Nelson "Farewell"
Landing on its bitter brilliance - Camille T. Dungy "Frequently Asked Questions: #9"
Where bitter joy can hear - Amelia Earhart "Courage"
Laudanum by the bitter spoonful - Martin Espada "The Five Horses of Doctor Ramon Emeterio Betances"
Taste the bitter draught of woe - William Falconer "The Shipwreck: Canto I"
With a bitter lantern in her hand - Joseph Fasano "Testimony"
The light of change is bitter - Joseph Fasano "Testimony"
With bolder passion the bitter day endowed - Arthur Davison Ficke "Swinburne, an Elegy"
Heaved beneath the bitter blast - "The Fisherman's Keen, or the Lamentation of O'Donoghue of Affadown ('Roaring Water'), in the west of Co. Cork, for his three sons and his son-in-law, who were drowned" transl. by Anonymous
Through dull years of bitter silence - John Gould Fletcher "Lincoln"
Many bitter winters of defeat - John Gould Fletcher "Lincoln"
Bitter for remembrance of the healing - John Gould Fletcher "Lincoln"
And some shall cry with bitter pain - James W. Foley "A Christmas Prayer"
Change their sweets to bitter burning - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"
The sweet of bitter bark and burning clove - Robert Frost "To Earthward"
The dark and bitter flow of grief - M.G. "Apostrophe to Time" (The Knickerbocker v.23:4, April 1844)
Respect even its bitter portion - Tess Gallagher "Black Pudding"
A curse too bitter and wild for the broken heart - Mary Gardiner "The Sacrifice" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
Salvaging among the tideline's bitter gleanings - Suzanne Gardinier "Gapped Sonnet"
All things sweet and bitter meet - Theodosia Garrison "The Gifts of Gold"
Boasting and bitter taunt - Ieuan Glan Geirionydd "The Strand of Rhuddlan" transl. by Edmund O. Jones
Too full of bitter memories - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Torch"
A bitter fruit for us to share - Carmen Gimenez "Beasts"
No taste more bitter nor truer - Dana Gioia "Seaward"
Dull, bitter light - C.S. Giscombe "First Dream"
Bitter, blinding, binding words - Kevin Goodan "Spot Weather Forecast"
A bitter brew mixed with my own hand - Mona Gould "This Bitter Brew"
we consume the bitter dream particles - Layla Azmi Goushey "Dream Particles"
A bitter breeze unkind - Ivor Gurney "Omens"
Draw out of memory all bitterness - Ivor Gurney "Song of Pain and Beauty"
All without bitterness - Hadewijch of Brabant "My Best Success"
Medicine is bitter and hard to swallow - Han-Shan "[So Han-shan writes you these words]" transl. by Burton Watson
The sweet and bitter gods who walk beside us - Joy Harjo "The Book of Myths"
Words that sting like bitter limes - Joy Harjo "Resurrection"
The first bite is neither sweet nor bitter - Penny Harter "Just Grapefruit"
When bitterness spills from the morning new - Penny Harter "Just Grapefruit"
So sweet and bitter fancy - F.W. Harvey "English Flowers in a Foreign Garden"
Ripe to be harvested for bitter need - F.W. Harvey "Harvest Home"
Through the bitter wells of woe - Frances Ridley Havergal "Springs of Peace"
Naked under bitter lichens - Anne Hebert "Spring Over the City" transl. by Kathleen Weaver
The bitter tear-drop of despair - Felicia Hemans "The Domestic Affections"
The bitter cup have shared - Felicia Hemans "The Sceptic"
The nurture of our bitter sky - Felicia Hemans "Wallace's Invocation to Bruce"
Bitter be thy chain - Felicia Hemans "The Wife of Asdrubal"
Even the bitterest rain can sink into sand - Conrad Hilberry "Clue"
Trailed its bitter breath over the desert - Conrad Hilberry "Wise Man"
Bitter black it falls between - Francis Hill "Rich Man, Poor Man"
The fruit of the vine bitter and premature - Ellen Hinsey "Epistle"
Which embittered every cup - J.G. Holland "Kathrina Part 1: Childhood and Youth"
In despair to reckon up the bitter cost - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"
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]
Bitter for want of weeping - William Dean Howells "Pleasure-Pain"
And bitterly hang on the flowerless air - Richard Hughes "The Image"
Bitter laughter and bitter tears - Aldous Huxley "Two Songs 2 [Men of a certain age]"
Shared our scanty meal in bitterness or glee - E.B. Impey "The Savoyard" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.20 no.573, Oct. 27, 1832]
the bitter tang of the dream he'll become - Tamara Jerée "In the Cult of Nearly-Lost Dreams"
Bright and bitter geometry - Amaud Jamaul Johnson "Place Your Bets"
Drink from the thrice bitter bowl - James Weldon Johnson "Miserable"
Memory's bitter blight - James Weldon Johnson "Morning, Noon and Night"
Remorse declares that bitter state - Lionel Johnson "Experience"
This bit of sun bittered earth - Fred L. Joiner "Below as Above"
Drinks anguish without ruling it bitter - Camisha L. Jones "Praise Song for the Body"
we are those tough bitter stems and pits - Tanque R. Jones "Chitterlings and Collard Greens"
Bitter tribute wrong from hearts of woe - Sir Nizamat Jung "VIII: The Heart of Love"
Wrestling with the bitter cold - Helen Keller "The Song of the Stone Wall"
Each butte and bitter lake - Donika Kelly "Santa Rosa"
Long in bitterness to reach the goal - Fanny Kemble "Lines on a Sleeping Child"
A cold and bitter consciousness - Fanny Kemble "Sonnet [There's not a fibre in my trembling frame]"
The bitterest tears we shed - Fanny Kemble "'Tis an Old Tale and Often Told"
Where the bitter barbs of frost have been - Henry Kendall "The Austral Months"
Ginger and bitter roots growing at her ankles - Vandana Khanna "A world like this hates"
The Cup with sweet or bitter run - Omar Khayyam "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" transl. by Edward Fitzgerald (Fifth Edition)
Bitter tides of sorrow roll - Joyce Kilmer "Age Comes A-Wooing"
With all that bitter agony of soul - "The King of Darkness: On the Fallen Angels" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.12 no.337, Oct. 25, 1828]
No word more bitter than sweet honey - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
Wine more bitter than the taste of gall - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
As lurks a bitter sting in honeyed words - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
And every brooded bitterness - Archibald Lampman "Favorites of Pan"
The hours slip bitterly over - Archibald Lampman "One Day"
And water it with bitter tears - Archibald Lampman "Peccavi, Domine"
Only bitter broken sand - Archibald Lampman "What Do Poets Want with Gold?"
