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Better grasp the red-hot steel, than touch another's gold - A.L.O.E. "Ragged Boy's Hymn"

Gold glitters at his feet - A.L.O.E. "The Wise Men from the East"

With the flesh made of a golden light - Lascelles Abercrombie "Marriage Song"

Spilt shatter'd gold about his back - Lascelles Abercrombie "Marriage Song"

Spilt shattered gold about his back - Lascelles Abercrombie "Small Fountains"

And in the dark is rich with alien gold - Abu'l-Ala "The Diwan X" (transl. by Henry Baerlein)

Which was a sluice of molten gold - Harold Acton "As Dmitri Karamazoff sang on the way to Chaos"

My misery dropped golden tears - Harold Acton "Greenness Unsecreted"

Sleep on couch of twisted gold - Harold Acton "Lament for Adonis"

As into the gold of a honeycomb - Delmira Agustini "The Vampire" (translated by Alejandro Caceres)

Increasing stores of treasured gold - Hatim al-Tai "On Avarice" transl. by Joseph Dacre Carlyle

Whose raiment was silver shot through with golden folds - Daisy Aldan "Everywhere in Constancy, He Is Intoning, Look! Look!"

Chasing butterflies golden, gathering blossoms sweet - Ellen Tracy Alden "The Child on the Battle-field"

Flashing up a path of gold - Ellen Tracy Alden "He Will Come Back"

On the rounds of a golden ladder - Ellen Tracy Alden "Jungenthor, the Giant"

Gold and houses and lands encumber - Ellen Tracy Alden "[Wandering, wandering all the world over]"

A scattering of gold crocus-petals - Richard Aldington "Round-Pond"

And into golden aeons far away - Mary Aldis and Arthur Davison Ficke "Chloroform"

Earth's philosopher traced with his golden pen - Cecil Frances Alexander "The Burial of Moses"

The clouds are broken into melancholy gold - William Allingham "Aeolian Harp"

Here is the token of gold that was broken - William Allingham "The Nobleman's Wedding"

Have traded in gold and blood - Ahmad Almallah "Some Verse for the Depressed Rebel"

Saffron, gold coins, a slight burning - Threa Almontaser "Heritage Emissary"

Dells where the gold bee drones - Amber aka Martha Everts Holden "The Brook"

All the lifetimes sift down like golden grains - Mouna Ammar "Inheritance"

Even the stories turn into gold - Leslie J. Anderson "In the Valley of Midas"

Around this valley lies a golden wall - Leslie J. Anderson "In the Valley of Midas"

Gold rose petals spilled by the moon - Margaret C. Anderson "Life Itself"

Creeping around the huge oak with its blossoms of gold - S.D. Anderson "A May Song" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.5, May 1849]

A golden sky smiles on the soil's increase - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.IX--Autumn, in its First Aspect"

Bare branches dripped with gold - H.M. Andrews "Song"

The gold of her promise - Maya Angelou "America"

A golden spindle with the flax of Egypt bound around it - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry XIX: Nightingales" transl. by Sir John Bowring

A sickle of silver in fingers of gold - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry XXIX: Lepota" transl. by Sir John Bowring

Of pearls two measures--of gold but three - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry XLVIII: The Sultaness" transl. by Sir John Bowring

In the tavern bear the golden cup - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry LIII: Mine Everywhere" transl. by Sir John Bowring

With golden peacock proudly on one shoulder - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry CXII: The Peacock and the Nightingale" transl. by J.W. Wiles

The golden decibel of angels - Raymond Antrobus "Echo"

Sprinkled beads of gold and steel - Martin Armstrong "Miss Thompson Goes Shopping"

Dead to every gain but gold - "An Army Contractor" [The Continental Monthly v.2 no.3, Sept. 1862]

Earth had doors to heaven once, wide on golden hinges - M.E. Atteridge "To a Child" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.5-v.I, 2 Feb. 1884]

Growing with purple or with gold - "Autumn" Chatterbox: Stories of Natural History. 1880]

Let the golden palaces groan - J.S.B. "Marathon" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCLXIII, v.LXXV, May 1854]

From the golden quivers drawn - Benjamin West Ball "Athens"

The golden manacles of verse - Benjamin West Ball "Elfin Land"

Fettered with links of gold - Benjamin West Ball "The Seraphs' Holiday"

And gold in the earth below - anonymous? "The Ballad of Meikle-Mouthed Meg"

A swallow coiled with gold leaves - Taneum Bambrick "Lovers' Mural"

With three lines of gold in its ceiling - Taneum Bambrick "Oven Street"

Through marbled gold and green - Rita Banerjee "Sleep"

The black and gold glassed-in air - J. Mae Barizo "Diorama"

Nor of all your strength of the gold and steel - William Francis Barnard "The Tongues of Toil"

Gold and steel enthroned at the gates of the mart - William Francis Barnard "The Tongues of Toil"

Made yourself a mustache of gold - Lou Barrett "Oliver Hill Hotel: 1932"

The strife that ever waits upon the race for gold - Charles H. Barstow "On the Coast" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.34-v.I, 23 Aug. 1884]

And cutting the golden thread - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Creation"

and suddenly flings in a rain of gold - Elizabeth Bartlett "I would remember"

yellow was first word for gold - Elizabeth Bartlett "time is a palette"

Yielding as molten gold - Ennis Rook Bashe "We Have Slain the Savage Martians, but Their Princess Escaped"

Lies wrapped in golden glory - Cora C. Bass "Sea and Cliff"

The sea flashing its gold scales - Ellen Bass "Sink Your Fingers into the Darkness of My Fur"

Seven dishes made out of the best red gold - Clara Doty Bates "Sleeping Beauty" [On the Tree Top 1881, Project Gutenberg]

The alchemist who brews him gold - Charles Baudelaire "Spleen" transl. by Richard Howard

Not the crystal acorn not the golden thread - Dan Beachy-Quick "Variations on Dawn and Dusk"

Our shapely hooks of shining gold - Josh Bell "Our Bed Is Also Green"

Angels brought Him toys of gold - Hilaire Belloc "The Birds"

A golden horn of light - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Drug-Shop, or, Endymion in Edmonstoun"

Hold a portion of your sacred gold - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Etcher"

Had scrawled vague lines of gold - Stephen Vincent Benet "Going Back to School"

Have taken gold for your soul's treasury - Stephen Vincent Benet "Grand Larceny"

An old trumpet harsh with rust and gold - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Last Vision of Helen"

From the gold of each new June - Stephen Vincent Benet "Lost Lights"

The orbed gold of the viol's voice - Stephen Vincent Benet "A Minor Poet"

A golden ball in fountains dancing - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Quality of Courage"

To endless quiet, golden peace - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Quality of Courage"

Plumage stirred by golden air - Park Benjamin "Audubon's Blindness"

I would siege the golden shores of space - Stella Benson "The Cornishman"

Across Titania's golden streams - Paul Bewsher "The Horrors of Flying"

Sleeps in pools of gold - Laurence Binyon "The Belfry"

Shall flow with tears of gold - William Blake "Night"

Build a golden stairway of escape - Maxwell Bodenheim "Advice to a Pool"

In the wind's golden elusiveness - Maxwell Bodenheim "Minna (IX)"

Let us dance by metal waters burned with gold - Arna Bontemps "The Return"

Turning baser metals to golden illumination - Bruce Boston "The Last Alchemist"

Trading gold for flesh, lives for legends - Bruce Boston & Marge Simon "Ajax Redux"

No charm in the miser's gold - John Philip Bourke "Dreaming the Dream of Life"

In a valley draped with gold - John Philip Bourke "The Pilgrimage"

Out of the gold of the morning - Thomas Boyd "Love on the Mountain"

Whose golden glory flashed and blazed - John Breslin "The Sunburst and the Tricolor"

And bring home a feather of gold - Mrs. S.J. Brigham "A Wish for Wings" [Our Young Folks at Home and Abroad (ed. by Daphne Dale), 1894]

To drink of silence like a golden cup - Eloise Briton "The Two Flames"

Brought me finer gifts than gold - Vera M. Brittain "To Monseigneur"

Still make the golden crocus shine - Anne Bronte "Memory"

Have lost their zone of gold - Emily Bronte "The Bluebell"

When the days of golden dream had perished - Emily Bronte "Cold in the Earth"

Turned the sea to silver, the earth to gold - Caris Brooke "[Never a hand on the cottage door]"

On the meadow's golden breast - Stopford A. Brooke "Song (From 'Six Days')"

A glitter of awful gold steals me - Paul Cameron Brown "Green Eye Shields"

Midas' gold or Krupp's iron wealth secured - Paul Cameron Brown "The Treasure Ships"

The warp was Fame and the woof was Gold - Evelyn Gage Browne "The Web of Dreams"

The blackbird's golden flute - Marie Hedderwick Browne "The Blackbird"

The golden lilies afloat with the dragon-fly - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Musical Instrument"

Weaves the glory of the golden corn - Edward Burrough Brownlow "The Poet"

Blasphemous worship under roofs of gold - William Cullen Bryant "Hymn of the Waldenses"

Totems for the last city of gold - Christopher Buckley "Prayer To Escape The East"

Falling away in a hive of liquid gold - Sue Budin "Japanese Baskets"

In a hive of liquid gold - Sue Budin "Japanese Baskets"

Judged a spurious gold - Gerald Bullett "The Grudge"

Appear'd in one moment both golden and argent - Bulwer Lytton publishing as Owen Meredith "Lucile: Part I Canto II"

Behold them clad in Autumn's golden pomp - George W. Bungay "The Lesson of the Wood" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.1, Jan. 1864]

Golden hours on angel wings - Robert Burns "Highland Mary"

Held a golden cup and tasted rust - Witter Bynner "The New World III"

Far away, where the sheaves are golden - B.C. "Love Lights" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.10-v.I, 8 March 1884]

A song of seashells laced with gold - Cecilia Caballero "Octavia Said You Cannot Know How Deeply People Feel Their Ancestors"

The lighted candles lent their gold - Scott Cairns "Draw Near"

Jeweled gates swing open on their bands of gold - Howell Calhoun "The Lost Temples of Xantoos" [Weird Tales Oct. 1936]

The hoard of the morning's gold - F. O. Call "Hidden Treasure"

Captured the gold of the summer's day - Frank Oliver Call "Hidden Treasure"

While we drifted along in a golden dream - Frank Oliver Call "Hidden Treasure"

Drifted along in a golden dream - F. O. Call "Hidden Treasure"

They pay not toll of their gold or blood - Frank Oliver Call "The Indifferent Ones"

The young dawn's golden fire - F. O. Call "On a Swiss Mountain"

Spin my golden web in the sun - Joseph Campbell writing as Seosamh MacCathmhaoil "I Spin My Golden Web"

