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Wrap the last rose of faith - Rasha Abdulhadi "Quailing"

A red rose just before it's dipped in liquid nitrogen - Duane Ackerson "Operation Macbeth"

When blood is black roses - Jeff William Acosta "Call Out My Name"

Anywhere I look is born a rose - Zubair Ahmed "Red with a Touch of Sulfur"

With drums before and roses showered after - Conrad Aiken "Romance"

Crown him with gems and roses - Elizabeth Akers "Love's Flitting"

And wakened the sleeping rose - Louisa May Alcott "Lily-Bell and Thistledown"

Receding on the path of dark spruce and roses - Daisy Aldan "I Awake in These Hills"

Lounging nude atop the roses on the mantle - Mike Allen "Chagall's Lamp"

Clad in diamonds of rose and black - Mike Allen "Picasso's Rapture"

And the glade of roses scream war - Threa Almontaser "And That Fast, You're Thinking About Their Bodies"

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

In a fragrant shrine of climbing roses - Auguste Angellier "Eyes and Lips" transl. by Henry van Dyke

Roses fall, but the thorns remain - Anonymous Dutch proverb (I can't find a firmer source for this)

To bear the red rose company - "Babylon"

Gone with the roses and dew - Libbie C. Baer "When My Soul Findeth Wings"

And the rose withers on its virgin thorns - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"

Bestows her summer ices and her winter rose - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"

The stricken lily puts the rose to shame - Maurice Baring "Phedre"

Put to shame the white rose and the red - Maurice Baring "Vita Nuova"

Opening to foggy roses - Rick Barot "Adjacent, Against, Upon"

Will hide the thorns with roses - Ardelia Maria Barton "Love's Garland"

Where rue displaced the rose - Cora C. Bass "Light"

Till Autumn fades the rose - Charles Baudelaire "A Landscape" transl. not credited

My rose of heart's delight - Charlotte Becker "Song"

A rose if its petals thought of snows - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Last Vision of Helen"

Gave her youth like a burning rose - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Retort Discourteous"

Left with a heartbreak of roses - Paul Bernstein "Prodigal"

The rose assumed a dye more deep - Robert Blair "The Grave"

A single rose upon a wand - Robert Bloomfield "May-Day With the Muses: The Invitation"

As though unseen roses grazed him - Maxwell Bodenheim "South State Street: Chicago"

Moles have gnawed the rose tree at its root - Arna Bontemps "Lancelot"

They have broken roses down - Arna Bontemps "Southern Mansion"

Unto the wine-filled rose - Elizabeth Bridges "Sonnets from Hafez & Other Verses 26"

Should never crave the rose - Anne Bronte "The Narrow Way"

Filtered through roses - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Drama of Exile"

Despite cold walls and roses - Sue Budin "Looking for My Brother's Grave"

Thorns form footholds by which to reach the rose - E.B.C. "Streck-Verse" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.3, Sept. 1864]

Threading depths of pearl and rose - Roy Campbell "The Porpoise"

Passionate as the rose of sleep - W. Wilfred Campbell "Phaethon"

Dropped a rose of gold - William Canton "Song"

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

Briar's rose and midnight owls - Anna Cates "Three Triolets"

Behind the rose the planet - Willa Cather "I Sought the Wood in Winter"

This is the joy of the rose - Willa Cather "In Rose-Time"

Once smelled a rose in sleep - Willa Cather "Thou Art the Pearl"

That rose of awful mystery - Madison Cawein "The Miracle of Dawn"

We can not mend torn roses - "Changed" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.5, May 1862]

Why the roses no longer grow at your feet - Tania Chen "A Toast from Santisima Muerte"

A crown of flinty spines about the rose - W.R. Childe "The Gothic Rose"

While the rose and the song are one - Virginia Woodward Cloud "The Gate"

Then lay your rose on the fire - Leonard Cohen "The Window"

Like the rose on its ladder of thorn - Leonard Cohen "The Window"

When the rose is queen - Arthur Colton "Martial to Pliny"

A rose lasts all night long - Arthur Colton "Phyllis and Corydon"

A rose, a crimson rose! - Arthur Colton "Phyllis and Corydon"

Nearer to the cypress than the rose - Arthur Colton "The Poet and the Fountain"