A snake in supreme bitterness - D.H. Lawrence "Almond Blossom"
Bitter-stinging white world - D.H. Lawrence "Southern Night"
Among the stones of the bitter sea - D.H. Lawrence "St John"
And mistletoe strange berries of bitter tears - Richard Le Gallienne "Christmas in War-Time"
As bitters over dulcet sins - Richard Le Gallienne "The Decadent to His Soul"
Your acids and bitters - Hailey Leithauser "Charm against Insomnia"
That casts a bitter shadow into the waters - R.B. Lemberg "Long Shadow"
With sighs and bitter tears invoked - Giacomo Leopardi "Consalvo" transl. by Frederick Townsend
With stabbing wounds of bitter sound - C.S. Lewis writing as Clive Hamilton "Dymer. Canto I"
Through bitterest toil you follow me - Li Ho "At Ch'ang-ku, Reading: To Show My Man Pa" transl. by Burton Watson
Fling these bitter drops to the wild swans - Li Qingzhao "The Wild Swans" transl. from Chinese to French by Judith Gautier and from French to English by James Whitall
Climbing bitterly the stranger's stairs - Vachel Lindsay "Dante"
Bitter dreams of enigma and night - Vachel Lindsay "The Last Song of Lucifer"
The bitter blows of truth - Amy Lowell "The End"
Through the wan twilight of that bitter day - Amy Lowell "Evelyn Ray"
The bitter wind of doubt has blown - Amy Lowell "To Elizabeth Ward Perkins"
Check the items in the bitter list - James Russell Lowell "An Epistle to George William Curtis"
Which once had quenched my bitter thirst - Maria White Lowell "The Alpine Sheep"
And swept with bitter rain - Isabel Ecclestone Mackay "The Homesteader"
All bane of life and bitter - Percy MacKaye "Fight: The Tale of a Gunner at Plattsburgh"
Sought in the bitter wind - Dorothea Mackellar "Pilgrim Song"
All the bitter ruin and wreck of us - Fiona MacLeod "The Prayer of Women"
My lament in bitterness outpoured - James Clarence Mangan "The Fair Hills of Eire, O!"
With bitter dew and star dust - Jeannette Marks "'When Spring'"
Iron ice bound all the bitter seas - Don Marquis "Dickens"
More bitter than the depths of Acheron - George Martin "1881"
Burning curse and bitter bane - George Martin "Marguerite"
Jaws that dripped with bitter fire - John Masefield "The Hounds of Hell"
Beside your bitter waters rise - Theodore Maynard "Ireland"
In the wind and bitter rain - Theodore Maynard "The Stirrup Cup"
Against our day of bitter scorn - Theodore Maynard "To a Good Atheist"
In time of bitter fear - John McCrae "The Anxious Dead"
Bitter orange and almond milk - Campbell McGrath "Joseph Brodsky in Venice (1981)"
Feeds me bread of bitterness - Claude McKay "America"
With nights of unabating bitterness - Claude McKay "Rest in Peace"
Through all the sullen, bitter years - Louis J. McQuilland "The Country of the Young"
Bitter root not allowed to stretch - Tony Medina "Seven Steps to Heaven Haiku"
Bitter gale and dripping wrack - E.H.W. Meyerstein "The Incantation"
Of bitter memory that stings and glows - Adam Mickiewicz "The Grave of Countess Potocka" transl. by Edna Worthley Underwood
In the blue and bitter fall - Edna St. Vincent Millay "Elegy"
Drink the bitter sea - Edna St. Vincent Millay "Ode to Silence"
And a bitter word - Edna St. Vincent Millay "Souvenir"
The small, bitter hawks of grief - Claire Millikin "Pierced Dolls"
To turn the heart to bitter gall - "The Misanthrope"
Fruit as bitter as the Dead Sea's - "The Misanthrope"
Quaffs years of bitter breath - Harriet Monroe "A Hymn"
Revived bitterness - Marianne Moore "The Past Is the Present"
And struggle with a bitter fate - Morna "Ianthe"
By herbless sand and bitter pool - Lewis Morris "The Epic of Hades book I: Tartarus: Phaedra"
Some bitter speech in my mouth - William Morris "The Pilgrim of Hope V: New Birth"
Kiss of sorrow's bitter lips - Ethel Allen Murphy "A Botticelli Madonna. I, The Wondering Angel"
Bitter, unreasoning, sarcastic jeers - Nekrasof (Nikolay Nekrasov) "A Sick Man's Jealousy" transl. by John Pollen
Taste the bitter apple - Marilyn Nelson "Bitter Apple"
A crushed and bitter bowl - Pablo Neruda "Almeria" translated by Richard Schaaf
Bitter and magic history - Pablo Neruda "Ancient History" transl. by Miguel Argarin
Like the fish of a bitter fountain - Pablo Neruda "Battle of the Jarama River" translated by Richard Schaaf
The bitter wheat of your people - Pablo Neruda "Battle of the Jarama River" translated by Richard Schaaf
Returning an empty dream to a bitter pasture - Pablo Neruda "The Bull" transl. by Maria Jacketti
A cup of bitter air between - Pablo Neruda "Cataclysm" transl. by Maria Jacketti
Bitter family of the trembling night - Pablo Neruda "Cataclysm" transl. by Maria Jacketti
Dew with its bitter greetings - Pablo Neruda "Come Up with Me, American Love" transl. by Nathaniel Tarn
A hollow in the heart of the bitter jungle - Pablo Neruda "Death in the World" transl. by Jack Schmitt
A bitter sky of soaked metal - Pablo Neruda "Disaction" translated by Donald D. Walsh
That bitter curtain going up - Pablo Neruda "First Travelings" transl. by Alastair Reid
Like bitter trees that bury you - Pablo Neruda "October Fullness" transl. by Alastair Reid
A bitter but desperate certainty - Pablo Neruda "Oh, My Lost City" transl. by Alastair Reid
The throbbing and the scintillations of the bitter sea - Pablo Neruda "The Sea and the Love of Quevado" transl. by Teresa Anderson
The last bitter drops of sobbing - Pablo Neruda "Song to the Red Army on its Arrival at the Gates of Prussia" translated by Donald D. Walsh
With utensils bitter to excess - Pablo Neruda "There Is No Oblivion (Sonata)" translated by Donald D. Walsh
The blue and bitter rhythm of breathing - Pablo Neruda "Tides" transl. by Alastair Reid
Broken glass fallen in a bitter street - Pablo Neruda "To Envy" transl. by Alastair Reid
Dressed in gray and bitter sounds - Pablo Neruda "Twenty Love Poems IX" translated by W.S. Merwin
Made of linked and bitter leaves - Pablo Neruda "Tyranny" Translated by Donald D. Walsh
Rivers of bitter certainty - Pablo Neruda 100 Love Sonnets LIV (trans. by Stephen Tapscott)
She worked the bitter charm - E. Nesbit "Death"
Ended this bitter journey - Robert Nichols "Ardours and Endurances: The Aftermath VI. The Full Heart"
By bitter winds o'erblown - Meredith Nicholson "Where Love Was Not"
Taste the bitter juice of roses - tiana nobile "Harlow's Monkey"
A bitter wind that scourges us - Alfred Noyes "Avicenna's Dream"
Desolate, bereft by bitter fate - Dermot O'Curnan "Love's Despair" transl. by George Sigerson
Let the bitterness sink to the bottom - January Gill O'Neil "In the Company of Women"
The lettuce has grown too bitter to eat - January Gill O'Neil "Sunday"
An ancient bitter nod - Simon J. Ortiz "From Sand Creek"
Profaned and swollen by bitter waters - Margaret Fuller Ossoli "Meditations"
Than death itself more bitter - Robert Owen "A Prayer" transl. by Edmund O. Jones
Bitter bread when the world was bare - Marjorie L.C. Pickthall "Mary Shepherdess"
Bitter bamboo growing all around my house - Po Chu'i "Song of the Lute" transl. by Burton Watson
As much embittered with poverty - Ezra Pound "To Dives"
Tasting the bitter syllables of their history - Minnie Bruce Pratt "The Great Migration"
The bitter bread of grief - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Our Daily Bread"