O'erlaid with vermilion, and blazoned with gold - Mrs. Juliet H.L. Campbell "The Prophet's Rebuke" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]

Will tread on the golden grass - Laura Campbell "Pilgrimage"

Thrashing the waves with fins of gold - Roy Campbell "The Porpoise"

A golden rocket trailing fire - Roy Campbell "The Porpoise"

Dimmed their tapers of gold - W. Wilfred Campbell "The Dryad"

Purple shut in gold - W. Wilfred Campbell "Phaethon"

Pearly foam from golden bridles - W. Wilfred Campbell "Phaethon"

With the golden flow of a brook - W. Wilfred Campbell "The Vengeance of Saki"

Earth's golden keys of happiness - W. Wilfred Campbell "Victoria"

Dropped a rose of gold - William Canton "Song"

In dazzling robes of silk and gold - Giosue Carducci "Carnival: Voice from Beneath" transl. by Frank Sewall

Veiled in the glow of the golden broom - Giosue Carducci "A Dream in Summer" transl. by Frank Sewall

Adder-tongues in coats of gold - Bliss Carman "The Deserted Pasture"

Desk and counter and rock-quarried gold - Edward Carpenter "The Angel of Death--and Life"

A golden shield of growing span - Edward Carpenter "Aphrodite"

To chase gold butterflies by green hedgerows - Edward Carpenter "The Great Peepshow"

Sorrows in her heart of gold - P.J. Carroll, C.S.C. "St. Patrick's Treasure"

And throw a golden bridge across - Phoebe Cary "Otway"

In tranquil gold concealed - Roger Casement "The Peak of the Cameroons"

Shoring gold at the core - Cyrus Cassells "Return to Florence"

Your dreams of golden roses - Ana Castillo "A Storm upon Us"

Golden prospects round us rise - John Castillo "The Country Love Feast"

That in a golden silence fall - Willa Cather "Autumn Melody"

Golden in every starry glade - Willa Cather "I Sought the Wood in Winter"

But what has become of Caesar's gold? - Willa Cather "The Palatine (In the 'Dark Ages')"

Gold enough to pave the way - Willa Cather "Provencal Legend"

Every golden star that passed - Willa Cather "The Star Dial"

My country's harp of gold - Ceiriog "The White Stone" transl. by Edmund O. Jones

Three golden hairs from the demon's head - Jennifer Chang "Obedience, or the Lying Tale"

Songs and laughter echo from the golden screens - Chang Wu-chien "The Poet and the Dancers" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

The golden beads of joy that once were mine - Thomas S. Chard "Across the Sea"

The shepherd sun upon his path of gold - Thomas S. Chard "The Seven Sleepers"

A golden boat rock onward to its changing destiny - Thomas S. Chard "The Seven Sleepers"

And recline on his golden door - Jos Charles "A Sonnet [I sat in windows]"

The pure golden message of your moon - Harindranath Chattopadhyaya "Worship"

How bright his golden laugh - Ken Chen "Cruel Cogito"

Red hells and golden heavens - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book III. The Harp of Alfred"

Dim green or torn with golden scars - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book IV. The Woman in the Forest"

God of gold and flaming glass - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book VI. Ethandune: The Slaying of the Chiefs"

A lark at the golden gate of the day - "A Child's Petition" [Happy Days for Boys and Girls, 1877]

Down from your mountains of emerald and gold - James G. Clark "Battle Invocation" [Beadle's Dime Union Song Book No.2 1861]

For nothing but to gather gold - "The Clearing of the Glens" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXIV, v.LXVII, Apr. 1850]

The golden tide of opportunity - Arthur Hugh Clough "Blank Misgivings of a Creature moving about in Worlds not realized"

The golden joys of fancy's dawning - Arthur Hugh Clough "The Silver Wedding"

Around us an atmosphere all gold - Arthur Hugh Clough "Χρυσέα κλῄς ἐπὶ γλώσσᾳ."

Sleep beneath a golden hill - Leonard Cohen "Avalanche"

Reach life's golden summit - Jamie Harris Coleman "Difficulties in Life"

Far better than honor or gold - Jamie Harris Coleman "Dove of Peace"

Far in the golden West - Jamie Harris Coleman "A Thought of Nature"

In letters of pure gold - Jamie Harris Coleman "To the Memory of Booker T. Washington"

Pledge me a cup of golden wine - Mary Coleridge "Wither Away?"

If no grey threads are in our gold - Arthur Colton "Heirs of Time"

Gold apples from the guarded trees - Arthur Colton "The Herb of Grace"

And the golden bowl is broken - Arthur Colton "Snow"

Golden hours we freely spent - Arthur Colton "Twenty Years Hence"

See the gold heart emerging - Arthur Colton "The Water-Lily"

Where the golden harvest bends - Arthur Colton "West-Easterly Moralities"

A little silt of golden things forgotten - Arthur Colton "Who May with the Shrewd Hours Strive?"

The light every shade of gold - Katie Condon "Big with Dawn"

Drop that golden spear - Hilda Conkling "Song for a Play"

Danced in the gold waters - Hilda Conkling "Theatre-Song"

That gold watch you dropped into hot coals - CAConrad "Home.3"

For the arrow was laden with gold - Eliza Cook "Cupid's Arrow"

Gold and crimson strew earth's gloomy floor - Mrs. Martha Walker Cook "Autumn Leaves" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.2, August 1863]

Summon gold and crimson, bright as dyed in blood - Mrs. Martha Walker Cook "Autumn Leaves" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.2, August 1863]

Ruby kindling, rippling fringed with molten gold - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds: Cumuli. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]

Safe seated in the golden haze - Susan Coolidge "Conqueror"

Folded in by golden noons - Susan Coolidge "A Portrait"

The future with its golden key - Susan Coolidge "Two Ways to Love. I"

When the roses in golden light peep - George Cooper "Little Home-Body" [Happy Days for Boys and Girls, 1877]

Who remain golden, but not upright - Giorgiomaria Cornelio "La specia storta (The Bent Species)" transl. by Moira Egan

Golden ladies come to dance - Frances Cornford "In France"

The whisper of gold, the story half told - Frank J. Cotter "The Land"

A cradle of gold on the bough of the willow - "The Cradle of Gold" transl. by Alfred Perceval Graves

Palisade wrenched gold of Nineveh - Hart Crane "Recitative"

Not your golden days nor your silver nights - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"

Where threads of gold the sun enweaves - Walter Crane "Queen Summer; Or, The Tourney of the Lily and the Rose"

Catching the light, spinning it into gold - James Crews "Here with You"

Embolden gold and sable leopards - George Cronyn "Dionysus Eleutherios: The Answer"

Where golden Ceres left her child - Rev. William Crowe "The Rape of Proserpine"

Gold and glamour of Life's lotus - Aleister Crowley "Tannhauser"

The golden night of mingling fire - Aleister Crowley "Tannhauser"

Golden bell pealing in the courts of dust - Countee Cullen "Epitaphs: For One Who Died Singing of Death"

The golden increment of bursting fruit - Countee Cullen "From the Dark Tower"

gold crescendo and silver muting - E. E. Cummings "Amores (VII)"

the gold year a formal spasm in the dust - E. E. Cummings "Amores (VIII)"

On a great horse of gold into the silver dawn - E. E. Cummings "Song (V)"

Four fleet does at a gold valley - E. E. Cummings "Songs (V)"

All the golden forests of the spheres - Olive Custance "Grief"

Sang at the sun's great golden doors - Olive Custance "The Prisoner of God"

Stoops to gather the golden flower of day - Olive Custance "The Storm"

The golden gloom of dreamland - Olive Custance "Twilight"

My hands keep the gold they took - H.D. "Evadne"

Gold apples set with silver apple-leaf - H.D. "Lais"

A king of blazing splendour and of gold - H.D. "Projector"

Amber husk fluted with gold - H.D. "Sea Poppies"

As with crackle of golden resin - H.D. "Toward the Piraeus"

The lost bee flies to die in golden broom - Danske Dandridge "A Question"

That war glazed their palms with gold - Kyle Dargan "The Robots are Coming"

Staunched their voices golden - John Davidson "Down-a-down"

Trespassed in a golden world - William H. Davies "Early Morn"

The gold and the precious silver of tradition - Kwame Dawes "New Year's Eve in Addis"

Gems among the gold and silver leaves - Rufus Dawes "Marriage" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.5, Nov. 1841]

Greedy the poison gold to seize - Juan Bautista de Arriaza "Tempest and War, or the Battle of Trafalgar. Ode" [Modern Poets and Poetry of Spain 1860 ed. and transl. by James Kennedy]

What's your gold compared with mine? - Walter de la Mare "The Midden's Song"

Their fleeces charged with gold - Walter de la Mare "Nod"

A costlier gift than gold - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Ever blessed be the day]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)

Golden slumbers kiss your eyes - Thomas Dekker "Golden Slumbers"

And filter down to pave a street with gold - Clarissa Scott Delany "Solace" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]

Gray ruin's golden crown - Delta "A Wild-Flower Garland: The Wall-Flower" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine no.CCCXX, v.LXVIII, Oct. 1850]

The gold in using wore away - Emily Dickinson "Book 1: Love XVII: The Wife"

A blue and gold mistake - Emily Dickinson "Book 1: Nature XXVII: Indian Summer"

Tossing their golden pebbles in the stream - Mrs. Elizabeth Dimond "Thoughts on Creation"

the golden age of gone traditions swept away - Caroline Dinh "City Girls"

Each flower lifts a golden chalice - Irving Sidney Dix "An Idyll of the Hills part 1: June"

Trace these scribbles of old gold - Rebecca Kai Dotlich "Room of Science"

An ivory lute with strings of gold - Lord Alfred Douglas "Two Loves"

From the gold throne of this midsummer day - Lord Alfred Douglas "Wine of Summer"

Golden reflections in the lake of vanished years - Lord Alfred Douglas "Wine of Summer"

Received a golden alms from you - Edward Dowden "Memorials of Travel VIII: On the Pier of Boulogne"

A zone of golden air - Edward Dowden "Windle-Straws"

Golden oriflames and tents of pearl - Eleanor Downing "The Pilgrim"

With one great shaft of molten gold - John William Draper "Carpe Diem"

A palace of vermeil fringed with gold - John William Draper "From a Grecian Myth"

The magic gold which from the seeker flies - Paul Laurence Dunbar "Ere Sleep Comes Down to Soothe the Weary Eyes" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]

Startle my garden pink and gold - Rebecca Dunham "Elegy for the Eleven: 4. The Mud Room"

Spreading in sheets of gold - Meghan Dunn "Ode to Butter"

Like gold we must be tried by fire - Toru Dutt "Savitri"

Sapphire and gold and mystery - George William Russell aka A.E. "Brotherhood"

Giving a gull a sack of gold - Cornelius Eady "God Could Not Make Her a Poet"