To-night the roses blow - Arthur Colton "To-Morrow"

That dallied with a crimson rose - Arthur Colton "West-Easterly Moralities"

Whose heart is a rose - Arthur Colton "Without the Gate"

The rose in its fragrance sleeps - Arthur Colton "Without the Gate"

Sleeping boys and drowsy roses - Hilda Conkling "Land of Nod"

The rose already has many names - Brendan Constantine "This Page Ripped Out and Rolled into a Ball"

Blooming like a guarded rose - Susan Coolidge "By the Cradle"

To tell where a rose has been - Susan Coolidge "Embalmed"

The right of a rose to bloom - Susan Coolidge "My Rights"

More dazzling fair than summer roses are - Susan Coolidge "My White Chrysanthemum"

Bursts the rose of light - Susan Coolidge "On the Shore"

Vain the roses' rapturous breath - Susan Coolidge "Solstice"

So your roses turned to bread - Susan Coolidge "To J.H. and E.W.H."

When my roses were at roses - Brody Parrish Craig "Traverse"

Geraniums and roses round me bloom - C.P. Cranch "Sorrento" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Who would answer for the color of a rose - Nathalia Crane "The Blind Girl"

Her rivals have flouted the rose - Nathalia Crane "The Gossips"

Called the roll of the roses - Nathalia Crane "The Roll of the Roses"

On the field where the roses fell - Nathalia Crane "The Roll of the Roses"

The wind in gardens where pale roses die - Adelaide Crapsey "Oh, Lady, Let the Sad Tears Fall"

Roses have set the borders on fire - Barbara Crooker "This Summer Day"

If (and when) roses complain - e.e. cummings ???

Roses (you feel certain) will only smile - e.e. cummings ???

Probably made of roses & hello - E.E. Cummings "Post Impressions (VI)"

the voice of your eyes is deeper than all roses - E. E. Cummings "somewhere i have never travelled, gladly beyond"

by oaks and roses deliberated - E. E. Cummings "Songs (II)"

A rose shall beget the spring - E. E. Cummings "Songs (IX)"

Roses with amber petals - Olive Custance "Candle-Light"

Rift on rift of rose and scattered light - H.D. "Fragment Thirty-six"

But leave the stark core of the rose - H.D. "Night"

A wet rose single on a stem - H.D. "Sea Rose"

Made of flint and roses - John Davidson "Thirty Bob a Week"

In dells of rose and meadowsweet - Walter de la Mare "The Enchanted Hill"

Outnumber a noon's roses - Walter de la Mare "Nod"

The sky a full-blown rose - Diana Marie Delgado "Songs of Escape"

Eating roses sprinkled with lime - Diana Marie Delgado "They Chopped Down the Tree I Used to Lie Under and Count Stars With"

Cuts roses with a hatchet - Diana Marie Delgado "Twelve Trees"

The rose is out of town - Emily Dickinson "Book 1: Nature XXVIII: Autumn"

The roses in life's diverse bouquet - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Time and Eternity XXXII: Gone"

Round his neck three chains of roses - Lord Alfred Douglas "Two Loves"

For roses my full store - Edward Dowden "Love-Tokens"

Tired of thornless roses - Edward Dowden "Paradise Lost and Found"

Hard by asphodel and rose - Theodor Dreiser "The Spring Recital"

Thorns and love in the roses' bed - Alice Dunbar-Nelson "Amid the Roses"

Burst rose of sharded light - Rebecca Dunham "Elegy, Wind-Whipped: 4. Catechism"

Too late for roses - Michael Earls, S.J. "An Autumn Rose-Tree"

Singing duets with the roses - Katherine Edgren "Unheard Melody"

Redeem the vanished rose of evening's dream - Ralph Waldo Emerson "May-Day"

The fresh rose on yonder thorn - Ralph Waldo Emerson "Song of Nature"

Shadows like black roses - B. H. Fairchild "The Big Bands: Liberal, Kansas, Summer of 1955"

Loiters with the briar rose - Catharine M. Fanshawe "An Imitation of Wordsworth"

A rose torn in the careless frolic - Eleanor Farjeon "Fairy-Time"

The lure of the roses is rare - Eleanor Farjeon "King Laurin's Garden"