Through bitterest inward strife - Anne Proctor "Verse: A Legend of Provence"
Now sweeter for a bitter past - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Verse: Rest"
Through bitterest inward strife - Anne Proctor "Verse: A Legend of Provence"
Found bitter drops in every cup - A. R. "Life's Young Dream" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
By frost and sun and bitter brine - Theodore H. Rand "Tennyson Rock"
The boom of the bitter bell - Cale Young Rice "Love in Japan"
Into a bitter-chocolate vein - Adrienne Rich "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes"
The savor of bitter waters - Lola Ridge "Firehead part III: Judas 1: Flower of Silver"
A bitter wine out of the bloody stills of the world - Lola Ridge "The Ghetto"
Bitter healing at the roots of seas - Lola Ridge "South-East Wind"
On my board are bitter apples - Lola Ridge "To the American People"
The world's bitter leaven - Lola Ridge "A Toast"
With the bitter twist of ingrown laughter - Lola Ridge "The White Bird"
No bitterer than the shrunk grape - Lynn Riggs "The Corrosive Season"
When the last bitterness was past - Rennell Rodd "Actea"
Plucked bitterest fruit to give - Christina Rossetti "Eve"
Every bitter wind of heaven - Captain Owen Rutter "The Song of Tiadatha"
Colored with bitter wrongs - Carl Sandburg "Lawyers"
Dust and a bitter wind - Carl Sandburg "The Windy City"
To taste the sweet and bitter fruits of earth - George Santayana "Six Wise Fools"
As if the dregs were bitter - George Santayana "Six Wise Fools"
Ancient wisdom like the bitterness of stars - Ann K. Schwader "Ammutseba Rising"
Leaving us little but bitter ashes - Ann K. Schwader "If Cold Is a War"
Imperishable blue this bitter sky - Ann K. Schwader "Maya Blue (At Chichen Itza)"
A truth bitter past bearing - Ann K. Schwader "The Queen's Speech"
Of bitter and of sweet the fullest store - Clinton Scollard "A Symphony of the Sea (Gloze Royal)"
Floundering forever in bitterness - "Selections from the 'Nineteen Old Poems of the Han'" transl. by Burton Watson
Can take no bitter leaving - Robert W. Service "The Lure of Little Voices"
And the bitter aroma of herbs - Clara Shanafelt "Interlude"
Trying to salvage the bitter roots - Prageeta Sharma "What Happened at the Service?"
On the bitter roads of France - Virna Sheard "Crosses"
The urn of bitter prophecy - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Hellas"
Here the grapes are bitter - Dora Sigerson Shorter "My Neighbour's Garden"
The plums could have been less bitter - Elizabeth Shvarts "Nothing More to Say"
Just as the bitter wind - Joyce Sidman and Rick Allen "Vole in Winter"
As at the bitter night of hell - Paulus Silentarius "241. ["Farewell" is on my tongue]" (translated by William Roger Paton)
Blinded by bitter wind - Sue William Silverman "If the Girl Dies, or Doesn't"
Beneath the sumac, yarrow, and bitter water - Jake Skeets "In the Fields"
Bitter dreams I bring - Clark Ashton Smith "Song"
The bleak and bitter spell - Clark Ashton Smith "To Omar Khayyam"
Sorrow's storm with bitter breath - Miss L. Virginia Smith "The Wasted Heart"
An accident away from being bitter - Richard Solomon "By Subtraction -- I Tego Arcana Dei"
From the bitter wind gets grief - "A Song of Winter" transl. by Kuno Meyer
Those cold qualms and bitter pangs - Robert Southwell "Upon the Image of Death"
Drowning in dreams as bitter and as deep - Leonora Speyer "This City Wind"
Mellowed with bitter and sweet words - Molly Spotted Elk [Molly Alice Nelson] "We're in the Chorus Now"
The grief from sorrow's bitter cup - Clarence Victor Stahl "Sing It"
Real as a bitter orange - A.E. Stallings "Sublunary"
A pleasant draught of bitter hyssop - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Protest of Faith: to Rev. --"
By the bitter years withdrawn - George Sterling "At the Lily's Heart"
With tears of bitter light - George Sterling "Beauty and Truth"
To the twilight of the bitter sands - George Sterling "Betrayal"
They sow a bitter grain - George Sterling "Safe"
Draining the bitter oceans - George Sterling "The Thirst of Satan"
Is bitter with our love's delay - George Sterling "Until Thou Comest"
The night more bitter cold will bring - Elizabeth Drew Stoddard "Christmas Comes Again"
The bitter wind has banished the silent nightingale - Richard Henry Stoddard "A Winter Scene"
Long after bitter chills - Alfred B. Street "The Loon: Tupper's Lake"
Have drunk deep of the well of bitterness - Arthur Stringer "Black Hours"
The little Dust blown from their bitter mouths - Muriel Stuart "Andromeda Unfettered"
The bitter thing that treachery is - Muriel Stuart "Shrift"
My fears, in bitterness and sorrow, void of tears - Alan Sullivan "Confession, Creed, and Prayer"
Bitterer than a soundless tear - Algernon Swinburne "A Baby's Death"
The bitter taste ensuing on the sweet - Algernon Charles Swinburne "Before Parting"
If such sweet and bitter things be done - Algernon Charles Swinburne "The Complaint of Lisa" [inspired by Bocaccio's Decameron X.7]
Hunting for the bitter drop - Sonya Taaffe "He Should Marry the Daughter of the Angel of Death"
The bitterness both of Substance and Shadow - Tao Yuanming "Substance, Shadow, and Spirit" transl. by Arthur Waley
Now when the bitter truth is learned - J. Bayard Taylor "The Angel of the Soul" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]
Bitter and certain of our ideas - Keith Taylor "In Spite of Myself"
Dissolve my bitter attachments - Fargo Tbaki "Palestine Is a Futurism: The Dream"
My heart in bitterness bled - Te-con-ees-kee "[Though far from Georgia in exile I roam]"
That no bitterness can bend - Sara Teasdale "August Moonrise"
For beauty more than bitterness - Sara Teasdale "Vignettes Overseas"
A bitter taste of beetroot - Lynne Thompson "St. Valentine, Bishop of Terni, probably beheaded, was also the patron saint of asthma, beekeepers, and epilepsy, so he might have said"
The bitter old and wrinkled truth - James Thomson "The City of Dreadful Night"
The very spring breathes bitter breath - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: IV. The Journey"
A dominant bitterness - Z.G. Tomaszewski "Salad of Sorts"
When that cry of bitter stress woke the hills - Miss Virginia Townsend "The House in the Lane" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.5, May 1864]
And all the train of bitter ghosts adore - Iris Tree "Holy Russia"
Tasting within the bitter dregs of spleen - Iris Tree "[My pain has all the patience of a nun]"
Chewing the bitter ashes - Richard Chenevix Trench "Dedicatory Lines"
Gone was the bitter day - Katherine Tynan "The Little Ghost"
And all the bitter banners furled - Louis Untermeyer "At Kennebunkport"
The bitter creeping plant of discontent - Henry van Dyke "Vera"
And a bitter store of arid sarcasms - Emile Verhaeren "Les Villages Illusoires: The Grave-Digger" transl. by Alma Strettell
Sickness, scorn, and bitterness to taste - Sherard Vines "Permission"
Medicine of bitterness - Derek Walcott "Dark August"
And only bitter land was washed away - Margaret Walker "Childhood"
With biting bitterness of mind - Charles William Wallace "False Womankind!"