The golden arrowheads of wit - T.W. Earp "Our Lady of Light"

To a few golden hours diminished - Helen Parry Eden "A Prayer for St Innocent's Day"

The altar's weekday thrift of gold - Helen Parry Eden "'Sidera Sunt Testes Et Matutina Pruina'"

Though arrayed in gold and gems - William Hodgson Ellis "Consider the Lilies of the Field"

Grains beyond the price of gold - Ralph Waldo Emerson "May-Day"

Your gold makes you seem wise - Ralph Waldo Emerson "The Park"

Alone with the gold last light - Heid E. Erdich "Stung"

One shallow dish of eerie golden fire - John Erskine "Ash Wednesday"

Her screen was like a net of gold- The Ettrick Shepherd "May of the Moril Glen"

The golden ladders of tomorrow's sickly sun - Anthony Euwer "By Scarlet Torch and Blade"

For then my needles turn to gold - Anthony Euwer "The Tamarack"

Gold coins on cobblestone - Lupita Eyde-Tucker "Without Reparations"

Confessions extracted like gold - Lupita Eyde-Tucker "Without Reparations"

Whose shields bear bags of argent on a field of gold - "False Estimations" [The Continental Monthly v.3 no.3, March 1863]

And a golden band about my neck - anonymous? "The Famous Flower of Serving-Men"

Upon her head a crown of gold - anonymous? "The Famous Flower of Serving-Men"

The golden nectar of her daffodils - Eleanor Farjeon "Pan-Worship"

Count the cost of golden laughter - Eleanor Farjeon "Sonnet III"

Which never gold could buy - Eleanor Farjeon "Vagrant Songs III"

An odor of lavender, an odor of gold - Joseph Fasano "The Figure"

A masked bird fishing in a golden stream - Lawrence Ferlinghetti "A Coney Island of the Mind, 11"

A golden disc sipping from the surf - Beatriz F. Fernandez "The Time Tourist | El Turista del Tiempo"

Half-blinded by its golden rapture - Arthur Davison Ficke "Swinburne, an Elegy"

Dancing down the sunlight's gold - Arthur Davison Ficke "Ten Grotesques: VI. To an Outrageous Person"

Laughing hours, steeped in gold - Beulah Field "To June"

Nets of silver and gold - Eugene Field "Wynken, Blynken, and Nod"

Checked the tide with golden bars - Michael Field "Another Leadeth Thee"

The sun shoots in golden veins - Michael Field "The Depths of the Grass"

One of the leaves in the crown is gold - Annie Finch "A Mabon Crown"

That breaks in bubbles of gold - John Gould Fletcher "Fugitive Thoughts"

Gold fish far above the black arches - John Gould Fletcher "Green Symphony"

Irradiant ecstasies, white and gold - John Gould Fletcher "Irradiations"

Nesting on green waves in the gold sunlight - John Gould Fletcher "Sand and Spray: A Sea-Symphony"

Powder the zenith with green and gold - John Gould Fletcher "Sand and Spray: A Sea-Symphony"

Green, gold and incandescent whiteness - F.S. Flint "Lunch"

Shot his golden beams askance - "Flora: a Vision"

Death that extends itself with golden planks - Sandy Florian "Our Big City"

Golden in autumn's sweep and blossom - Jennifer Elise Foerster "Hvmken 2"

Gold and tempests hollow in the sand - Jennifer Elise Foerster "Sixteen Shadows 4"

Hours like dull gold - Jennifer Elise Foerster "Winter Watch"

Gold in a fortress beyond the border - John M. Ford "Troy: the Movie"

Water falling golden from the sun - John Freeman "The Body"

Ruby lilies, and roses of gold, and myrtle of amethyst - Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman "A Castle in Spain"

Who found a flower of gold and rubies - Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman "Down in the Clover"

With the gold of roses caught round his feet - Mary Eleanor Wilkins Freeman "The True and Last Story of Little Boy Blue"

Raw, gold coiling whirled against air - Carol Frost "The Part of the Bee's Body Embedded in the Flesh"

By tying together its hands of gold - Robert Frost "I Will Sing You One-O"

Nothing gold can stay - Robert Frost "Nothing Gold Can Stay"

Berries to thread in golden strands - Rose Fyleman "Alms in Autumn"

A cage of gossamer gold - Rose Fyleman "The Goblin to the Fairy Queen"

Prepares for gold array - Zona Gale "Ballade of Listening"

The air is purged of gold - Zona Gale "Exercise in Spenserians"

The molten golden javelins of the sun - Zona Gale "Exercise in Spenserians"

The leaves of Spring turn gold - Zona Gale "Half Thought"

With many red and golden fluttering things - Zona Gale "Ballade of Old Perfumes"

When first the dice of gold upon the board did run - "The Game of Dice" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

And I will wager my golden crown - "The Game of Dice" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

In gold and russet bright arrayed - Linda Gardiner "Long Ago" [Chamber's Journal of Popular Literature, Science and Art, 5th series, no.52--v.I, 27 Dec. 1884]

The slanted gold bars of the day - Suzanne Gardinier "Gapped Sonnet"

With treasures of silver, and treasures of gold - Ellen M.H. Gates "Rich and Poor" [Happy Days for Boys and Girls, 1877]

Gold raised the sword midst kith and kin - John Gay "Fable VI: Miser and Plutus" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]

Gold from empty bags in torrents rolled - John Gay "Fable XLII: Juggler and Vice" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]

Gold can the frowns of scorn remove - Mr. Gay "Song [The sun was sunk beneath the hills]" [The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.13, no.364, 4 April 1829]

Orange, and red, all fringed with golden light - Ilsien Nathalie Gaylord "The Fairies' Ball"

Barren of bliss and robbed of golden cheer - Sri Aurobindo Ghose "Bunkim Chandra Chatterji"

Bewildered in a glittering golden maze - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Gorse"

Golden maze of stinging scented fire - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Gorse"

Who swallowed a golden forest - Nikita Gill "After the Visit"

Nor the noonday's golden grace - Alice E. Gillington "The Seven Whistlers"

If the stars be gold or gray - Ellen Glasgow "Reunion"

The golden wall-flower stood like seneschal - Julia Goddard "The Deserted Garden" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.718, 29 Sept. 1877]

Gold, the cursed cause of all - "The Gold-Finder" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXXIX, v.LXXI, May 1852]

I die of want upon a bed of gold - "The Gold-Finder" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXXIX, v.LXXI, May 1852]

Sips tea made from flakes of gold - Rigoberto Gonzalez "In the Village of Missing Fathers"

The coarsest ore a golden mine - "Good-Humor" [Happy Days for Boys and Girls, 1877]

With the golden ether blended - Adam Lindsay Gordon "Ye Wearie Wayfarer, hys Ballad In Eight Fyttes"

Hurt my arms with their golden weight - Theodora Goss "The Princess and the Frog"

Golden and phantom-pale they lay - Edmund Gosse "On Yes Tor"

Golden light to make a flight of dreams - Mona Gould "Sherry"

Golden sunshine driving back the night - Herbert H. Gowen "What the Wise Men Saw"

Glittering walks of gems and gold - Miss H.E. Grannis "The Lifted Veil"

The brass and gold skeletons are exhumed - Preston Grassmann "The Doors of a Drowned City"

The brass and gold come to life in her hands - Preston Grassmann "The Doors of a Drowned City"

October's gold is dim - David Gray "Sonnet"

Reddening Phoebus lifts his golden fire - Thomas Gray "On the Death of Richard West"

And the golden bowl was broken - Russell Green "De Mundo"

And the golden bowl is shattered - Miss Mattie Griffith "The Deserted"

Crimson or gold dropping away - Angelina Weld Grimké "The Eyes of My Regret"

A hint of gold where the moon will be - Angelina Weld Grimké "The Want of You"

Turned from the splendor of silver and gold - Edgar A. Guest "Looking Back"

Any witch's youngest daughter golden and bold - Marilyn Hacker "Iva's Pantoum"

After making three millions in gold - Tom Hall "Why he asked for a Vacation"

To bind a fox's throat with a gold bell - Joy Harjo "Becoming Seventy"

Pieces of gold confetti - Joy Harjo "Becoming Seventy"

No golden weights can turn the scale - Frances E.W. Harper "A Double Standard"

Vineyards that drink the golden light - Frances E.W. Harper "Go Work in My Vineyard"

New wealth to his golden store - Frances E.W. Harper "Going East"

Gold can rip up the ground beneath you - francine j. harris "Burden, old story"

Talons stretched over gold proportion - francine j. harris "Oregon Trail, Missouri"

For one golden memory - Patrick Joseph Hartigan writing as John O'Brien "The Parting Rosary"

When fairies brought me golden dreams - Patrick Joseph Hartigan writing as John O'Brien "St. Patrick's Day"

Some lambient world of green and gold - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat II"

Moments drift on golden clouds - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat XII"

Through golden temples, portals red - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat XL"

Whose book of life reads blood and gold - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat LV"

A magic tissue of transparent gold - Mary Cornelia Hartshorne "The Poet"

However gold the weather - F.W. Harvey "Delights"

Glory is a golden snake around Life's tree - F.W. Harvey "The Golden Snake"

Robed in moonlight's ancient gold - F.W. Harvey "Lassington"

Ringed round with golden weather - F.W. Harvey "The Stranger"

The sun begins to build its house of gold - Margaret Hasse "Art"

Now I see the golden towers - Frances Ridley Havergal "The Welcome to the King"

When the red and golden leaves have fallen on my sorrow - Donald Jeffrey Hayes "Auf Wiedersehen" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]

A golden pallor of voluptuous light - Paul H. Hayne "The Mocking-Bird" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.22, July 1878]

The riverbed's washed dream of gold - Seamus Heaney "Come to the Bower"

Colloquies of bronze and russet and gold - William Ernest Henley "Hawthorn and Lavender: Praeludium"

Dispersed in wafts and drifts of gold - William Ernest Henley "London Voluntaries"

Gloriously vaporised, visioned in gold - William Ernest Henley "Rhymes and Rhythms"

That Gift of Gold to him denied - Oliver Herford "To My Toy Canary"

There offered up his golden heart - Mary E. Hewitt "The Hearth of Home"

Gold coins raining down on her - Mary Hickman "Everything Is Autobiography and Everything Is a Portrait"

The mystic assignation the golden throat of light - Tiffany Higgins "Dance, Dance, While the Hive Collapses" [Poetry Jan. 2016]

A golden bomb bursts the glow'ring sky - Jennie Earngey Hill "Nature's Game"

With golden wheat or bearded rye - Leslie Pickney Hill "Summer Magic"

And golden stars bring peace at night - Mrs. E. Annette Hills "A Little Girl's Wedding Gift" [Our Young Folks at Home and Abroad (ed. by Daphne Dale), 1894]

Kite now a little higher on gold air - Jane Hirshfield "A Sweetening All Around Me as It Falls"