Rose above the shadows their names cast - Andrew Feld "Great Hill Lyric"

Where nevermore the rose of sunset pales - James Elroy Flecker "The Golden Journey to Samarkand"

And drive away the rose to leave a shell - James Elroy Flecker "The Queen's Song"

Rose fresher from the breeze - "Flora: a Vision"

Lavender instead of roses - Jennifer Elise Foerster "The Painter"

A mutant rose's neurotoxin - Jennifer Elise Foerster "Tuccenen C"

White roses broke like foam - Maxwell E. Foster "Truth"

And knock to the echoes as beggars for roses - Robert Frost "Asking for Roses"

Grants us by silence the boon of her roses - Robert Frost "Asking for Roses"

Some wild, easily shattered rose - Robert Frost "A Line-storm Song"

To earthly rose and violet and blue - Zona Gale "Light"

Sure that a rose answered me - Zona Gale "Roses"

Always the reticence of roses - Zona Gale "Roses"

A rose would never admit me - Zona Gale "Roses"

Outlined like a rose - Zona Gale "When Did Spring Die?"

The virgin sisterhood of roses - Manmohan Ghose "Mentem Mortalia Tangunt"

In the garden of my shame growing roses - Andrea Gibson "Bad at Love"

Redder and redder burns the rose - Rosa Gilbert "Song [The silent bird is hid in the boughs]"

Roses white and lilies tender - Glasynys "Blodeuwedd and Hywel" transl. by Edmund O. Jones

Merging with the shadows of the roses - Louise Gluck "A Summer Garden"

Rose stark in ecstasy of fire - Louis Golding "Bird, Bird, Bird"

Banners of white fire and rose - Louis Golding "The Midmost Field in Kent"

The rose is fenced by the thorn - Adam Lindsay Gordon "Ye Wearie Wayfarer, hys Ballad In Eight Fyttes"

And make roses of the daisies - Robert Graves "The Dying Knight and the Fauns"

The night-wind trembling round the rose - Grace Greenwood "A Lay" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Tilling the earth from thorn to rose - James Roane Gregory "Rain"

Jagged as a red-rose thorn - Nikki Grimes "On Bully Patrol"

The sharp thorn grows on the budding rose - Angelina Weld Grimké "When the Green Lies Over the Earth"

During the rose and lily's reign - Hafiz "The Divan XXIII" (translated by H. Bicknell)

Cold as the heart of a colorless rose - Katherine Hale "Christmas Eve"

Dancing in a rose of joy - Katherine Hale "Pavlowa Dancing"

A rose of fire and snow - Katherine Hale "Pavlowa Dancing"

A common miracle of salt roses - Joy Harjo "The Book of Myths"

A steady tattoo of roses - Joy Harjo "We Encounter Nat King Cole as We Invent the Future"

In search of midnight roses - Derrick Harriell "Underground King"

To gather a rose by the light of stars - Fanny Wheeler Hart "Harry: Part 1"

On thorns (and roses) treading - Patrick Joseph Hartigan writing as John O'Brien "The Careys"

Stand again in rose and purple - Patrick Joseph Hartigan writing as John O'Brien "The Trimmin's on the Rosary"

Glowing rose and pensive pansy - F.W. Harvey "English Flowers in a Foreign Garden"

Sweet as the dusty roses - F.W. Harvey "On Over Bridge at Evening"

Its roses turned to holly - F.W. Harvey "The Philosopher Visits the Night Club"

Drew the balsam from the rose - Robert Stephen Hawker "King Arthur's Waes-Hael"

I will ask the rose - Walter Everette Hawkins "Ask Me Why I Love You"

Exhaled from rose and citron bower - Felicia Hemans "The Abencerrage Canto I"

Frowns midst the roses - Felicia Hemans "The Sceptic"

All things that make the rose - William Ernest Henley "Hawthorn and Lavender XVI"

Pelted with roses and rinsed with the rain - Jeannette Fraser Henshall "Brother O' Mine"

Thus dividing rain and roses - Jeannette Fraser Henshall "Lines to Death"

Breath of roses and a prayer - Jeannette Fraser Henshall "Lines to Death"

A rose grows sweeter every time it rains - Jeannette Fraser Henshall "The Long Twilight"