Nor bitter irony a truth foreshows - A.D.T. Whitney "Banbury Cross"
Stands face to face with bitter Truth - A.D.T. Whitney "Bo-Peep"
And leave no gifts but bitterness - Helen Hay Whitney "Disguised"
Drink the lees of bitter wine - Helen Hay Whitney "The Philosopher"
Rest from all bitter thoughts - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"
Lift your flowers on bitter stems - William Carlos Williams "Chickory and Daisies"
Turn bitter in the end - William Carlos Williams "Libertad! Igualdad! Fraternidad!"
Against treacherous bitterness of wind - William Carlos Williams "March"
The sky has given over its bitterness - William Carlos Williams "Spring Storm"
The bitter horizontals of a north wind - William Carlos Williams "Trees"
The bitterness buried itself in my tongue - Tanaya Winder "Becoming a Ghost"
Because the flowers of life are bitter - Adolf Wolff "Confidences"
The same odd taste of bitterness and terror - Charles Wright "Basin Creek Lullaby"
Bitter springs of truth - Elinor Wylie "Fire and Sleet and Candlelight"
And tasted bitter springs of truth - Elinor Wylie "Fire and Sleet and Candlelight"
A bright core to bitter black pain - Elinor Wylie "Incantation"
Then their water shall be made bitter - "XIII: Huexotzincayotl | A Song of Huexotzinco" transl. from Nahuatl by Daniel G. Brinton
Who made you bitter made you wise - W.B. Yeats "Cuchulain’s Fight with the Sea"
Time's bitter flood - W.B. Yeats "The Lover pleads with his Friend for Old Friends"
Crowded with bitter faces - W.B. Yeats "The Travail of Passion"
Cure the bitter fruit in brine - Stephen Yenser "Vertumnal [excerpt]"
In bitter London's heart of stone - Francis Brett Young "The Pavement"
Of wine with bitter hemlock steep'd - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"
Awaken to frozen days and bitter nights - Francis Brett Young "Winter Sunset"
Altered its taste to bitter dishsoap - Ray Young Bear "The Aura of the Blue Flower That is a Goddess"
Come dancing bitter city - Matthew Zapruder "Thank You for Being You"
Stirring the bitter taste of solitude - Zheng Min "My Oriental Soul #4: Snow, It can't be White" translator not credited. Source: https://projects.zo.uni-heidelberg.de/archive2/DACHS_Leiden/poetry/MD/Zheng_Min_trans.pdf
Bitter words swallowed - Tracie Vaughn Zimmer "Grace"
Sitting there so bitter-bright - Mark Van Doren "The Rivals"
Bordering on cool but tinged with bitter-green - Luisa A. Igloria "Custody"
Bittersweet.
The sad tear may embitter the wine - R. Penn Smith "A Health to My Brother"
A syrup, sweet-bitter with smoke - Jessica P. Wick "Sap and Superstition"
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Winter sunshine cheered the bitter sky - Lascelles Abercrombie "Ryton Firs: The Voices in the Dream"
Your vampire of bitterness - Delmira Agustini "The Vampire" (translated by Alejandro Caceres)
The bitter pennies that I saved - Conrad Aiken "Parasite"
Season of snows and bitter rain - Conrad Aiken "Romance"
Had poured him a bitter grief - Anna Akhmatova [Untitled] transl. by Robert Tracy
Same bitter origin - Francisco X. Alarcon "Sal de la Tierra/Salt of the Earth"
At the gates of a bitter hell - Mary Aldis and Arthur Davison Ficke "Chloroform"
bitter oranges unafraid of cosmic dust - Alise Alousi "Burnished in Future Time"
A reason his love tastes bitter - Alise Alousi "Pandemic"
On that same spot the bitterest rue and wormwood - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry LXXII: Unhappy Bride" transl. by Sir John Bowring
Gather wormwood into boiling water press its bitters - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry LXXX: Youth and Age" transl. by Sir John Bowring
Kissing a bitter mouth - Homero Aridjis (transl. by George McWhirter) "The ways to see and be an angel"
The bitter symbiosis of couples - Rae Armantrout "Two, Three"
And unite with your bitter love - Zahir-Ud-Din Muhammad Babur "Poems of Babur (2)" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun
Warm, sugar sweet, and wormwood bitter - Mary Jo Bang "Dark Smudged the Path Untrammeled"
Appeasement turned bitter - Mary Jo Bang "This Supposed Alchemy"
Every flower brings bitter meed - Maurice Baring "Diffugere Nives, 1917"
Urged some bitter secret - Djuna Barnes "From Fifth Avenue Up"
earned through bitterness of need - Elizabeth Bartlett "challenge"
Sweet and bitter waters - Ellen Bass "Sink Your Fingers into the Darkness of My Fur"
Memory of the bitter flood - Charles Baudelaire "The Eyes of Beauty" transl. not credited
Beneath the bitter tooth accursed - Charles Baudelaire "The Irreparable" transl. not credited
Only the bitterness of harvest wind - Lucius Beebe "Autumn Lament"
larvae ravening the bitter vine - Amy Beeder "My Poisonous Cousin the Pipevine Swallowtail"
To wipe the bitter tear from Sorrow's eye - Blanche Benairde "Angels on Earth" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
Pour your rain on the bitter tree - Stephen Vincent Benet "8:30 A. M. on 32nd Street"
Give us drink for our bitter thirst - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Last Vision of Helen"
A fog that came like bitter smoke - Stephen Vincent Benet "Three Days' Ride"
The cry of the bitter clay to the God who devised it carrion - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Walkers"
Wavering on the sudden brink of jaded bitterness - Maxwell Bodenheim "To Orrick Johns"
And feed on bitter fruit - Arna Bontemps "A Black Man Talks of Reaping"
A wild bird riding the wind and screaming bitterly - Arna Bontemps "Homing"
The stones have scored you bitterly - Arna Bontemps "To a Young Girl Leaving the Hill Country"
More blithe than bitter - Geoffrey Brock "Ovid Old"
With broken hopes and bitter fears - Ruth Margaret Muskrat [Bronson] "The Trail of Tears"
Bitter partings at its gate - Charlotte Bronte "The Teacher's Monologue"
Very bitter with the ashes - Stopford A. Brooke "Song (From 'Six Days')"
A cry of bitter dead men - Gwendolyn Brooks "Gay Chaps at the Bar"
Ruined by an ever-bitter extremity - Jericho Brown "Of the Swan"
The bitterness of days like these - Sterling A. Brown "Salutamus"
What if the bread be bitter - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "Cheerfulness Taught by Reason"
Oblivion of my bitterness - Gerald Bullett "Rest"
What depth of bitterness is ours - Olivia Ward Bush-Banks "Heart-Throbs"
That must contend to the dark and bitter end - Charles Wm. Butler "North and South" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.2, Feb. 1864]
From all the bitter corners of the earth - Witter Bynner "The New World II"
