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Filled his arms with hues and shadows - Mike Allen "La Donna del Lago"

Storms of shape and hue rain tremors - Mike Allen "Kandinsky's Garden"

All glorious in their hue - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.II--Morning Further Advanced"

Tied with twine of invisible hue - Mary Jo Bang "Given to Believe"

The broidered hue of illusion - Mary Jo Bang "The Medicinal Cotton Clouds Come Down to Cover Them"

A shell transfigured with the rainbow's hue - Maurice Baring "Italy"

Every illustrious hue of the earliest sunset's tapestry - William Rose Benét "Imagination"

The lunar hues of this image - Jaswinder Bolina "Ultrasonic"

Coral's hues and rainbows - Rupert Brooke "Tiare Tahiti"

May grief never spoil its hue - J.G. Brooks "To the 'Blue-eyed Lassie'"

Which stole the hues and fires of Paradise - Michelangelo Buonarroti "XLIX. Love's Excuse" transl. by John Addington Symonds

Hues of ash and glints of glory - Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey "Spring Song"

The wilder the drifting, the deeper the hue - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds: Rain Clouds. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]

Time and Eternity were of one hue - Martha Walker Cook "The Dove" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.6, June 1864]

Sweet harmonies of hue - Susan Coolidge "Solstice"

Containing multitudes of hues - Monica de la Torre "Intimacy in Discourse: A Comedy in Three Movements"

Filled with dawn's initial hue - Chris Dombrowski "Partial Eclipse / N 46.677, W 114.244"

With fairy form and rainbow hue - William Hodgson Ellis "Consider the Lilies of the Field"

Her hardest hue to hold - Robert Frost "Nothing Gold Can Stay"

Of some beloved hue that pales - Zona Gale "Light"

Floods of light rich with all hues - G.H.H. "Night and Morning" (from The Knickerbocker, v. 23:3, March 1844)

Crystalled dew from the hyacinth's deep hue - G.H.H. "Night and Morning" (from The Knickerbocker, v. 23:3, March 1844)

When cotton explodes that gaudy hue - Myronn Hardy "Aurora Americana"

Each star rang with separate colored hue - Joy Harjo "Kansas City"

Full perfection of immortal hues - Felicia Hemans "The Domestic Affections"

Others come from deeper hues - Ellen Hinsey "Varieties of Flight"

The silver pheasant bereft of hue - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Prose Poem on the Snow" transl. by Burton Watson

Dethroned by a hue - Georgia Douglas Johnson "Hope"

Burned to darkly golden hue- Joyce Kilmer "Imitation of Richepin's Ballade of the Beggars' King"

Giving off hues of life - D.H. Lawrence "Bare Fig-Trees"

In that raging, radioactive hue - Aimee Le "Praise Poem for Mtn Dew"

Such pain as to reveal your hue - R.B. Lemberg "The Ash Manifesto"

Retained its vivid crimson hue - Dr. John Leyden "The Mermaid"

Brilliant with every cosmic hue - Toby MacNutt "Perihelion"

Golden days and days of somber hue - Naomi Long Madgett "Wedding Song"

Centuries that bore a crimson hue - George Martin "Books"

Adds a hue to the garden of Eden - Baba Rahim Mashrab "Love Ghazal of Mashrab (5)" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun

Paint field and flower in nature's hues - H.P. McKnight "Dedication"

Caught from dubious hues - George Meredith "A Later Alexandrian"

Twisting hues of flourished steel - George Meredith "The Woods of Westermain"

Fire in water hued as wine - George Meredith "The Woods of Westermain"

Must wear the hue and coldness of despair - Morna "Ianthe"

Ten thousand hues hold their freshness - Mu Hua "Rhyme-Prose on the Sea" transl. by Burton Watson

Dyed with the hue of spring rivers - Po Chu'i "Liao-ling" transl. by Burton Watson

Harmonies of wedded hue - John Presland "A January Morning"

Where the hues are atrophy and grief - Wendy Rathbone "Grief"

All that hues the chrysalis - Lola Ridge "Firehead part I: He 2: The Man from Joppa"

With flashes of barbaric hues - Lola Ridge "The Ghetto"

Tinted with all splendid hues - Alice Wellington Rollins "A Trust in God"

Hues upon the angel's form - A former student of the Male Sem. "The Rose of Cherokee" 1855 (per Changing Is Not Vanishing)

The shattered hue of starlight failing - Ann K. Schwader "Conflict Carbon"

To harmonies and hues beneath - Shelley "The Recollections"

Petals blown from flower-hued stars - Edith Sitwell "Fireworks"

And night devour its flaming hues - Clark Ashton Smith "Retrospect and Forecast"

Croon in every screeching hue - Patricia Smith "5 p.m., Thursday, August 25, 2005"

Where the grass is hidden with a hungry hue - Analicia Sotelo "Quemado, Texas"

To rob the velvet of its hue - Jane Taylor "The Squire's Pew"

A trembling variance of revolving hues - James Thomson "Summer" [Harper's New Monthly v.4 June 1851]

Poisoned with raptures in many hues - Iris Tree "[Ah! you, from the small high-walled acre]"

To steep in hues of beauty - Richard Chenevix Trench "The Story of Justin Martyr"

A shimmering glory of light and hue - Ts'ao Chih "The Forsaken Wife" transl. by Burton Watson

In hues of tulip twilight flowers - Helen Hay Whitney "Lyric Love"


A hueless warp of light - Clark Ashton Smith "Crepuscle"

That hide a hueless poison - Clark Ashton Smith "The Hashish-Eater; or, The Apocalypse of Evil"


To sing of pink-hued vapors - Adolf Wolff "Excuse Me, Muse"


Frail decoy to merit myriad-hued - Charles Seabridge "Connected Poems I"


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