Kind enough to give of roses - Jeannette Fraser Henshall "My Neighbor's Roses"

And roses tumbling round - Jeannette Fraser Henshall "My Old House and the Weather"

In the company of dried roses - Bob Hicok "No Stones"

That wells and flows from every leopard, lark and rose - Ralph Hodgson "The Song of Honour"

On a couch of lavish roses - Thomas Hood "To Goldenhair"

Plucked from the roses of your days - Victor Hugo "More Strong Than Time" transl. by Andrew Lang

Roses of lucid shadow - Aldous Huxley "Italy"

Of lilies dead and turned to roses - Aldous Huxley "Variations on a Theme of LaForgue"

Roses red as an angry dawn - Aldous Huxley "Variations on a Theme of LaForgue"

A rose of fire that must blossom - Aldous Huxley "Waking"

Left a dream of roses - Fay Inchfawn "Early Spring"

A bloom as of blush roses - Jean Ingelow "Songs with Preludes: Wedlock"

As a rose refolding toward evening - Mark Irwin "Dear Red"

As sleeps the patient rose - Helen Hunt Jackson "January"

A rose crowned song - Fenton Johnson "Your Soul and Mine"

Like a rose of the south - James Weldon Johnson "Down by the Carib Sea"

Fading through all of the tints of the rose - James Weldon Johnson "Down by the Carib Sea"

Red wreckage of the rose - Lionel Johnson "In England"

A crown of roses and of bay - Lionel Johnson "Men of Assisi"

Roses dropping from his hair - Henry Johnstone "Love Penitent"

More than roses love the sun - Edward Smyth Jones "To Estelle"

rosy cheeks plumped with rapture - Tanque R. Jones "Heaven"

Thorny roses goaded into color - Allison Joseph "My Father's Kites"

Red rose petals scattered everywhere - Zilka Joseph "Eliyahoo Hanabi"

Bear no badge of roses or of rue - Fanny Kemble "Lines, In Answer to a Question"

'Twixt the last violet and the earliest rose - Fanny Kemble "Sonnet [Whene'er I recollect the happy time]"

From every rose a spider - Joyce Kilmer "The Ballade of Butterflies"

And Lilith roses dipped in wine - Joyce Kilmer "Ballade of My Lady's Beauty"

Petals of moon-kissed roses - Joyce Kilmer "Slender Your Hands"

A valley sweet with rose and vine - Joyce Kilmer "Tribute"

Roses made of crimson light - Joyce Kilmer "A Valentine"

When roses bloom most fully - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"

Into the clouds of loose, lush roses - Ted Kooser "The China Painters"

Burdened with the rose - Archibald Lampman "June"

The universe of the unfolded rose - D.H. Lawrence "Grapes"

Rose water, sugar cane, and summer melons - Joseph O. Legaspi "My Mother's Suitors"

A rose beneath your feet - Amy Levy "A Waltz Song"

How many times have the roses bloomed? - Li Po "Thinking of East Mountain" transl. by Burton Watson

Scented of roses and fire - Paulin Lim "Last Wish of Tithonus"

The lions and roses and lilies of love - Vachel Lindsay "For All Who Ever Sent Lace Valentines"

Smell the first summer rose - Myra Cohn Livingston "Cricket Never Does: Summer"

Raw rose crystal - Federico Garcia Lorca (trans. By Sarah Arvio) "[To find a kiss of yours]"

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

Fill my lap with roses gathered in the milky way - Amy Lowell "The Crescent Moon"

Above me in a wheel of roses - Amy Lowell "Granadilla"

The fallen roses of outlived minutes - Amy Lowell "A Lady"

Echo in faint rose over the pavement - Amy Lowell "Red Slippers"

With a rose's red heart's tide - James Russell Lowell "The Singing Leaves"

As she culls the blood red rose - E.M. "Part II. The Garden of Sleep"

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

Worked with rose and saffron - Dorothea Mackellar "Bazar"

Take a rose by the throat - Anthony Madrid "Maxims 1"

In the bursting buds of roses - Douglas Malloch "June"

The color of the roses that spy - Sally Wen Mao "The Toll of the Sea"

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

Put blood of roses in his veins - Don Marquis "A Dream Child"

Who set snares with roses - Don Marquis "The Struggle"