To drink this last and bitter cup - Thomas Campbell "The Last Man"
Rouses the bitter armies of the cold - W. Wilfred Campbell "September in the Laurentian Hills"
That bitter hour drained the life from me - Ethna Carbery "The Love-Talker"
Somewhere on the bitter tide - Edward Carpenter "As Round a Lighthouse to--"
Sweet life given to a soul in bitterness clad - Edward Carpenter "The Complaint of Job chap. III"
Rising to greet the bitter air - Willa Cather "I Sought the Wood in Winter"
Bitter was the bread of song - Willa Cather "The Poor Minstrel"
To taste our bitterest woe - "Centos and Suggestions" transl. and arranged by Rev. John Brownlie in Hymns from the Greek Offices
The bitter root of love - Jennifer Chang "Episteme 12"
Abundant bitterness - Jennifer Chang "A Horse Named Never"
The bitter truth about your deeds - May Chong "Catering"
How many a bitter blast - John Clare "Address to Plenty: In Winter"
dry mornings and bitter nights - Lucille Clifton "dear fox"
To style it the religious bitter - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"
My wind is turned to bitter north - Arthur Hugh Clough "A Song of Autumn"
With the measures of a bitter song - Leonard Cohen "I Draw Aside the Curtain"
For the dust blows bitterly - Arthur Colton "Arcadie. I"
Never dreamed of the bitter end - Katherine Eleanor Conway "The Heaviest Cross of All"
Ere I wore proud chains of diamonds, forged of bitter, frozen tears - Mrs. Martha W. Cook "Ethel: Fitz Fashion's Wife" [The Continental Monthly v.III - April, 1863 - no.IV]
Why do I shrink to own the bitter truth? - Mrs. Martha W. Cook "A Spirit's Reproach" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.2, August 1863]
A faint, dim breath of bitter lies - Susan Coolidge "My White Chrysanthemum"
Bitter drop in bloom and sweet - Susan Coolidge "Solstice"
Its wages and its bitter bread - Susan Coolidge "When Love Went"
Eat from every plant except for the bitter one - Giorgiomaria Cornelio "La specia storta (The Bent Species)" transl. by Moira Egan
You can harvest the bitter tomato - "Counsel to a Bridegroom" transl. from Mandinka by Bala Saho
Bitter outtakes from tar - Maxe Crandall "Sappho for Everybody"
Or is the truth bitter as eaten fire? - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"
Stern stands and bitter runs for glory - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"
In all drink he detected the bitter - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"
And drink, themselves, the bitter cup they mix - Rev. William Crowe "Verses Intended to Have Been Spoken in the Theatre to the Duke of Portland, at His Installation as Chancellor of the University of Oxford, in the Year 1793"
A well drained bitter by the sky - Countee Cullen "In Memory of Col. Charles Young"
All bitter yesterdays I knew - Countee Cullen "Oh, for a Little While Be Kind"
How strangely cold these few yet bitter words - Charlotte Cushman "Duchess de la Valliere"
This bitter power of song - H.D. "Cassandra"
These ripe pears are bitter to the taste - H.D. "The Gift"
Your coaxing will only make a bitter fruit - H.D. "Sheltered Garden"
Set some seal on my bitter heart - H.D. "Toward the Piraeus"
Chewing bitter rowanberries - Krystyna Dąbrowska "Confession" transl. by Karen Kovacik
The bitter smart of sorrow - T.A. Daly "To a Robin"
Makes bitter poison into sweet - Russell W. Davenport "Five Sonnets I"
Bitter with remembrance of the spring - Russell W. Davenport "Poems XII"
There is a smile of bitter scorn - Lucretia Maria Davidson "The Smile of Innocence"
To the bitter border of divorce - Geffrey Davis "What I Mean When I Say Truck Driver"
The bitter taste of your commanding - Kwame Dawes "Eat"
Of unforgottenness a bitter draught - Walter de la Mare "The Revenant"
All her sorrows, bitter rue - Walter de la Mare "The Sunken Garden"
Tears of an antique bitterness - Walter de la Mare "They Told Me"
A sip of coffee before I knew bitter - Monica de la Torre "Equivalences"
My heart is broken down with bitter pain - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Since, O my Love, I may behold no more]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
Bitter as raw olives - Diane DeCillis "Milk"
Bitter contested farthings - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Life XI: Compensation"
My long wound, my bitter sorrow - Dark Eileen "Dirge on the Death of Art O'Leary, Shot at Carraganime, Co. Cork, May 4, 1773" transl. by Eleanor Hull
Until the battlefields bittered our pollen - Tarik Dobbs "Mad Honey"
Your bitter lot shall be - James B. Dollard "The Soul of Karnaghan Buidhe"
Preempted by three bitter decades - Chris Dombrowski "Hammock Poem"
Skies of snow and bitter air - Edward Dowden "Burdens"
Unallied to bitter things or barren - Edward Dowden "In the Galleries: II. The Venus of Melos"
Utter bitterness shall be your wage - John Drinkwater "Persuasion"
'Tis bitter thus to lose thee - Alice Dunbar-Nelson "Farewell"
Landing on its bitter brilliance - Camille T. Dungy "Frequently Asked Questions: #9"
Where bitter joy can hear - Amelia Earhart "Courage"
Laudanum by the bitter spoonful - Martin Espada "The Five Horses of Doctor Ramon Emeterio Betances"
Taste the bitter draught of woe - William Falconer "The Shipwreck: Canto I"
With a bitter lantern in her hand - Joseph Fasano "Testimony"
The light of change is bitter - Joseph Fasano "Testimony"
With bolder passion the bitter day endowed - Arthur Davison Ficke "Swinburne, an Elegy"
Heaved beneath the bitter blast - "The Fisherman's Keen, or the Lamentation of O'Donoghue of Affadown ('Roaring Water'), in the west of Co. Cork, for his three sons and his son-in-law, who were drowned" transl. by Anonymous
Through dull years of bitter silence - John Gould Fletcher "Lincoln"
Many bitter winters of defeat - John Gould Fletcher "Lincoln"
Bitter for remembrance of the healing - John Gould Fletcher "Lincoln"
And some shall cry with bitter pain - James W. Foley "A Christmas Prayer"
Change their sweets to bitter burning - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"
The sweet of bitter bark and burning clove - Robert Frost "To Earthward"
The dark and bitter flow of grief - M.G. "Apostrophe to Time" (The Knickerbocker v.23:4, April 1844)
Respect even its bitter portion - Tess Gallagher "Black Pudding"
A curse too bitter and wild for the broken heart - Mary Gardiner "The Sacrifice" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
Salvaging among the tideline's bitter gleanings - Suzanne Gardinier "Gapped Sonnet"
All things sweet and bitter meet - Theodosia Garrison "The Gifts of Gold"