The pendant gold of necklaced summer - Jane Hirshfield "A Sweetening All Around Me as It Falls"

A shadow under gold streaks - Millie Ho "Beasts of New France"

And he is crowned with the red, red gold - "Holger Danske and Stout Didrik" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

To meet its golden coming - J.G. Holland "Kathrina Part 1: Childhood and Youth"

An enormous golden lion calm and sleeping - Bill Holm "Wedding Poem For Schele and Phil"

Clasped by the golden light - Thomas Hood "Ruth"

In his golden greeting no least alloy - E.W. Hornung "The Ballad of Ensign Joy"

Golden sunshine's nursing power - William H.C. Hosmer "Impromptu: Written on Receiving a Rose-Bud from a Lady"

With golden death was crowned - William Dean Howells "Pleasure-Pain"

Candles drowning in gold - Yong-Yu Huang "City Lights as Myth"

Had such store of golden tones - Richard Hughes "Vagrancy"

Dropped his golden scythe there in that field of stars - Victor Hugo "Boaz Asleep" transl. not credited

With golden dyes are glowing all around - "The Hunt Is Up"

Noonday golds and shadows - Ellen MacKay Hutchinson "June"

The poet's mind boils gold and amethyst - Aldous Huxley "The Garden"

The gold serenity of western skies - Aldous Huxley "Mole"

The lamps round pool of gold - Aldous Huxley "Scenes of the Mind"

An anguish of evening gold - Aldous Huxley "Song of Poplars"

Happy in the golden march of sunlight - Aldous Huxley "Song of Poplars"

In the golden march of sunlight - Aldous Huxley "Song of Poplars"

Golden instants in the deep - Aldous Huxley "Summer Stillness"

Whose chariot roll'd on wheels of amber and of gold - "Hymn [I praised the earth, in beauty seen]" [The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.12, no.333, 27 Sept. 1828]

{a cool drink of sorrow} {laced with gold} - fahima ife "thirst is a way of knowing, not knowing"

A little gold will buy me - Jean Ingelow "The Dreams that Came True"

Golden radiance from boughs of dusk - Scharmel Iris "Fantasy of Dusk and Dawn"

The apple of gold will teach him a song - Scharmel Iris "Three Apples" [The Little Review Nov. 1914 (v.1, no.8)]

Lifted my voice through a trumpet of gold - "IV: Mexica Otoncuicatl | An Otomi Song of the Mexicans" transl. from Nahuatl by Daniel G. Brinton

gold against the mica sky - Didi Jackson "Fall"

Golden gates to an unforeseen heaven - Major Jackson "Language of the Moon"

The golden sunflowers ranged their faces to the west - Violet Jacob "The Little Dragon"

Studded with three nails of burning gold - Robinson Jeffers "Wonder and Joy"

Wheeling ourselves golden - Amaud Jamaul Johnson "This Bitter Earth"

Nuggets of gold are her acres - Emily Pauline Johnson "Brandon"

And your heart is my golden coronet - Emily Pauline Johnson "Lady Lorgnette"

The hush of the golden moon - Emily Pauline Johnson "The Lost Lagoon"

Golden grain will greet the morning - Fenton Johnson "The New Day"

When we count out our gold at the end - Georgia Douglas Johnson "Service" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]

Wring from grasping hands their meed of gold - Helene Johnson "Sonnet to a Negro in Harlem"

Deepening in purple, flaming in gold - James Weldon Johnson "Down by the Carib Sea"

Chanters of the gold and purple harvest - James Weldon Johnson "A Poet to His Baby Son"

The gold lilies and their shadows - Kate Knapp Johnson "Parker's Mountain"

Apples of ashes, golden bright - Lionel Johnson "The Dark Angel"

And wound the golden air - Lionel Johnson "Enthusiasts"

Golden music is among the corn - Lionel Johnson "Harvest"

Whose golden silences are stirred - Annie Fellows Johnston "Bob White"

A hoard of gold it bore along - Annie Fellows Johnston "It Was the Road to Jericho"

golden butterfly against the cave-dark - Ashley M. Jones "Lullaby for the Grieving"

Framed in a sky of gold - Joshua Henry Jones, Jr. "I Saw You"

Shading into sky of gold - Joshua Henry Jones, Jr. "In Summer Twilight"

The circle of wolves blinking gold - Saeed Jones "Last Portrait as Boy"

Every empty hour is wrought of gold - Thomas S. Jones, Jr. "As a Still Brook"

The golden bowl with its glowing fire - Thomas S. Jones, Jr. "A Song of Life"

A gold medallion for her suffering - June Jordan "Poems for One Little Girl Blue"

All those veils of grey and golden gossamer - James Joyce "Chamber Music: XV"

Pure water from their golden urns - Kalidasa "The Birth of the War-God: Canto Seventh: Uma's Bridal" transl. by Ralph T.H. Griffith

The gold of many a tinkling bell - Kalidasa "The Birth of the War-God: Canto Seventh: Uma's Bridal" transl. by Ralph T.H. Griffith

My yellow gun still humming with golden bees - Raimo Kangasniemi "October 2026: The End of the Picnic"

Fingers burning into straw, into gold - Sandra Kasturi "Carnaval Perpetuel"

The gold larvae may be clues - Janet Kauffman "No Answering at this Time"

Black stuff and blue, gold and green - Janet Kauffman "The Whirlwind Times"

Tomorrow's gold belled pipe - Bob Kaufman "Walking Parker Home"

With universal tinge of sober gold - John Keats "Endymion, Book I [A thing of beauty is a joy for ever]"

Great key to golden palaces - John Keats "Endymion, Book I [A thing of beauty is a joy for ever]"

There must be a golden victory - John Keats "Hyperion"

Upon the gold clouds metropolitan - John Keats "Hyperion"

Bastion'd with pyramids of glowing gold - John Keats "Hyperion"

Traveled in the realms of gold - John Keats "On First Looking into Chapman's Homer"

On the golden margin that binds the silver sea - Fanny Kemble "Fragment [Walking by moonlight on the golden margin]"

Your golden lie of Tir-na-n'Og - T.M. Kettle "Dedication Sonnet to My Wife"

Who husbanded the Golden Grain - Omar Khayyam "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" transl. by Edward Fitzgerald (First Edition)

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

A golden chain of rhythm - Joyce Kilmer "Thurifer"

If the shadow is golden - Rosamond S. King "Breathe. As in. (shadow)"

His mast of beaten gold - Charles Kingsley "Earl Haldan's Daughter"

Sweep the golden reed beds - Charles Kingsley "Ode to the Northeast Wind"

Till golden Phoebus should restore his splendor - Mrs. E.C. Kinney "Ode to the Moon" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]

The morning sun with its golden tassels - Christopher Kondrich "Clearing"

The sunlit waters gleaming golden at their feet - J.I.L. "The Old Home" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.746, 13 April 1878]

Which turns the liquid air to gold - L.E.L. "The Skylark"

The earth's gold breath falling softly - Danusha Lameris "Dust"

Golden honey daubed on the bread of the ordinary - Alfred K. LaMotte "Gentle"

In gold and shadow spun - Archibald Lampman "Among the Timothy"

A smile as golden as the dawn - Archibald Lampman "Comfort of the Fields"

And the curse of gold was dead - Archibald Lampman "The Land of Pallas"

Whose griefs were written up in gold - Archibald Lampman "The Moon-Path"

A song among the golden reeds - Archibald Lampman "The Return of the Year"

Ready for the golden news - Archibald Lampman "The Song Sparrow"

From the vintage of gold and of light - Archibald Lampman "The Sun Cup"

With violet and vastness and gold - Archibald Lampman "The Sun Cup"

In the gold sun's might - Archibald Lampman "Three Flower Petals"

A glamour soft with gold - Archibald Lampman "A Vision of Twilight"

Give the simple poet gold - Archibald Lampman "What Do Poets Want with Gold?"

The gold of all the forests - Archibald Lampman "Winter Hues Recalled"

Shall glimmer with living gold - Archibald Lampman "The Woodcutter's Hut"

coiled around perfect circles and golden rectangles - Jessica Langer "Chaos"

In amber shades of many a golden spray - Sidney Lanier "The Bee" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, Oct. 1877 v.XX no.118]

At beckoning of Trade's golden rod - Sidney Lanier "The Symphony" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, June 1875, v.XV]

Turned bright gold and left - Joan Larkin "Afterlife"

Gold in the sun, dark when it fails - Rose Hawthorne Lathrop "Inlet and Shore"

A flaming torch thrown to the golden sea - Rose Hawthorne Lathrop "A Song Before Grief"

With gold throat of wrath - D.H. Lawrence "Hibiscus and Salvia Flowers"

Brimstone-molten angry gold - D.H. Lawrence "Hibiscus and Salvia Flowers"

The golden horns of power - D.H. Lawrence "St Luke"

Dissolved on the golden sorcery you should not outlast - D.H. Lawrence "Scent of Irises"

And kindled you over deep with a cast of gold - D.H. Lawrence "Scent of Irises"

Oh Danaë to this spring of cosmic gold - D.H. Lawrence "Tommies in the Train"

To unlock the golden gates of sunset - Emma Lazarus "By the Waters of Babylon"

Blossoms of gold and blossoms of blood - Emma Lazarus "By the Waters of Babylon"

Open unseen gates with key of gold - Emma Lazarus "City Visions"

Fretted with burning stones, and trellised with red gold - Emma Lazarus "Fog"

Longings and golden dreams to bring - Emma Lazarus "A March Violet" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.15, no.88, April 1875]

Orchards burn their lamps of fiery gold - Emma Lazarus "The New Year"

The gold of his burning dreams - Richard Le Gallienne "Faery Gold (To Mrs. Percy Dearmer)"

Three golden tulips spouting flame - Richard Le Gallienne "Faery Gold (To Mrs. Percy Dearmer)"

Blowing to flame the golden cup - Frances Ledwidge "Thomas MacDonagh"

Tossed aside the golden sheaf - Ida Lee "Suffolk"

Kiss the marble and the gold - Eugene Lee-Hamilton "A Pageant of Siena"

The pleasures that gold can procure - Henry S. Leigh "Anticipations"

A common thing to turn to gold when one is able - Henry S. Leigh "Midas"

All gleams in glory's golden light - Charles G. Leland "Thank God for All" [The Continental Monthly v.II no.VI, Dec. 1862]

Calm us then under a gold sky - Philip Levine "Breath"

My high thoughts, and my golden dreams - Amy Levy "Xantippe"

Raised his riding-crop in golden greeting - Li Po "The Encounter" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

Traded the golden tortoise for wine - Li Po "Facing Wine with Memories of Lord Ho" transl. by Burton Watson

Then climb into the golden saddle - Li Po "In Reply When Lesser Officials of Chung-tu Brought a Pot of Wine and Two Fish to My Inn as Gifts" transl. by Burton Watson