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

As roses slowly blush a deeper color - Jose Marti "Love in the City" (translated by Esther Allen)

If thorns instead of roses suit - George Martin "The Hawk and the Sparrow"

The watered garden of the Mystic Rose - Theodore Maynard "Beauty II: Absolute"

Starry lands where mystic roses shine - Theodore Maynard "The Universal Mother"

Purple rose before the thorn - Campbell McGrath "Charlie Parker (1980)"

With scarlet roses staining her fair feet - Claude McKay "A Memory of June"

Roses plucked in June - Louis J. McQuilland "With Bertha Up the River"

Solely in that cherished Rose - George Meredith "The Three Singers to Young Blood"

Heavenly Rose to swelling sea - George Meredith "The Three Singers to Young Blood"

As dewlight off the rose - George Meredith "The Woods of Westermain"

Rose in brain from rose in blood - George Meredith "The Woods of Westermain"

You do not miss a rose - Charlotte Mew "In Nunhead Cemetery"

The roots of last year's roses - Edna St Vincent Millay "Eight Sonnets: VIII"

Why bewilder her with roses - Edna St Vincent Millay "Epitaph"

Under centuries of fine dead dust of roses - Edna St. Vincent Millay sonnet VI from Second April

Unless I smell the Carthaginian rose - Edna St Vincent Millay "To the Not Impossible Him"

The roots of last year's roses - Edna St. Vincent Millay untitled sonnet from Sonnets and The Ballad of the Harp-Weaver

Of frangipani and dark oratory roses - Claire Millikin "Superhero Costume, Attic, Tifton, Georgia"

The stolen rose on its stem - Jim Moore "Twenty Questions"

All around, roses glow in nebula tints - Sarah Kathryn Moore "Excerpts from the Dr. Sexpot Saga"

The days of the roses glow in the drift - William Moore "Dusk Song"

Sent roses by another name - Stanley Moss "Winter Flowers"

Cover him with rose and eglantine - Louise Chandler Moulton "For Cupid Dead"

The roses in a waste of weeds - William Mountain "Dies Irae"

Only this withered rose - Simone Muench "Wolf Centos"

From their rosy dreams awake - Francis Neilson "The Boon"

Not a bed of thornless roses - Marilyn Nelson "The Baby Picture Guessing Game"

Like roses made of whips and perfume - Pablo Neruda "Furies and Sorrows" translated by Donald D. Walsh

Shaken by a broken rose - Pablo Neruda "Madrid (1937)" translated by Richard Schaaf

Blunted star, hostile rose - Pablo Neruda "Mexican Serenade" transl. by Alastair Reid

Bloody roses and goblets of ashes - Pablo Neruda "Ode with a Lament" translated by Donald D. Walsh

The soul rises with instant roses - Pablo Neruda "One Day Stands Out" translated by Donald D. Walsh

A rose of hatred and pins - Pablo Neruda "Ode to Federico Garcia Lorca" translated by Donald D. Walsh

A heavy rose in silver and leather - Pablo Neruda "Saddlery" transl by Jack Schmitt

Hears the rose of yesterday - Pablo Neruda "Tina Modotti Is Dead" translated by Donald D. Walsh

This royal promise of the rose - E. Nesbit "To Rosamund"

Before the old rose grew pale - E. Nesbit "True Love and New Love"

War's red rose sprang blooming - "New-England's Advance" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.6, June 1862]

The horse of the wallpaper powdered with roses - Amy Newman "Sylvia Plath Is in Paris with a Balloon on a Long String"

Lands of olive and the rose - Effie Lee Newsome "O Autumn, Autumn!"