Boasting and bitter taunt - Ieuan Glan Geirionydd "The Strand of Rhuddlan" transl. by Edmund O. Jones
Too full of bitter memories - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Torch"
A bitter fruit for us to share - Carmen Gimenez "Beasts"
No taste more bitter nor truer - Dana Gioia "Seaward"
Dull, bitter light - C.S. Giscombe "First Dream"
Bitter, blinding, binding words - Kevin Goodan "Spot Weather Forecast"
A bitter brew mixed with my own hand - Mona Gould "This Bitter Brew"
we consume the bitter dream particles - Layla Azmi Goushey "Dream Particles"
A bitter breeze unkind - Ivor Gurney "Omens"
Draw out of memory all bitterness - Ivor Gurney "Song of Pain and Beauty"
All without bitterness - Hadewijch of Brabant "My Best Success"
Medicine is bitter and hard to swallow - Han-Shan "[So Han-shan writes you these words]" transl. by Burton Watson
The sweet and bitter gods who walk beside us - Joy Harjo "The Book of Myths"
Words that sting like bitter limes - Joy Harjo "Resurrection"
The first bite is neither sweet nor bitter - Penny Harter "Just Grapefruit"
When bitterness spills from the morning new - Penny Harter "Just Grapefruit"
So sweet and bitter fancy - F.W. Harvey "English Flowers in a Foreign Garden"
Ripe to be harvested for bitter need - F.W. Harvey "Harvest Home"
Through the bitter wells of woe - Frances Ridley Havergal "Springs of Peace"
Naked under bitter lichens - Anne Hebert "Spring Over the City" transl. by Kathleen Weaver
The bitter tear-drop of despair - Felicia Hemans "The Domestic Affections"
The bitter cup have shared - Felicia Hemans "The Sceptic"
The nurture of our bitter sky - Felicia Hemans "Wallace's Invocation to Bruce"
Bitter be thy chain - Felicia Hemans "The Wife of Asdrubal"
Even the bitterest rain can sink into sand - Conrad Hilberry "Clue"
Trailed its bitter breath over the desert - Conrad Hilberry "Wise Man"
Bitter black it falls between - Francis Hill "Rich Man, Poor Man"
The fruit of the vine bitter and premature - Ellen Hinsey "Epistle"
Which embittered every cup - J.G. Holland "Kathrina Part 1: Childhood and Youth"
In despair to reckon up the bitter cost - Henry Clayton Hopkins "To --"
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]
Bitter for want of weeping - William Dean Howells "Pleasure-Pain"
And bitterly hang on the flowerless air - Richard Hughes "The Image"
Bitter laughter and bitter tears - Aldous Huxley "Two Songs 2 [Men of a certain age]"
Shared our scanty meal in bitterness or glee - E.B. Impey "The Savoyard" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.20 no.573, Oct. 27, 1832]
the bitter tang of the dream he'll become - Tamara Jerée "In the Cult of Nearly-Lost Dreams"
Bright and bitter geometry - Amaud Jamaul Johnson "Place Your Bets"
Drink from the thrice bitter bowl - James Weldon Johnson "Miserable"
Memory's bitter blight - James Weldon Johnson "Morning, Noon and Night"
Remorse declares that bitter state - Lionel Johnson "Experience"
This bit of sun bittered earth - Fred L. Joiner "Below as Above"
Drinks anguish without ruling it bitter - Camisha L. Jones "Praise Song for the Body"
we are those tough bitter stems and pits - Tanque R. Jones "Chitterlings and Collard Greens"
Bitter tribute wrong from hearts of woe - Sir Nizamat Jung "VIII: The Heart of Love"
Wrestling with the bitter cold - Helen Keller "The Song of the Stone Wall"
Each butte and bitter lake - Donika Kelly "Santa Rosa"
Long in bitterness to reach the goal - Fanny Kemble "Lines on a Sleeping Child"
A cold and bitter consciousness - Fanny Kemble "Sonnet [There's not a fibre in my trembling frame]"
The bitterest tears we shed - Fanny Kemble "'Tis an Old Tale and Often Told"
Where the bitter barbs of frost have been - Henry Kendall "The Austral Months"
Ginger and bitter roots growing at her ankles - Vandana Khanna "A world like this hates"
The Cup with sweet or bitter run - Omar Khayyam "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" transl. by Edward Fitzgerald (Fifth Edition)
Bitter tides of sorrow roll - Joyce Kilmer "Age Comes A-Wooing"
With all that bitter agony of soul - "The King of Darkness: On the Fallen Angels" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.12 no.337, Oct. 25, 1828]
No word more bitter than sweet honey - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
Wine more bitter than the taste of gall - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
As lurks a bitter sting in honeyed words - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
And every brooded bitterness - Archibald Lampman "Favorites of Pan"
The hours slip bitterly over - Archibald Lampman "One Day"
And water it with bitter tears - Archibald Lampman "Peccavi, Domine"
Only bitter broken sand - Archibald Lampman "What Do Poets Want with Gold?"
A snake in supreme bitterness - D.H. Lawrence "Almond Blossom"
Bitter-stinging white world - D.H. Lawrence "Southern Night"
Among the stones of the bitter sea - D.H. Lawrence "St John"
And mistletoe strange berries of bitter tears - Richard Le Gallienne "Christmas in War-Time"
As bitters over dulcet sins - Richard Le Gallienne "The Decadent to His Soul"
Your acids and bitters - Hailey Leithauser "Charm against Insomnia"
That casts a bitter shadow into the waters - R.B. Lemberg "Long Shadow"
With sighs and bitter tears invoked - Giacomo Leopardi "Consalvo" transl. by Frederick Townsend
With stabbing wounds of bitter sound - C.S. Lewis writing as Clive Hamilton "Dymer. Canto I"
Through bitterest toil you follow me - Li Ho "At Ch'ang-ku, Reading: To Show My Man Pa" transl. by Burton Watson
Fling these bitter drops to the wild swans - Li Qingzhao "The Wild Swans" transl. from Chinese to French by Judith Gautier and from French to English by James Whitall
Climbing bitterly the stranger's stairs - Vachel Lindsay "Dante"
Bitter dreams of enigma and night - Vachel Lindsay "The Last Song of Lucifer"
The bitter blows of truth - Amy Lowell "The End"
Through the wan twilight of that bitter day - Amy Lowell "Evelyn Ray"
The bitter wind of doubt has blown - Amy Lowell "To Elizabeth Ward Perkins"
Check the items in the bitter list - James Russell Lowell "An Epistle to George William Curtis"
Which once had quenched my bitter thirst - Maria White Lowell "The Alpine Sheep"
And swept with bitter rain - Isabel Ecclestone Mackay "The Homesteader"
All bane of life and bitter - Percy MacKaye "Fight: The Tale of a Gunner at Plattsburgh"
Sought in the bitter wind - Dorothea Mackellar "Pilgrim Song"
All the bitter ruin and wreck of us - Fiona MacLeod "The Prayer of Women"
My lament in bitterness outpoured - James Clarence Mangan "The Fair Hills of Eire, O!"