Let the golden cups never stand empty - Li Po "Let Us Drink Wine" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

Trembled upon a border of gold and earth - Paulin Lim "Last Wish of Tithonus"

Ten gold suns in California - Vachel Lindsay "The Golden Whales of California"

Harnessed with golden seaweeds - Vachel Lindsay "The Golden Whales of California"

Darting golden through the night - Emily O. Liu "[Time Wrinkles]"

The golden pomegranates of Eden - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow "Sandalphon"

Bind on your helms of the burning gold - "Lovel and John" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

The birthplace of jewels and gold - Samuel Lover "The Fairy Tempter"

His promise of gold and of pearl - Samuel Lover "The Fairy Tempter"

Rose and gold arabesqued with the song of birds - Amy Lowell "Azure and Gold"

Under the eye of a golden moon - Amy Lowell "Clear, with Light Variable Winds"

With silver steps and paths of gold - Amy Lowell "The Coal Picker"

A city whose windows flame gold - Amy Lowell "The Way"

Quaint grace in golden filigree - James Russell Lowell "Fitz Adam's Story"

Where Shakspeare buried gold - James Russell Lowell "Out of Doors"

And gold rings for my hand - James Russell Lowell "The Singing Leaves"

And a gold comb for my head - James Russell Lowell "The Singing Leaves"

Dim shone the golden crown - James Russell Lowell "The Singing Leaves"

His country less than gold - Henry Lushington "To the Memory of Pietro d'Alessandro"

Who leaves golden footprints in the marsh - Alessandra Lynch "[The lamp is like a capsized ship]: Two Voices Muse over the Speaker"

Intend to turn to gold myself - Thomas Lynch "A Note on the Rapture to His True Love"

They turn to gold and vanish - Thomas Lynch "A Note on the Rapture to His True Love"

Threw down our golden citadel - Sidney Royse Lysaght "First Horizons"

Diamond sceptre and golden throne - Denis Florence MacCarthy "A Lament"

Send a golden harvest up the air - George MacDonald "A Hidden Life"

A ring of the gold so bright - Charles Mackay "The Kelpie of Corrievreckan"

A city framed of rose and gold - Isabel Ecclestone Mackay "The Gatekeeper"

Green shadow in a golden net - Isabel Ecclestone Mackay "Spring in Nazareth"

Rimming the dark with golden coins - Percy MacKaye "Fight: The Tale of a Gunner at Plattsburgh"

One ceaseless shower of gold - Dorothea Mackellar "Burning Off"

The hot gold hush of noon - Dorothea Mackellar "My Country"

With the stars' great golden choir - Dorothea Mackellar "Settlers"

Where the golden and green intertwine - Mrs Elizabeth A (MacQueen) MacLeod "Sieur de Maisonneuve, or The Founding of Montreal"

Flowing o'er the chords of gold - Donnchad Ruadh MacNamara, c.1730 "The Fair Hills of Eire" transl. by George Sigerson

Makes golden moments swiftly glide - Arthur Macy "At Marliave's"

Golden summer dreams in mid-December - Naomi Long Madgett "The Time Is Now"

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

Memory's golden gate - Trebor Mai "The Shepherd's Love" transl. by Edmund O. Jones

When the sun spreads wings of gold - Trebor Mai "The Shepherd's Love" transl. by Edmund O. Jones

The golden brilliance of the stars - Jaime Manrique "The Sky Over My Mother's House" transl. by Edith Grossman

This cup of golden love dream-deep - Jeannette Marks "Beside the Way"

Earth's golden bonnet of the day - Jeannette Marks "Blind Sleep"

Sprinkles darkness with his gold - Jeannette Marks "Calendar"

With gold dashed on their lips - Jeannette Marks "Calendar"

Some waste of gold in autumn - Jeannette Marks "Calendar"

Has neither rose nor red nor gold - Jeannette Marks "Calendar"

Much bannered gold - Jeannette Marks "Calendar"

Begins and ends in gold - Jeannette Marks "Calendar"

See its golden deep of sand - Jeannette Marks "Even as Here"

Green golden door, swing in - Jeannette Marks "Green Golden Door"

A mountain peak with its one gold star - Jeannette Marks "Last Dawn"

My dreams of gold and ivory - Jeannette Marks "Gold and Ivory"

And the dust upon our hair was gold - Jeannette Marks "The Railroad Station"

Tell your golden tale - Jeannette Marks "Ravello"

Sit within a golden field - Jeannette Marks "Stars"

Your youth upon its golden way - Jeannette Marks "Sun-Path"

No gold of autumn grasses - Jeannette Marks "White Hair"

Here the golden song of thrush - Jeannette Marks "White Paths"

Beating upon the stars with my gold - Jeannette Marks "Wild Grape Vine"

False gods of gold and steel - Don Marquis "The Child and the Mill"

Spendthrift of the seasons' gold - Don Marquis "October"

The golden harvest of their praise - George Martin "Eudora"

Shaped an Era's golden height - George Martin "Shelley"

Who sold celestial rights for earthly gold - "Martin Luther" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXLV, v.LVI, July 1844]

Blazoned our confinement gold with fire - Harry Martinson "Aniara 48" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg

All golden things cast into summer's grave - Harry Martinson "Aniara 49: The Blind Woman" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg

A beautiful gold leaf upon a choice branch - Harry Martinson "Aniara 51" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg

Who made their pence of gold - John Masefield "Esther"

The golden birds became a fire - John Masefield "Fragments"

A silver call that had a chain of gold - John Masefield "An Old Song Re-Sung"

Stripped of all the golden lies - John Masefield "Truth"

From a golden incense burned in Paradise - John Masefield "Vision"

Under the golden eagle of the empire - Myron L. Mason "Zenobia" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

No heaven of golden air - Edgar Lee Masters "The Landscape"

A lily crowned with powdered gold - Edgar Lee Masters "Victor Rafolski on Art"

The gold from my blood - Pages Matam "Spoiled Child"

Where all gold starts - Louise Mathias "What If the Invader Is Beautiful"

Survey the conquered golden plains - Thomas Mathison "The Goff"

Spices, fine linen, and cloth of gold - Laurens Maynard "Ave Post Saecula"

What glamour of forgotten gold - Theodore Maynard "The Glory of the Oriflamme"

In the sunset's lucid gold - Theodore Maynard "A Reply"

Imperial in purple, gold and blood - Theodore Maynard "The Return"

Velvet stiff with gold device - Theodore Maynard "The Ships"

Serenely through the golden gate - Theodore Maynard "The Ships"

Plundered of her gold by pirate Fate - Theodore Maynard "The Ships"

To gather shame and gold - Theodore Maynard "The Tramp"

All gold and true inside my head - John McCarthy "Pickup Truck"

Bringing home the golden sheaves - John McCrae "The Harvest of the Sea"

When gold can give it aid - James E. McGirt "A Test of Love"

Golden moment rare like wine - Claude McKay "The City's Love"

Sweet with the golden threads - Claude McKay "Flame-Heart"

To be a country's golden terror - Rachel McKibbens "Remember the Boys"

A golden bowl carefully repaired - Maureen N. McLane "What I'm Looking For"

To Midas lent the fatal gift of gold - J. Fairfax McLaughlin writing as Pasquino "The American Cyclops, the Hero of New Orleans, and Spoiler of Silver Spoons"

As golden rain in the singing grass - Louis J. McQuilland "Gladys in the Woodland"

The gold that our fancy had spun - Louis J. McQuilland "The Lost Land"

Gold of woeful fields and towns - George Meredith "The Nuptials of Attila"

Their red and golden physique of sly heat - Joanne Merriam "First Contact"

The gold outline the bird left behind - Joanne Merriam "No Words"

Stormful shadows against the gold - Helen M. Merrill "The Promise of Spring"

Uplands where gold violets grow - Helen M. Merrill "Sun-Gold"

Three broad bits of lucky gold - Alice Meynell "The Joyous Wanderer"

But greatly and in gold - Alice Meynell "Lord, I Owe Thee a Death"

The dying of the golden and the grey - Alice Meynell "Parentage"

Keep your golden hour - Alice Meynell "Your Own Fair Youth"

The golden vessel of great song - Edna St. Vincent Millay sonnet II from Second April

No gracious weight of golden fruits - Edna St Vincent Millay "Eight Sonnets: III"

Down the gold tipped September elms - Matt W. Miller "Far Away"

A golden plinth for sky - Claire Millikin "The Mannequins"

Here is a host of Golden Lads - Ruth Comfort Mitchell "November Eleventh"

That play at golden games - Ruth Comfort Mitchell "November Eleventh"

To seize the sunlight's liberal gold - S. Weir Mitchell "The Marsh" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.20, Aug. 1877]

Shine in beaten gold and glory - N. Scott Momaday "Death Comes for Beowulf"

Wrought your baser dross to bars of golden thought - George L. Moore "Keats"

Whose armour shone like gold - anonymous? "The More Modern Ballad of Chevy-Chase"

Golden beads on lips of wisdom hung - Henry Morford "The Children in the Wood" [The Continental Monthly v.2 no.3, Sept. 1862]

Love's golden chain and burning vow - George P. Morris "I Never Have Been False to Thee" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.5, Nov. 1841]

The key of the happy golden land - William Morris "The Blue Closet"

A path of gold on stones worn grey - K. Mounsey "To a Little House in Oxford"

Stunned by gold - Simone Muench "Wolf Centos"

While all the leaves leak gold - Simone Muench "Wolf Centos"

Gold Filings in an Amber Box - "Mundus Foppensis" [PG lists 'Dubious author: John Evelyn"]

This charging late gold in summer - Miguel Murphy "August"

A golden storm of glittering sheaves - Sarojini Naidu "Autumn Song"

Grind them in mortars of amber and gold - Sarojini Naidu "In Praise of Henna"

Morning sows her tents of gold on fields of ivory - Sarojini Naidu "Indian Love-Song"

Let the golden rivers flow - Francis Neilson "Fortune, You Have Naught I Need"

Golden fires consumed dawn's keep - Francis Neilson "When You Were Born"

In gold whiskey and soap - Maggie Nelson "Vallejo"

The day and its family of gold - Pablo Neruda "Alliance (Sonata)" translated by Donald D. Walsh

A gold capsule in the foliage - Pablo Neruda "Appointment with Winter" transl. by Alastair Reid

Made golden by gunpowder - Pablo Neruda "Battle of the Jarama River" translated by Richard Schaaf

Light dancers of gold and air - Pablo Neruda "Caribbean Birds" transl. by Miguel Algarin

Until I reach the jaws of gold - Pablo Neruda "Elegy" transl. by Jack Schmitt

In your gold laughter and your crystal voice - Pablo Neruda "Farewell and Sobs: Love" translated by Ilan Stavans