With throats like nipped roses - Aimee Nezhukumatahil "Hummingbird Abecedarian"

That the thorn and rose are wed - Meredith Nicholson "Song"

A time before the rose - Meredith Nicholson "Sweetheart Time"

Taste the bitter juice of roses - tiana nobile "Harlow's Monkey"

Cloud-galleons with their sails of rose and snow - Alfred Noyes "The Hill-Flowers"

Out of the wild briar evoked the rose - Alfred Noyes "Lamarck and Buffon"

Hid in the heart of a rose - Alfred Noyes "Song [What is there hid in the heart of a rose]"

Could live inside this rose - Naomi Shihab Nye "Last August Hours Before the Year 2000"

That makes the rose about me and gnashes at thorns - Brandon O'Brien "Elegy for the Self as Villeneuve's Belle"

Aspirin in this sunset of roses - Frank O'Hara "Chez Jane"

Birth & blood is the rose - dg nanouk okpik "Twilight Pain"

Went down like a thousand roses - Mary Oliver "From the Book of Time"

Count the roses, wrinkled and salt - Mary Oliver "From the Book of Time"

The last roses of the sunset - Mary Oliver "The Notebook"

Except in the splurge of roses - Mary Oliver "Work"

The red rose is a falcon - John Boyle O'Reilly "The White Rose"

And the white rose is a dove - John Boyle O'Reilly "The White Rose"

A rose made from cellophane - Gregory Orr "Domestic Life"

A red rose for my helmet - John Oxenham "The Word that Was Left Unsaid"

The rose shall be my oriflamme - John Oxenham "The Word that Was Left Unsaid"

With roses adorning - Walter S. Percy "Youth"

I have hung our cave with roses - Sylvia Plath "Nick and the Candlestick"

I see His blood upon the rose - Joseph Plunkett "I See His Blood Upon the Rose"

The first roses of the year - Alexander Pope "Elegy to the Memory of an Unfortunate Lady"

A rose whose crimson breath revealed - Adelaide Anne Proctor "Verse: Three Roses"

Just because the rose has blossomed - Kate Putnam "Excuse" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.4, August 1864]

From the heart of an opening rose - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "White Butterflies: Schwartz Wald"

Rose and rosebud on one stem - Theodore H. Rand "'By the Love'"

Your roses are too fair for earth - Theodore H. Rand "Glory-Roses"

Like the tides and the stars and the rose - Theodore H. Rand "The Note of Nature"

O rose in the mirror of time - Theodore H. Rand "The White Rose"

A labyrinth of black roses - Paisley Rekdal "Joan of England in Bordeaux, 1348"

Wore the rose of pain - Lola Ridge "Firehead part I: He 1: Midafternoon"

Eleven petals about the rose - Lola Ridge "Firehead part III: Judas 3: The Void"

Sweet as many roses on one stem - Lola Ridge "Firehead part IV: The Stone 2: The Mother"

Rose heart of many thousand mornings - Lola Ridge "Firehead part IV: The Stone 2: The Mother"

In strands of shattered rose - Lola Ridge "Manhattan Lights"

A dime for a wired rose - Lola Ridge "Phyllis"

Like a red rose rinsed with rain - James Whitcombe Riley "An Empty Glove"

Roses, too, both red and pink - James Whitcombe Riley "The Lovely Child"

And the Roses and Thistles, agree to entwine - Mrs. A. Ritson "Classical Enigmas"

Labyrinths of lavender and rose - Charles G.D. Roberts "My Garden"

Why the tangled roses breathe so softly to the moon - Lloyd Roberts "England's Fields"

Roses thrown on marble stairs - Edwin Arlington Robinson "The Gift of God"

Sudden blossoming of one more rose - Alice Wellington Rollins "Influence"

The rose of love bewilderingly sweet - Alice Wellington Rollins "A Rose"

With the tremulous breath of roses - Alice Wellington Rollins "A Song of Summer"

The roses entrancing the night - Alice Wellington Rollins "A Song of Summer"

Lay your costly roses down - Alice Wellington Rollins "Sumner"

Rosy apple, lemon, or pear - "Rosy Apple, Lemon, or Pear"

Bunch of roses she shall wear - "Rosy Apple, Lemon, or Pear"

To mourn among my scattered roses - Christina Rossetti "An October Garden"

A rose has thorns as well as honey - Christina Rossetti "[A rose has thorns as well as honey]"

Wearing wild red roses on her tongue - Alison Rumfitt "Romance of Possible Contrasts"

The rose flees from autumn - Rumi "The World Gave Thee False Clues" transl. by R.A. Nicholson

That fall on the roses in May - Abram J. Ryan "Song of the Mystic"

Here is dust remembers it was a rose - Carl Sandburg "Dust"

Roses rise with red rain-memories - Carl Sandburg "Follies"