With bitter dew and star dust - Jeannette Marks "'When Spring'"
Iron ice bound all the bitter seas - Don Marquis "Dickens"
More bitter than the depths of Acheron - George Martin "1881"
Burning curse and bitter bane - George Martin "Marguerite"
Jaws that dripped with bitter fire - John Masefield "The Hounds of Hell"
Beside your bitter waters rise - Theodore Maynard "Ireland"
In the wind and bitter rain - Theodore Maynard "The Stirrup Cup"
Against our day of bitter scorn - Theodore Maynard "To a Good Atheist"
In time of bitter fear - John McCrae "The Anxious Dead"
Bitter orange and almond milk - Campbell McGrath "Joseph Brodsky in Venice (1981)"
Feeds me bread of bitterness - Claude McKay "America"
With nights of unabating bitterness - Claude McKay "Rest in Peace"
Through all the sullen, bitter years - Louis J. McQuilland "The Country of the Young"
Bitter root not allowed to stretch - Tony Medina "Seven Steps to Heaven Haiku"
Bitter gale and dripping wrack - E.H.W. Meyerstein "The Incantation"
Of bitter memory that stings and glows - Adam Mickiewicz "The Grave of Countess Potocka" transl. by Edna Worthley Underwood
In the blue and bitter fall - Edna St. Vincent Millay "Elegy"
Drink the bitter sea - Edna St. Vincent Millay "Ode to Silence"
And a bitter word - Edna St. Vincent Millay "Souvenir"
The small, bitter hawks of grief - Claire Millikin "Pierced Dolls"
To turn the heart to bitter gall - "The Misanthrope"
Fruit as bitter as the Dead Sea's - "The Misanthrope"
Quaffs years of bitter breath - Harriet Monroe "A Hymn"
Revived bitterness - Marianne Moore "The Past Is the Present"
And struggle with a bitter fate - Morna "Ianthe"
By herbless sand and bitter pool - Lewis Morris "The Epic of Hades book I: Tartarus: Phaedra"
Some bitter speech in my mouth - William Morris "The Pilgrim of Hope V: New Birth"
Kiss of sorrow's bitter lips - Ethel Allen Murphy "A Botticelli Madonna. I, The Wondering Angel"
Bitter, unreasoning, sarcastic jeers - Nekrasof (Nikolay Nekrasov) "A Sick Man's Jealousy" transl. by John Pollen
Taste the bitter apple - Marilyn Nelson "Bitter Apple"
A crushed and bitter bowl - Pablo Neruda "Almeria" translated by Richard Schaaf
Bitter and magic history - Pablo Neruda "Ancient History" transl. by Miguel Argarin
Like the fish of a bitter fountain - Pablo Neruda "Battle of the Jarama River" translated by Richard Schaaf
The bitter wheat of your people - Pablo Neruda "Battle of the Jarama River" translated by Richard Schaaf
Returning an empty dream to a bitter pasture - Pablo Neruda "The Bull" transl. by Maria Jacketti
A cup of bitter air between - Pablo Neruda "Cataclysm" transl. by Maria Jacketti
Bitter family of the trembling night - Pablo Neruda "Cataclysm" transl. by Maria Jacketti
Dew with its bitter greetings - Pablo Neruda "Come Up with Me, American Love" transl. by Nathaniel Tarn
A hollow in the heart of the bitter jungle - Pablo Neruda "Death in the World" transl. by Jack Schmitt
A bitter sky of soaked metal - Pablo Neruda "Disaction" translated by Donald D. Walsh
That bitter curtain going up - Pablo Neruda "First Travelings" transl. by Alastair Reid
Like bitter trees that bury you - Pablo Neruda "October Fullness" transl. by Alastair Reid
A bitter but desperate certainty - Pablo Neruda "Oh, My Lost City" transl. by Alastair Reid
The throbbing and the scintillations of the bitter sea - Pablo Neruda "The Sea and the Love of Quevado" transl. by Teresa Anderson
The last bitter drops of sobbing - Pablo Neruda "Song to the Red Army on its Arrival at the Gates of Prussia" translated by Donald D. Walsh
With utensils bitter to excess - Pablo Neruda "There Is No Oblivion (Sonata)" translated by Donald D. Walsh
The blue and bitter rhythm of breathing - Pablo Neruda "Tides" transl. by Alastair Reid
Broken glass fallen in a bitter street - Pablo Neruda "To Envy" transl. by Alastair Reid
Dressed in gray and bitter sounds - Pablo Neruda "Twenty Love Poems IX" translated by W.S. Merwin
Made of linked and bitter leaves - Pablo Neruda "Tyranny" Translated by Donald D. Walsh
Rivers of bitter certainty - Pablo Neruda 100 Love Sonnets LIV (trans. by Stephen Tapscott)
She worked the bitter charm - E. Nesbit "Death"
Ended this bitter journey - Robert Nichols "Ardours and Endurances: The Aftermath VI. The Full Heart"
By bitter winds o'erblown - Meredith Nicholson "Where Love Was Not"
Taste the bitter juice of roses - tiana nobile "Harlow's Monkey"
A bitter wind that scourges us - Alfred Noyes "Avicenna's Dream"
Desolate, bereft by bitter fate - Dermot O'Curnan "Love's Despair" transl. by George Sigerson
Let the bitterness sink to the bottom - January Gill O'Neil "In the Company of Women"
The lettuce has grown too bitter to eat - January Gill O'Neil "Sunday"
An ancient bitter nod - Simon J. Ortiz "From Sand Creek"
Profaned and swollen by bitter waters - Margaret Fuller Ossoli "Meditations"
Than death itself more bitter - Robert Owen "A Prayer" transl. by Edmund O. Jones
Bitter bread when the world was bare - Marjorie L.C. Pickthall "Mary Shepherdess"
Bitter bamboo growing all around my house - Po Chu'i "Song of the Lute" transl. by Burton Watson
As much embittered with poverty - Ezra Pound "To Dives"
Tasting the bitter syllables of their history - Minnie Bruce Pratt "The Great Migration"
The bitter bread of grief - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Our Daily Bread"
Through bitterest inward strife - Anne Proctor "Verse: A Legend of Provence"
Now sweeter for a bitter past - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Verse: Rest"
Through bitterest inward strife - Anne Proctor "Verse: A Legend of Provence"
Found bitter drops in every cup - A. R. "Life's Young Dream" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
By frost and sun and bitter brine - Theodore H. Rand "Tennyson Rock"
The boom of the bitter bell - Cale Young Rice "Love in Japan"
Into a bitter-chocolate vein - Adrienne Rich "The Night Has a Thousand Eyes"
The savor of bitter waters - Lola Ridge "Firehead part III: Judas 1: Flower of Silver"
A bitter wine out of the bloody stills of the world - Lola Ridge "The Ghetto"
Bitter healing at the roots of seas - Lola Ridge "South-East Wind"
On my board are bitter apples - Lola Ridge "To the American People"
The world's bitter leaven - Lola Ridge "A Toast"
With the bitter twist of ingrown laughter - Lola Ridge "The White Bird"
No bitterer than the shrunk grape - Lynn Riggs "The Corrosive Season"
When the last bitterness was past - Rennell Rodd "Actea"
Plucked bitterest fruit to give - Christina Rossetti "Eve"
Every bitter wind of heaven - Captain Owen Rutter "The Song of Tiadatha"
Colored with bitter wrongs - Carl Sandburg "Lawyers"
Dust and a bitter wind - Carl Sandburg "The Windy City"
To taste the sweet and bitter fruits of earth - George Santayana "Six Wise Fools"
As if the dregs were bitter - George Santayana "Six Wise Fools"
Ancient wisdom like the bitterness of stars - Ann K. Schwader "Ammutseba Rising"
Leaving us little but bitter ashes - Ann K. Schwader "If Cold Is a War"
Imperishable blue this bitter sky - Ann K. Schwader "Maya Blue (At Chichen Itza)"
A truth bitter past bearing - Ann K. Schwader "The Queen's Speech"
Of bitter and of sweet the fullest store - Clinton Scollard "A Symphony of the Sea (Gloze Royal)"
Floundering forever in bitterness - "Selections from the 'Nineteen Old Poems of the Han'" transl. by Burton Watson
Can take no bitter leaving - Robert W. Service "The Lure of Little Voices"
And the bitter aroma of herbs - Clara Shanafelt "Interlude"
Trying to salvage the bitter roots - Prageeta Sharma "What Happened at the Service?"