Golden tongue nourished on thirst - Pablo Neruda "Furies and Sorrows" translated by Donald D. Walsh

With a thousand small golden hands - Pablo Neruda "History" transl. by Dennis Maloney

Its geography of duplicated gold - Pablo Neruda "Little America" transl. by Donald D. Walsh

Summer in a church of gold - Pablo Neruda "Morning XXVII" transl. by Mark Eisner

Illuminating golden geometry's papers - Pablo Neruda "Paraguay" transl. by Jack Schmitt

A golden claw separates her from her lovers - Pablo Neruda "Puerto Rico, Puerto Pobre [Song of Protest]" transl. by Miguel Algarin

The harsh dew of your golden earth - Pablo Neruda "Song on the Death and Resurrection of Luis Companys" translated by Donald D. Walsh

Last bright relic of the moon's full gold - E. Nesbit "[The last bright relic of the moon's full gold]"

The golden steep straight sunbeam-stair - E. Nesbit "To a Child (Rosamund)"

Dressed the honeysuckle in fringe of gold - E. Nesbit "To a Child (Rosamund)"

The taste of thin gold shielding cold brass - Mari Ness "Snowmelt"

Cutting every gold thing I find - Caroline Harper New "The Archaeology Magazine"

A small chandelier fostering a golden air - Grace Nichols "Ode to a Daffodil"

Whose walls are glass, whose gates are gold - Robert Nichols "A Faun's Holiday"

Made out of rainbows and gold - Sarah Noble-Ives "The Butterfly"

Of golden melody and lofty grace - Yone Noguchi "Upon the Heights"

Cracked gold on fire - Alice Notley "Individual Time"

Gnomes in rusty red and gold - Alfred Noyes "Linnaeus"

Paid for his dreams with gold - Alfred Noyes "A Tale of Old Japan"

A vessel of golden hope - Naomi Shihab Nye "Elementary"

Sovereign of the golden lyre - "Ode: The Birth of Poesy"

Strung across with golden wires - "Ode: The Birth of Poesy"

The golden hours of promise - Thomas O'Hagan "The Song My Mother Sings"

Put on your charm of gold - "Old May Song"

The melting that gold requires - Jose Olivarez "Mexican Heaven"

Kissing me with its golden mouth - Mary Oliver "I don't want to live a small life"

Instead of being locked up in gold - Mary Oliver "This World"

Burns like a pillar of gold - Mary Oliver "Where Does the Dance Begin, Where Does It End?"

Golden snares on the tide - James Oppenheim "Self"

Like a noose of golden shadow - James Oppenheim "We Dead"

The sighs that follow him up the golden stair - "Oration on Charles Sumner, Addressed to Colored People"

Treasure every eloquent ray of golden light - Frances S. Osgood "A Farewell to a Happy Day" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

close by each golden tent a golden torch - Jacqueline Osherow "Inspiration Point, Bryce Canyon, Utah"

ecstatic ovations from thick stands of golden birch - Jacqueline Osherow "Inspiration Point, Bryce Canyon, Utah"

Went dancing back to the age of gold - Seumas O'Sullivan "A Piper"

To every weaver one golden strand - John Oxenham "Weavers All"

Gold and silver freckles burning five-pointed holes into the bone - Mayra Paris "New York, 2009"

Golden with the dust of wings - Dorothy Parker "Hearthside"

Ring sweet as a chime of gold - Dorothy Parker "Love Song"

With garments more gold than gray - Amy Parkinson "The Messenger Hours"

A place of unimagined reds and golds - Linda Pastan "All Nights"

Into stacks of inflammable gold - Linda Pastan "The Poets"

Sweet slumber's mistland gold and gray - Paul Pastnor "Little Boy Blue" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.22, Oct. 1878]

The glad sun in his mail of gold - John Payne "Chant Royal of the God of Love"

Their glories, scarlet-stained and golden - Josephine Preston Peabody "Canticle of the Babe"

Golden windows gazing from the shore - Josephine Preston Peabody "Rich Man, Poor Man"

His seven horns of clear gold glowing - "The Pearl" transl. by Sophie Jewett

A new allotment promised shining heaps of gold - "The Penitent Free-Trader" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no. CCCXV, v.LXVII, May 1850]

A boundless future sweeps in golden day - J.G. Percival "Life: a Sonnet" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]

In another kind of gold - Walter S. Percy "The Boy Millionaire"

With reflected gold and grace - Walter S. Percy "Two Frames"

A lungful of gold I can keep - Kiki Petrosino "Confession"

That pool of slow gold scraped down - Kiki Petrosino "Happiness"

She multiplies in gold - Kiki Petrosino "Sermon"

Let her multiply in gold - Kiki Petrosino "Sermon"

Through golden tamaracks in autumn - Rosalie Sanara Petrouske "True North"

Scatters her golden lustre far and wide - Philo "The Tribute"

And knowledge still extends the golden chain - Philo "The Tribute"

Each twig a chain of gold - Lydia Jane Pierson "A Winter Scene"

A tongue of gold parsing the dust motes - Rachel Pittman "The Quickening"

The hounds that hunt on the Scent of Gold - Frank L. Pollock "The Trail of Gold"

My hopes are as gold in my pathway - Annie Porter "Selim" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.20, Dec. 1877]

For the warmth of winter gold - Andrea Potos "Crocheting in December"

I've ruined completely my suit of gold - Miriam Clark Potter "Blundering Benjamin Bumble Bee"

A glint of gold from the evening sky - Miriam Clark Potter "How Sleep Was Made"

And toss a golden comet for a ball - Miriam Clark Potter "Rocking Song"

Full of faint light but golden - Ezra Pound "The Coming of War: Actaeon"

Dominion in a golden age - D.A. Powell "To Last"

Tells a golden story of the transfigured west - Horatio Nelson Powers "Delectatio Piscatoria" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.26, Sept. 1880]

A luminous spiral, a golden basket - Rena Priest "Tour of a Salmonberry"

Dreamy days of golden hours - C.I. Pringle "The Last Year" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.121-v.III, 24 April 1886]

My golden-belted bees - May Probyn "The Bees of Myddleton Manor"

Transfigured in the golden mist of love - Anne Proctor "Verse: A Legend of Provence"

With a nobler price than gold - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Verse: My Will"

Through gold rents torn in a violet sky - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Verse: My Picture Gallery"

The golden chain of my love - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Verse: The Tyrant and the Captive"

The dolphins bared their backs of gold - Bryan Waller Proctor (Barry Cornwall) "A Song of the Sea"

Golden shuttles flung by spirit hands - Ita Aniol Prokop "Gold" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.XII, no.29, Aug. 1873]

Envied none their gold from labor torn - Ita Aniol Prokop "Gold" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.XII, no.29, Aug. 1873]

Golden tales of endless treasure - Francis Quarles "The World's Fallacies"

Hoisted up their sails of silk all on the golden mast - "Queen Dagmar's Bridal, 1205" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

Etch your departing silhouette in gold - Khadijah Queen "Declination"

Amber hardened into gold - Noel Quiñones "Orange"

Gold tricking mortals, mortals tricking gods - Noel Quiñones "Orange"

Each within a golden shroud - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "A Mountain Path"

Golden coins from out the blue - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "Rustic Courting XXII: Primrose Flowers"

A sapphire in the golden day - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "Silent Places"

Has poured its living gold - Theodore H. Rand "At Minas Basin"

In the eye of golden Day - Theodore H. Rand "The Dragonfly"

Half-full of heaven's gold - Theodore H. Rand "In City Streets"

These workers of the golden straw - Theodore H. Rand "Marie Depure"

Golden and replaceable - Julian Randall "The King Is Dead, Long Live the King"

Let fall his brimming cup of gold - T. Buchanan Read "A Christmas Hymn" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.15, no.85, Jan. 1875]

A duplicated golden glow - T. Buchanan Read "Drifting"

She walks amid the golden fields of Time - Thomas Buchanan Read "Lines, Suggested by Rogers' Statue of Ruth"

Until the gold ran rich and thick into jars - Paisley Rekdal "Psalm"

Brood beneath the golden stars - Agnes Repplier "Le Repos in Egypte: The Sphinx"

A golden nailhead, burning in your palm - Lola Ridge "Death Ray"

The golden sheath of a remembered day - Lola Ridge "The Dream"

Golden spools of the sun and dawns - Lola Ridge "Firehead part I: He 3: The Light"

Overflowed the dim gold vase of evening - Lola Ridge "Firehead part II: John: He walks at dawn in a wood without Jerusalem"

Of unicorns all dripping gold - Lola Ridge "Firehead part IV: The Stone 2: The Mother"

Gold artery the faithful rock - Lola Ridge "Firehead part VII: Thaddeus the Unborn 1: The Call"

Blew a golden horn among the olive trees - Lola Ridge "Firehead part IX: Resurrection 2: John Walks in the Morning"

In a spray of amethyst and gold - Lola Ridge "Libation"

Gold at the uttermost circles fading - Lola Ridge "Manhattan Lights"

Spread quivering spokes of gold - Lola Ridge "Mo-ti"

The faint gold light of evening - Lola Ridge "Mo-ti"

In the golden distance of your eyes - Lola Ridge "Shadow"

A golden javelin to run it through - Lynn Riggs "The Deer"

With yellow gold and white jewels - Rihaku "Exile's Letter" transl. by Ezra Pound

With silver harness and reins of gold - Rihaku "Exile's Letter" transl. by Ezra Pound

The winds with their fringes of gold - James Whitcombe Riley "The Circus Parade"

With its fabulous waters of gold - James Whitcombe Riley "The Circus Parade"

No wealth of gold do I possess - James Whitcombe Riley "A Poor Man's Wealth"

Crested o'er the golden walls - James Whitcombe Riley "The Song I Never Sing"

In silver largess and gold twinklings bright - James Whitcombe Riley "When I Do Mock"

Sings every crust of golden gleams - Arthur Rimbaud "Waifs and Strays" transl. not credited

the golden caskets of days coming up false - Ed Roberson "American Quartet"

When purest gold fell softly to the snow - Lloyd Roberts "Flowers of the Sky"

As they pitch the bearded barley in a thousand tents of gold - Lloyd Roberts "The Homesteader"

Yellow sun and shadow are spinning gold behind - Lloyd Roberts "The Wood Trail"

The gold I miss for dreaming - Edwin Arlington Robinson "Dear Friends"

Over the foam for the golden chances - Edwin Arlington Robinson "Late Summer"

Far away above the golden haze - Rennell Rodd "At Lanuvium"

Red and gold strike down the twilight dim - Rennell Rodd "In Chartres Cathedral"

All through the golden weather - Rennell Rodd "A Song of Autumn"

With his gold and wasted lands - John Jerome Rooney "The Empire Builder"

Our pulses have no golden tremors - Isaac Rosenberg "Sleep"

Which gold and stone and spices bear - Christina Rossetti "Autumn"