Whether love talks and roses grow - Carl Sandburg "To a Dead Man"

For thorns and roses there outspread - Friedrich Schiller "To the Fates"

Glowing all around with red roses - Fritz Schnack "One Morning" transl. by William Saphier

Filled your canvas curves with rose - Duncan Campbell Scott "Off Riviere du Loup"

Beauty's rose might never die - William Shakespeare "Sonnet I"

Roses fearfully on thorns did stand - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XCIX"

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

The word a rose breathes to a bird - Frank Dempster Sherman "At Her Window"

To return us like fossilized roses - Maurya Simon "Angels"

Where fallen roses stir - Clark Ashton Smith "Autumnal"

Waning rose by ungathered rose - Clark Ashton Smith "Chant of Autumn"

From autumn's grey, forgotten roses - Clark Ashton Smith "November Twilight"

Where the ruining roses go - Clark Ashton Smith "Quest"

Starward incense of the waning rose - Clark Ashton Smith "To Omar Khayyam"

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

Dripping the repeated roses - Patricia Smith "Giving Birth to Soldiers"

Down in the land of roses - Molly Spotted Elk [Molly Alice Nelson] "[Down in the land of roses]"

Ahead a rose wreathed laurel - Clarence Victor Stahl "Push Onward"

And crowns utility with rose - A.E. Stallings "The Rosehead Nail"

When the dew-drop feeds the roses - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Elfin Song"

Lone and everlasting rose of light - George Sterling "Aldebaran at Dusk"

Rose whose thorn is ecstasy - George Sterling "Doubt and Worship"

And on thy mouth lost roses - George Sterling "Hesperia"

A rose of sorrow and change - George Sterling "Rainbow's End"

As dust that gathered to a rose - George Sterling "Tasso to Leonora"

Where light and roses stir - George Sterling "To My Sister"

Silent as her heavy-petalled rose - George Sterling "To Ruth Chatterton"

Would lie on shattered roses - George Sterling "To Vera (5)"

My thicket yields a rose - M. Letitia Stockett "Free"

The keepers of the roses have shut the garden-gate - Richard Henry Stoddard "A Winter Scene"

Danced it to dust and drugged it with the rose - Muriel Stuart "Mrs. Effingham's Swan Song"

Must pay the rose's price - Muriel Stuart "Mrs. Effingham's Swan Song"

Redolent with balm of myrtle, orange, and the rose - Alan Sullivan "A Question"

The future is strewn with the roses of hope - Miss Caroline E. Sutton "The Past" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

Hid my heart in a nest of roses - Algernon Charles Swinburne "A Ballad of Dreamland"

Under the roses I hid my heart - Algernon Charles Swinburne "A Ballad of Dreamland"

The word on the lips of the rose - Algernon Charles Swinburne "A Dark Month"

As burns the passion of the rose - Algernon Swinburne "The Lute and the Lyre"

Rain between the bowing heads of roses - Sonya Taaffe "Idle Thoughts While Watching a Faun"

With rosy kisses maddening all the sky - Rabindranath Tagore "Spring that in My Courtyard"

With a burning rose hidden away - Sara Teasdale "Thoughts"

Blood of the rose and hyacinth - Iris Tree "[The sun is lord of life and colour]"

A rose finished with the business of becoming - Emma Trelles "Night of Telescopes"

Glow voluptuous of the damask rose - H.T. Tuckerman "To the Violet" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

Tear the fresh rose from the garland of youth - H.T. Tuckerman "[You call us inconstant]" [Graham's Magazine v.XXI no.3, Sept. 1842]

Roses in the sky, roses in the sea - Katherine Tynan "Winter Sunset"

Rose and fire together - Katherine Tynan "Winter Sunset"

Burning roses in a garden - Katherine Tynan "Winter Sunset"

Complete without a blooming rose - Irvin W. Underhill "Solitude"

Made of rose and fire and mist - Louis Untermeyer "The Dying Decadent"

Dead roses lift their heads - Louis Untermeyer "Haunted"

If life were like a rose designed - Edward A. Uffington Valentine "If Like a Rose"

The rose that cannot wither - Henry Vaughan "Peace"

Must kneel like a rose - Jose Garcia Villa "Lyrics: II (17)"

Look at us with eyes that missed the roses - Edith Wharton "Elegy"