On the bitter roads of France - Virna Sheard "Crosses"
The urn of bitter prophecy - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Hellas"
Here the grapes are bitter - Dora Sigerson Shorter "My Neighbour's Garden"
The plums could have been less bitter - Elizabeth Shvarts "Nothing More to Say"
Just as the bitter wind - Joyce Sidman and Rick Allen "Vole in Winter"
As at the bitter night of hell - Paulus Silentarius "241. ["Farewell" is on my tongue]" (translated by William Roger Paton)
Blinded by bitter wind - Sue William Silverman "If the Girl Dies, or Doesn't"
Beneath the sumac, yarrow, and bitter water - Jake Skeets "In the Fields"
Bitter dreams I bring - Clark Ashton Smith "Song"
The bleak and bitter spell - Clark Ashton Smith "To Omar Khayyam"
Sorrow's storm with bitter breath - Miss L. Virginia Smith "The Wasted Heart"
An accident away from being bitter - Richard Solomon "By Subtraction -- I Tego Arcana Dei"
From the bitter wind gets grief - "A Song of Winter" transl. by Kuno Meyer
Those cold qualms and bitter pangs - Robert Southwell "Upon the Image of Death"
Drowning in dreams as bitter and as deep - Leonora Speyer "This City Wind"
Mellowed with bitter and sweet words - Molly Spotted Elk [Molly Alice Nelson] "We're in the Chorus Now"
The grief from sorrow's bitter cup - Clarence Victor Stahl "Sing It"
Real as a bitter orange - A.E. Stallings "Sublunary"
A pleasant draught of bitter hyssop - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Protest of Faith: to Rev. --"
By the bitter years withdrawn - George Sterling "At the Lily's Heart"
With tears of bitter light - George Sterling "Beauty and Truth"
To the twilight of the bitter sands - George Sterling "Betrayal"
They sow a bitter grain - George Sterling "Safe"
Draining the bitter oceans - George Sterling "The Thirst of Satan"
Is bitter with our love's delay - George Sterling "Until Thou Comest"
The night more bitter cold will bring - Elizabeth Drew Stoddard "Christmas Comes Again"
The bitter wind has banished the silent nightingale - Richard Henry Stoddard "A Winter Scene"
Long after bitter chills - Alfred B. Street "The Loon: Tupper's Lake"
Have drunk deep of the well of bitterness - Arthur Stringer "Black Hours"
The little Dust blown from their bitter mouths - Muriel Stuart "Andromeda Unfettered"
The bitter thing that treachery is - Muriel Stuart "Shrift"
My fears, in bitterness and sorrow, void of tears - Alan Sullivan "Confession, Creed, and Prayer"
Bitterer than a soundless tear - Algernon Swinburne "A Baby's Death"
The bitter taste ensuing on the sweet - Algernon Charles Swinburne "Before Parting"
If such sweet and bitter things be done - Algernon Charles Swinburne "The Complaint of Lisa" [inspired by Bocaccio's Decameron X.7]
Hunting for the bitter drop - Sonya Taaffe "He Should Marry the Daughter of the Angel of Death"
The bitterness both of Substance and Shadow - Tao Yuanming "Substance, Shadow, and Spirit" transl. by Arthur Waley
Now when the bitter truth is learned - J. Bayard Taylor "The Angel of the Soul" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]
Bitter and certain of our ideas - Keith Taylor "In Spite of Myself"
Dissolve my bitter attachments - Fargo Tbaki "Palestine Is a Futurism: The Dream"
My heart in bitterness bled - Te-con-ees-kee "[Though far from Georgia in exile I roam]"
That no bitterness can bend - Sara Teasdale "August Moonrise"
For beauty more than bitterness - Sara Teasdale "Vignettes Overseas"
A bitter taste of beetroot - Lynne Thompson "St. Valentine, Bishop of Terni, probably beheaded, was also the patron saint of asthma, beekeepers, and epilepsy, so he might have said"
The bitter old and wrinkled truth - James Thomson "The City of Dreadful Night"
The very spring breathes bitter breath - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: IV. The Journey"
A dominant bitterness - Z.G. Tomaszewski "Salad of Sorts"
When that cry of bitter stress woke the hills - Miss Virginia Townsend "The House in the Lane" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.5, May 1864]
And all the train of bitter ghosts adore - Iris Tree "Holy Russia"
Tasting within the bitter dregs of spleen - Iris Tree "[My pain has all the patience of a nun]"
Chewing the bitter ashes - Richard Chenevix Trench "Dedicatory Lines"
Gone was the bitter day - Katherine Tynan "The Little Ghost"
And all the bitter banners furled - Louis Untermeyer "At Kennebunkport"
The bitter creeping plant of discontent - Henry van Dyke "Vera"
And a bitter store of arid sarcasms - Emile Verhaeren "Les Villages Illusoires: The Grave-Digger" transl. by Alma Strettell
Sickness, scorn, and bitterness to taste - Sherard Vines "Permission"
Medicine of bitterness - Derek Walcott "Dark August"
And only bitter land was washed away - Margaret Walker "Childhood"
With biting bitterness of mind - Charles William Wallace "False Womankind!"
Nor bitter irony a truth foreshows - A.D.T. Whitney "Banbury Cross"
Stands face to face with bitter Truth - A.D.T. Whitney "Bo-Peep"
And leave no gifts but bitterness - Helen Hay Whitney "Disguised"
Drink the lees of bitter wine - Helen Hay Whitney "The Philosopher"
Rest from all bitter thoughts - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"
Lift your flowers on bitter stems - William Carlos Williams "Chickory and Daisies"
Turn bitter in the end - William Carlos Williams "Libertad! Igualdad! Fraternidad!"
Against treacherous bitterness of wind - William Carlos Williams "March"
The sky has given over its bitterness - William Carlos Williams "Spring Storm"
The bitter horizontals of a north wind - William Carlos Williams "Trees"
The bitterness buried itself in my tongue - Tanaya Winder "Becoming a Ghost"
Because the flowers of life are bitter - Adolf Wolff "Confidences"
The same odd taste of bitterness and terror - Charles Wright "Basin Creek Lullaby"
Bitter springs of truth - Elinor Wylie "Fire and Sleet and Candlelight"
And tasted bitter springs of truth - Elinor Wylie "Fire and Sleet and Candlelight"
A bright core to bitter black pain - Elinor Wylie "Incantation"
Then their water shall be made bitter - "XIII: Huexotzincayotl | A Song of Huexotzinco" transl. from Nahuatl by Daniel G. Brinton
Who made you bitter made you wise - W.B. Yeats "Cuchulain’s Fight with the Sea"
Time's bitter flood - W.B. Yeats "The Lover pleads with his Friend for Old Friends"
Crowded with bitter faces - W.B. Yeats "The Travail of Passion"
Cure the bitter fruit in brine - Stephen Yenser "Vertumnal [excerpt]"
In bitter London's heart of stone - Francis Brett Young "The Pavement"
Of wine with bitter hemlock steep'd - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"
Awaken to frozen days and bitter nights - Francis Brett Young "Winter Sunset"
Altered its taste to bitter dishsoap - Ray Young Bear "The Aura of the Blue Flower That is a Goddess"
Come dancing bitter city - Matthew Zapruder "Thank You for Being You"
Stirring the bitter taste of solitude - Zheng Min "My Oriental Soul #4: Snow, It can't be White" translator not credited. Source: https://projects.zo.uni-heidelberg.de/archive2/DACHS_Leiden/poetry/MD/Zheng_Min_trans.pdf
Bitter words swallowed - Tracie Vaughn Zimmer "Grace"
Sitting there so bitter-bright - Mark Van Doren "The Rivals"
Bordering on cool but tinged with bitter-green - Luisa A. Igloria "Custody"
Bittersweet.
The sad tear may embitter the wine - R. Penn Smith "A Health to My Brother"
A syrup, sweet-bitter with smoke - Jessica P. Wick "Sap and Superstition"
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