Gold and silver by her side - "Rosy Apple, Lemon, or Pear"

In golden dusks of memory - Thomas Runciman "Miscellaneous Poems II: An Afternoon Soliloquy"

Who went forth radiant in the golden prime - George William Russell "The Earth Breath"

Hid in the golden thicket of day - George William Russell "The Hunter"

The sparks like golden raindrops - Captain Owen Rutter "The Song of Tiadatha"

Ground to better dust than golden - J.S. "Hymn of a Hermit" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXLI, v.LV, Mar. 1844]

the present, a gold rotting in our palms - Abu Bakr Sadiq "Wormhole"

No gold to repair cracked pottery lips - R.S. Saha "Kin"

And cloud the golden harvesting of love - Arthur L. Salmon "By the River" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.127-v.III, 5 June 1886]

Rust and gold on the roofs of the sea - Carl Sandburg "Fins"

Bannered with fire and gold - Carl Sandburg "Monotone"

Deep-shadowed from the candle's guttering gold - Siegfried Sassoon "The Dug-Out"

Built their lives of stone & gold - Ann K. Schwader "Why We Left"

Omens cryptic & golden, poisoned & red - Ann K. Schwader "Wind Shift"

Her golden memory may not sleep - Clinton Scollard "The Hill of Maeve"

In the great west's golden urn - Clinton Scollard "Nightfall in Sligo"

All its golden past a dirge - Clinton Scollard "Saint Sepulchre's Beside the Sea"

My wish in the golden weather - Clinton Scollard "Song"

And though he strew the grave with gold - "The Seafarer" transl. from 'the early Anglo-Saxon' by Ezra Pound

Give your gold no acid test - Robert W. Service "Dreams Are Best"

Until their black feathers are edged in gold - Diane Seuss "I Have Lived My Whole Life in a Painting Called Paradise"

Attending on his golden pilgrimage - William Shakespeare "Sonnet VII"

Gold candles fix'd in heaven's air - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XXI"

Sleep in a dream of savage gold - Brenda Shaughnessy "Big Game"

The golden field of frozen honey clover - Brenda Shaughnessy "Nachtraglichkeit"

Roses with their hearts of gold - Virna Sheard "Dreams"

Golden letters on the midnight sky - Virna Sheard "The Young Knights"

A fair table all of the beaten gold - Frederick Sheldon "Belted Will"

Well laden wi' the yellow gold - Frederick Sheldon "Belted Will"

Their starry domes of diamond and of gold - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Alastor: or, the Spirit of Solitude"

Marked the braided webs of gold - Percy Bysshe Shelley "The Daemon of the World"

The golden lightning of the sunken sun - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Ode to a Skylark"

A glowworm golden in a dell of dew - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Ode to a Skylark"

Glitters with fishes of gold - William Shenstone "The Shepherd's Home"

The far-off hills cry a golden word of you - Francis Sherman "A Canadian Calendar: V. A Song in August"

Shall be weary of the myrrh and gold - Francis Sherman "The Deserted City: The House of Earth"

Lost in the golden labyrinth of light - Frank Dempster Sherman "Song at Daybreak"

An arm of steel and a heart of gold - Dora Sigerson Shorter "A Weeping Cupid"

And don the bright colors of scarlet and gold - Joyce Sidman "Ballad of the Wandering Eft"

Last few hours of gold - Joyce Sidman and Rick Allen "Snake's Lullaby"

Golden jonquils like a star amid the gloom - "A Sign of Spring" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]

Each hue and grace of golden Nature - B. Simmons "Stanzas to the Memory of Thomas Hood" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCLVI, v.LVII, June 1845]

An elevator hauled by golden chains - Marge Simon "Sightings: Algis Budrys"

Have shorn your golden fleece - Safiya Sinclair "Center of the World"

Guns and swords, and gold and thought - "Smiles and Tears" [Happy Days for Boys and Girls, 1877]

Is grown a dimmer gold - Clark Ashton Smith "Autumnal"

To stars of undiscovered gold - Clark Ashton Smith "Beyond the Great Wall"

The voice of a golden star - Clark Ashton Smith "Chant of Autumn"

The skies of steel and gold - Clark Ashton Smith "The Exile"

The golden shore allured me - Clark Ashton Smith "In Saturn"

The golden queens of planets long forgot - Clark Ashton Smith "Requiescat in Pace"

Gold from the mines of the past - Clark Ashton Smith "A Song of Dreams"

The glad and golden death of spring - Clark Ashton Smith "To Omar Khayyam"

Golden stem of roses of illusion - Clark Ashton Smith "To the Beloved"

Unwrapping golden butterscotches - Maggie Smith "Accidental Pastoral"

A tigereye banded five kinds of gold - Maggie Smith "Poem Beginning with a Line from It's the Great Pumpkin, Charlie Brown"

Heat rises in distorted gold - Maggie Smith "Rasp"

In distorted gold - Maggie Smith "Rasp"

Drizzles gold on her breakfast toast - Maggie Smith "Where Honey Comes From"

Green to gold to blinding white - Tracy K. Smith "We Feel Now A Largeness Coming On"

Dozens of pockets of gold - Gary Snyder "Why I Take Good Care of my Macintosh"

As the sun pours its gold silt throughout the valley - Analicia Sotelo "Quemado, Texas"

Bread is now than Gold more precious - John Spateman "War"

This unbarred stronghold of sweet gold - Leonora Speyer "Fiddler's Farewell"

Held out to me a golden handful of bird's-notes - Leonora Speyer "A Gift"

Eternally golden, immortally indifferent - Leonora Speyer "Gold-Fish"

My thoughts amid the golden spheres - Ezra Hurlburt Stafford "The Last Orison"

Full of the golden past - A.E. Stallings "Olives"

A knot that gold and silver can buy - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Diamond Wedding"

In robes of gold and crimson fire - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Sleigh-Ride"

In an age of infamy and gold - George Sterling "At the Grave of Serra"

Lonely in her golden glow - George Sterling "Autumn (StC)"

Where golden altars fume - George Sterling "The Chariots of Dawn"

Lit his garden with a lamp of gold - George Sterling "Charles Warren Stoddard"

From headlands of celestial gold - George Sterling "The City of Music"

Of golden shadows in our dream - George Sterling "Compensation"

To see the sun drip gold - George Sterling "Confession"

Lilies of celestial gold - George Sterling "Dawn from a Western Mountain"

Sunset, like a golden blade - George Sterling "Duandon"

Our wingless gold of earth - George Sterling "Farm of Fools"

With Heaven a golden mist beyond - George Sterling "Hesperia"

Girdled half of a world in gold - George Sterling "Hesperian"

Watched the golden reefs of sunset fade - George Sterling "Hesperian"

A flower of elfin gold - George Sterling "The Hidden Pool"

Wardens of the far-sought gold - George Sterling "The Homing of Drake"

Veined with sullen gold - George Sterling "Hostage"

With portent of a Golden Age - George Sterling "The House of War"

To hold by faith a heart's untested gold - George Sterling "Intimation"

Their reefs of sunken gold - George Sterling "The Islands of the Blest"

What golden people call it home? - George Sterling "The Last Island"

Her chords of shadowy gold - George Sterling "Music"

Ashes of the sun-deserted gold - George Sterling "Ocean Sunsets"

Circe folded in the sunset's gold - George Sterling "The Pain of Beauty"

Follow with the sound of gold - George Sterling "The Pathfinders"

Their gold was the gold of earth - George Sterling "The Pathfinders"

Whose gold is the gold of eternity - George Sterling "The Pathfinders"

Red and gold of sunset wines - George Sterling "The Pathway"

Gold is on the heart's horizon - George Sterling "Reborn"

The music of her age of gold - George Sterling "The Testimony of the Suns"

Whoso drinks her beauty's golden wine - George Sterling "That Walk in Darkness"

On fabled sands of gold - George Sterling "Under the Rainbow"

Squander the year's unhoarded gold - George Sterling "Untitled Poem"

The harvest of my proven gold - George Sterling "The Voice of the Wheat"

To morning's throne of gold - George Sterling "The Voices"

His priests in gold and scarlet - George Sterling "The War-Machine"

Untouched by crimson or by gold - George Sterling "A Winter Dawn"

A crock of gold inside a hollow tree - James Stephens "Behind the Hill"

Old pipers of the Age of Gold - James Stephens "By Ana Liffey"

The gold gateway of the stars - Charles Warren Stoddard "Ave Maria Bells"

Raised a cloud of dusty gold - R.H. Stoddard "Rome"

Compare it with the Present's golden page - R. H. Stoddard "The World" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

Ripening in love's golden grace - William W. Story "The Violet"

Blots the shoal with golden apples - Alfred B. Street "The Loon: Tupper's Lake"

Sunlight drops its gold upon the moss - Alfred B. Street "One of the 'Southern Tier of Counties'" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

As through the waning gold I come - Arthur Stringer "Dedication [Hephaestus, Persephone at Enna, and Sappho in Leucadia]"

Golden and sad and full of regret - Arthur Stringer "A Summer Night"

The sands telling golden hours - Muriel Stuart "Boys Bathing"

The gold, unlaced, dew-drunken daffodils - Muriel Stuart "The New Aspasia"

Takes the golden spendthrift's trail - Muriel Stuart "The Thief of Beauty"

One hour worth a thousand gold coins - Su Tung-p'o "Spring Night" transl. by Burton Watson

In one rich embassy of gold - "The Summer"

Can turn your gold to glass - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 230: The Poet's Petition and Praise" transl. by John Stratton Hawley

A banner of gold to the summer wind cast - Miss Caroline E. Sutton "The Past" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

That steel is more than gold - E. Sutton "The Bugle"

Through the Future's golden aisles - T.A. Swan "The Rain" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXV no.3, Sept. 1849]

The golden vintage of Shakespeare - Algernon Charles Swinburne "A Dark Month"

Dust and laurels and gold and sand - Algernon Charles Swinburne "The Triumph of Time"

Smiles of silver and kisses of gold - Algernon Charles Swinburne "The Triumph of Time"

Exiled from youth's golden hosts - Rachel Annand Taylor "The Hours of Fiammetta III: The Peace to Be"

That once was singing gold - Sara Teasdale "Let It Be Forgotten"

Pull off, pull off, the brooch of gold - Alfred, Lord Tennyson "Lady Clare"

Hung in the golden Galaxy - Alfred, Lord Tennyson "The Lady of Shalott"

The full redundance of their golden store - T.J. Terrington "Autumn"

On golden threads of hope and fear - Rose Terry "Then"

And the gloom turned swift to gold - Celia Thaxter "The Gift" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.22, Nov. 1878]

Golden in the mercy of his means - Dylan Thomas "Fern Hill"

Lay the gold tithings barren - Dylan Thomas "I see the boys of summer"

And he had not much lead or gold - Edward Thomas "Under the Woods"

Giver of golden days - Francis Thompson "To My Godchild--Francis M. W. M."