Peer past the stripped arms of the rose - Edith Wharton "The First Year [All Souls' Day]"

That throws across the pathway of my doom a rose - Edith Wharton "The Last Token. A.D. 107. (She Speaks)"

Has heard the message of the Rose - Helen Hay Whitney "The Message"

Rose blossoms, traitors to the night - Helen Hay Whitney "The Rose-Colored Camelia-Tree"

A pale and crownless rose - Helen Hay Whitney "Song [Love is a broken lily]"

The roses of my heart shall bloom - Helen Hay Whitney "To the Beloved"

Whose crimson roses burst his frost - Oscar Wilde "Her Voice"

Rose hedges to the very water's brink - William Carlos Williams "Asphodel, That Greeny Flower" [excerpt]

To make roses stand before thorns - William Carlos Williams "The Ivy Crown"

Give me roses to remember - Margaret L. Woods "Gaudeamus Igitur"

Roses dead and garlands broken - Margaret L. Woods "Gaudeamus Igitur"

Neglectful of roses - Jay Wright "Sasa"

Far from the rose and the lily - W.B. Yeats "The White Birds"

Uttermost attar of the living rose - Francis Brett Young "Dead Poets"


The rosy veils of pure celestial air - Benjamin West Ball "The Seraphs' Holiday"

And nights in rosy riot fly - Charlotte Bronte "Evening Solace"

A rosy glimmer of flame remembered - John Gould Fletcher "The Old Love and the New"

Lifting the dawn with rosy feet - Jeannette Marks "Sea Gulls"

From their rosy dreams awake - Francis Neilson "The Boon"


then temper it to golden-rose - Jacqueline Osherow "Inspiration Point, Bryce Canyon, Utah"


Used a rosebud for a brush - Tom Hall "The Perfect Face"

Rose and rosebud on one stem - Theodore H. Rand "'By the Love'"

When the rosebuds hide the thorns - S.R.H. "Mabel" (in The Cornhill Magazine v.1 no.3)

And renew my faith in an ornamental rosebud - Jay Wright "Kumu"


Rose-coloured dreams adorning - Paul Laurence Dunbar "Dreams"

Of all the rose-crowned year - Louis J. McQuilland "To the New Helen on Her Birthday"

Rose-crown for the dancing hours - E. Nesbit "St. Valentine's Day"

Yield rose-dust and ivy-leaf - Clark Ashton Smith "Sepulture"

All this sky a rose-garden - Katherine Tynan "Winter Sunset"

A rosegold gown of smoke - Molly Raynor "Yamim Noraim///Days of A W E"

Drenched with the perfumes of summer nights and rose-hush - Hester J. Rook "Stepping the Path Trod by the Moon"

Quaint jars with rose-leaf memories - Edward Dowden "To Hester"

Received the rose-leaf soul - Robert Alden Sanborn "To a Child Falling Asleep"

Will mount again into rose-leaves - William Carlos Williams "History"

Crying from roseless lands - Lionel Johnson "In England"

Of roseless thorns to crown and bind - Charles William Wallace "False Womankind!"

Knotted as rose of Sharon - Michael Field "Relics"

Rose-rumours steal and stir - Zona Gale "Ballade of Old Perfumes"

Set the rose-shrouded sundial in shadow - Louise Morey Bowman "Green Apples"

Rose-tinted shadows of beauty and light - S.D. Anderson "A May Song" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.5, May 1849]

From the rose-tree of our hopes - George D. Prentice "Lines in Memory of My Lost Child"

Rose water in black coffee - Zaina Alsous "Southern Accent"

By sunshine, by rosewater, by the cactus flowers - Andrea Gibson "In the chemo room, I wear mittens made of ice so I don't lose my fingernails. But I took a risk today to write this down"

Filled with rose-water and myrrh - Iris Tree "[Many things I'd find to charm you]"

Pause hard by the rose-wreathed gate - Grace Greenwood "The Spanish Princess to the Moorish Knight" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]

Through rose-wreathed halls of fantasy - William H.C. Hosmer "Impromptu: Written on Receiving a Rose-Bud from a Lady"

Bowers of scarlet sky-roses - Katherine Tynan "Winter Sunset"


Wild-Rose.


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