A golden crevice in the sky - Francis Thompson "To My Godchild--Francis M. W. M."

Which on such golden memories can lean - Henry David Thoreau "Greece"

And takes the golden glory from the day - Gregory Thornton "Sonnets of Shakespeare's Ghost: VII"

When the golden waves are tumbling into the sun - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: VII. Ripples"

Sink holes consume fields of gold - S.R. Tombran "A Time Traveler's Field Notes"

Hold a lengthened tournament for flashing gold - Jean Toomer "Georgia Dusk" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]

The shoreline baked in golden sandstorms - Edwin Torres "The Intermission Clown"

Cast in gold across a wealth of gems - Edwin Torres "A Most Imperfect Start"

Glutted with gold and dust and empty state - Iris Tree "[And afterwards, when honour has made good]"

Passions writ in hieroglyphs of gold - Iris Tree "[I can but give thee unsubstantial things]"

Stirred from the golden quilt of memory - Iris Tree "[Long ago we walked together in a garden]"

Tarnished prisons lined with white and gold - Iris Tree "Streets"

Feeds her golden flocks with light - Richard Chenevix Trench "The Descent of the Rhone"

A thousand floating motes of gold - Richard Chenevix Trench "The Story of Justin Martyr"

With rich gold memories sit here and sigh - Tu Fu "A Song Out There" transl. not credited [The Jade Flute, c.1960, Project Gutenberg]

On their golden sheaves the quivering dew - H.T. Tuckerman "Luna.--An Ode" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.5, May 1849]

The purple and golden blooms of the sun - W.J. Turner "A Ritual Dance"

Walked in a great golden dream - Walter J. Turner "Romance"

Six poplar trees, in golden green - Florence Tylee "Bird Notes" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.125-v.III, 22 May 1886]

A sheet of golden water, cold and sweet - Katharine Tynan "Farewell"

Through the gold hours dreameth - Katherine Tynan "Shamrock Song"

Makes him richer than Croesus in gold - Rudolph Valentino "Cap and Bells (To F.)"

In the gold of my memory - Jean Starr Untermeyer "Forget-Me-Nots"

Rise into choruses of singing gold - Louis Untermeyer "Roast Leviathan"

At every seam red gold shone through - "Valdemar and Tove (A)" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

A gathering of golden quail waiting - Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez "Summer 1945"

In shining pools of white and gold - Henry van Dyke "Flood-Tide of Flowers in Holland"

Ruddy gold of sunset from cliff and canyon gleams - Henry van Dyke "The Heavenly Hills of Holland"

Golden streams that never freeze - Henry van Dyke "The Ruby-Crowned Kinglet"

Among the golden fruit upon the wall - Emile Verhaeren "La Multiple Splendeur: Joy" transl. by Alma Strettell

All one ferment of varied gold - Emile Verhaeren "Les Apparus dans mes Chemins: St. George" transl. by Alma Strettell

One tumult of haggard gold - Emile Verhaeren "Les Apparus dans mes Chemins: St. George" transl. by Alma Strettell

Fire with hands of boiling gold - Emile Verhaeren "Les Villages Illusoires: The Bell-Ringer" transl. by Alma Strettell

Toward Canaan's blue traced golden paths - Emile Verhaeren "Les Villages Illusoires: The Rope-Maker" transl. by Alma Strettell

Twin stairs of gold suspend their steps of blue - Emile Verhaeren "Les Villages Illusoires: The Rope-Maker" transl. by Alma Strettell

Downs of gold beflecked with shadows' flight - Emile Verhaeren "Les Villages Illusoires: The Silence" transl. by Alma Strettell

Pursues the gold and purple - Paul Verlaine "L'Amour par Terre" transl. by Gertrude Hall Brownell

Intervening flecks of gold reveal unseen intensity - "La Vie Poetique" [The Continental Monthly v.II no.VI, Dec. 1862]

Gold rust down my back - Ocean Vuong "Immigrant Haibun"

Golden light and glancing wings - B.T.W. "The Coming of Winter" [The Knickerbocker v.10, no.6, December 1837]

And the Spaniards were seeking gold - Wa Wa Chaw "The Trial of the Mission Indian"

Wrought of gold from my heart riven - Charles William Wallace "The Nightmare"

Midnight hymn from chords of gold - Wm. Wallace "Perditi"

The mountain's gold confusion of emerald green - Wang An-Shih "Bell Mountain" transl. by David Hinton

Igniting gold ripples in a glass of stale wine - Wang An-Shih "A Moonlit Night in Mid-Autumn, Sent to Broad-Origin and My Other Brothers" transl. by David Hinton

Gold on the chill of deep water - Wang An-Shih "Sun west and low" transl. by David Hinton

The afternoon's gold findings recede into the hills behind us - Noah Warren "Shuttle"

Woods of gold and skies of grey - William Watson "Autumn"

Wild light at golden intervals - William Watson "The Empty Nest"

'Twixt the gold hour and the grey - William Watson "The Frontier"

Golden water or green hail - Mary Webb "Green Rain"

Maize in golden colors dressed - Arthur Weir "The Oak"

Once I was a Venetian with my last gold coin - John Moncure Wettarau "Every Moment"

From the hoards of the golden past - Edith Wharton "June and December"

From whatsoever depth of gold and blue - Edith Wharton "Nightingales in Provence"

Minutes are like grains of gold - "What the Clock Says" [Happy Days for Boys and Girls, 1877]

In the golden morning of my days - Helen Hay Whitney "Ambition and Love"

With a golden swift caress - Helen Hay Whitney "Bird Love--Rose Love"

Piled with poppies and gold grain - Helen Hay Whitney "Flower of the Clove"

The haze of glimmering nights and golden days - Helen Hay Whitney "Was There Another Spring"

A golden glow when twilight curtains fall - Helen Hay Whitney "Winter Song"

Paint the golden morrow - John Greenleaf Whittier "Barclay of Ury"

In golden haze melt down the amber sky - John Greenleaf Whittier "My Psalm" [Atlantic Monthly v.8 no.22, Aug. 1859]

The hazel's gold is paling - John Greenleaf Whittier "My Triumph"

A golden woof-thread of circumstance - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"

Have known great gold Sorrows - Margaret Widdemer "The Jester"

In a jacket of gold leaves drawn tight - Adam Wiedewitsch "If Night You Were a City"

Golden corn for the stranger - Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde "The Famine Year"

With the gold of the flower of March - Oscar Wilde "Magdalen Walks"

Great gold cross shining in the wind - William Carlos Williams "Ballet"

Has sent one golden needle - William Carlos Williams "Complaint"

Gold and silver mixed to one - William Carlos Williams "Love"

Gold of tarnished masonry - William Carlos Williams "Postlude"

At her throat is loose gold - William Carlos Williams "The Wanderer"

Reaping gold apples of the storm - Humbert Wolfe "Apples"

Done with wearing gold words upon my heart - Humbert Wolfe "Dedication [for Shylock Reasons with Mr. Chesterton]"

A martyr-cloud with halo dipped in gold - Humbert Wolfe "The Dancers"

Clean outrun the golden diapason of the sun - Humbert Wolfe "The First Airman"

The miser's fingers on his gold - Adolf Wolff "Byron"

Gold fountains of lions - Valerie Worth "Bull"

And stop at the one with the golden script - Charles Wright "I Shall Be Released"

When foxes eat the last gold grape - Elinor Wylie "Escape"

Wears that sky like a thin gold mask - Elinor Wylie "Sunset on the Spire"

That sky like a thin gold mask - Elinor Wylie "Sunset on the Spire"

Grapes of purple-brown and gold - Elinor Wylie "Wild Peaches"

Criss-crossing in that golden light - Lynn Xu "[Sun-messenger]"

Across the field lined with golden bells - Emily Jungmin Yoon "Bell Theory"

Washed within a wave of golden - Francis Brett Young "Testament"

Chased by golden armies - Matthew Zapruder "After Reading Tu Fu, I Emerge from a Cloud of Falseness"

Tracks of brown and gold across the tarmac - Cynthia Zarin "Rainy Day Fugue"

Every coordinate a golden fiber - Hal Y. Zhang "Majorana, Back Again"


From a billion blue-gold caverns of air - Eleanor Farjeon "Apollo in Pherae"

Cupped in brown-gold - Jeannette Marks "Wild Grape Vine"

As cloth-of-gold the fallen leaves lie - Scharmel Iris "The Forest of the Sky" [The Little Review Nov. 1914 (v.1, no.8)]

The honey-seeking, golden-banded - H.D. "Orchard"

Our gold-dense gravity was close to losing equilibrium - Harry Martinson "Aniara 90" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg

The gold-dusted curtains of the air - Ruben Dario "Autumnal" transl. by Thomas Walsh and Salomon de la Selva

The crystal pond where gold-fish play - Mrs. Elizabeth Dimond "Thoughts on Creation"

Husbandry to pluck golden fleece - Leah Bobet "Psyche and Eros"

Where the gold-green waters run - Fanny Kemble "A Lament for the Wissahiccon"

The rocks where gold-haired syrens sang - C.P. Cranch "Sorrento" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Bade adieu to each golden-hearted queen - Florence Tylee "Fairyland in Midsummer" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.51-v.I, 20 Dec. 1884]

At what gold-laced speech - Bret Harte "A Newport Romance"

Your eyes are gold-leaf & reflection - Amaud Jamaul Johnson "Delfonic"

Kept it for some goldless debt - Richard Hughes "Gratitude"

At night when her gold-light is spent - Charles Swain "The Ship 'Extravagance'" [International Weekly Miscellany v.1 no.2, July 1850]

Holds a goldmine in the sky - Russell Brakefield "Field Recordings"

then temper it to golden-rose - Jacqueline Osherow "Inspiration Point, Bryce Canyon, Utah"

in the beginning was the gold rush - Jayson P. Smith "on fathers & swords"

Gold-seeking hucksters in a noble land - Richard Le Gallienne "Christmas in War-Time"

In her hand her gold-threaded slippers - Li Yu "[Blossoms bright, the moon dark]" transl. by Burton Watson

In the gleam of the gold-washed sea - Rennell Rodd "By the South Sea"

Golden-winged through the glory swim - Kate Putnam "Our Martyrs" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.2, August 1864]

On the worn book of old-golden song - Robert Frost "Waiting-- Afield at Dusk"

A rosegold gown of smoke - Molly Raynor "Yamim Noraim///Days of A W E"

A slender bunch of russet-gold keys - Rose Fyleman "Alms in Autumn"

Reap the far star-gold - Charles Baudelaire "The Venal Muse" transl. not credited

Watching Ariadne ungold time - Airea D. Matthews "Altitude"

Love and anger and white-gold milk - Maggie Nelson "The World"


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