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His gathered hounds bay gloom - Harold Acton "Lament for Adonis"

To court the kindred gloom - "Addressed to a Young Lady"

Who droops in gloom beyond the wall - Auguste Angellier "Resignation" transl. by Henry van Dyke

The shadowy realm where all is grief and gloom - B. "Two Pictures: Love Terrestrial" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]

To lampless glooms descend - Benjamin West Ball "Disenchantment"

Idea drunk in the elegant gloom - Mary Jo Bang "The Medicinal Cotton Clouds Come Down to Cover Them"

Awakening to a world of gloom - Maurice Baring "Wagner"

Faced a bank of gloom - Cora C. Bass "Washington"

Only one rainy cave of hollow gloom - Charles Baudelaire "The Remorse of the Dead" transl. not credited

Weary of the gloomy north - Charles Baudelaire "The Voyage" transl. not credited

Cold and rayless in the starless gloom - Alex. Lacey Beard, M.D. "A Sketch" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]

Encompassed with funereal gloom - James Beattie "Elegy"

Gloom invests the howling shades - James Beattie "Ode to Peace: Written in the Year 1756"

Lovely flowers in gloomy forests grow - Blanche Benairde "Angels on Earth" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Gloom seen all ages - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Drama of Exile"

These strange contrasting glooms - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "The Seraphim"

Of spun fire and woven gloom - F. O. Call "Calvary"

A shroud of glooming stone - W. Wilfred Campbell "Departure"

Hidden in caves and coral glooms - W. Wilfred Campbell "Phaethon"

Rove from gloom to glee - Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey "A Rover's Song"

And Neptune's children from the emerald gloom - Edward Carpenter "Aphrodite"

Sunset clouds in gloom depart - Willis Gaylord Clark "Stanzas Written in Indisposition"

Through gloomy caverns threads his way - Thomas Clarke "Sir Copp canto II"

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

Sometimes glooming into storms - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]

With gloomy thoughts and thronging dreams oppressed -Martha Walker Cook "The Dove" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.6, June 1864]

Gladdened the garden's deep gloom - Benjamin Copeland "The Law of Love"

Through gloom and tempest guide - Benjamin Copeland "Out of the Depths"

Scatter fragrance after winter's gloom - E. Coungeau "If I Might Choose"

The golden gloom of dreamland - Olive Custance "Twilight"

Which shines a meteor through life's gloom - Lucretia Maria Davidson "The Smile of Innocence"

Through gleam and gloom - Edward Dowden "Sent to an American Shakespeare Society"

Coil gloom around wicked hearts - Enheduana "The Temple Hymns: 4. E-Melemhush, the Temple of Nuska in Nippur" transl. by Sophus Helle

The mist of the cordite's gloom - George Blackstone Field "The Mustering of the Legion"

Cleaves the interstellar gloom - Robert Frost "Bond and Free"

When gloomy Jordan roared and swelled - Ieuan Glan Geirionydd "Why should we Weep?" transl. by Edmund O. Jones

A veil that borrows gloom - Ellen Glasgow "Mary"

Deep solitude converts to gloom - Mrs. L.S. Goodwin "The Unsepulchred Relics"

Rifts of uninvaded gloom - Louise Imogen Guiney "The Wooing Pine"

Should go with him in the gloom - Thomas Hardy "The Oxen"

Night from her gloomy dungeon freed - E. Curtiss Hine, U.S.N. "A Vision" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]

Panting to crimson gloom - Lionel Johnson "Gwynedd"

Each in his proper gloom - Lionel Johnson "Visions"

Long shadows of the cypress gloom - Thomas S. Jones, Jr. "The Island"

The gloom of dreams, a blinding flame - James Joyce "I Hear an Army"

Nightshade all, with gloomy cypress wove - Fanny Kemble "Lines for Music [Oh, sunny love!"

How the heavens stoop and gloom - Fanny Kemble "Sonnet [Art thou already weary of the way?]"

The gloom of solemn cypress bowers - Fanny Kemble "Sonnet [By jasper founts, whose falling waters make]"

Through the dungeon's gloom did fearless grope - Mrs. E.C. Kinney "Miss Dix, the Philanthropist"

Over the starry border glooms - Archibald Lampman "New Year's Eve"

Knee-deep in existential gloom - Deborah Landau "Skeleton"

A gloom fouls the stacked weeks - Deborah Landau "Skeleton"

A shadow of unmitigated gloom - Emily Lawless "From a Western Shoreway I: The Shadow on the Shore"

The mandrake root that fattens in the gloom - Richard Le Gallienne "Tree-Worship"

No lantern in the gloom - John Masefield "Lollingdon Downs"

From gloomy cot to sparkling palace - Maikof (Apollon Maykov) "On Lomonossoef" transl. by John Pollen

Despite our gloomy horoscope - Duncan Moore "To the Lost One"

Winter with its gloomy merchandise - Pablo Neruda "The Human Condition" transl. by Alastair Reid

The gloomy pelicans exhausted - Pablo Neruda "The Unburied Woman of Paita" transl. by Maria Jacketti

Amid the encircling gloom - John Henry (Cardinal) Newman "Lead Kindly Light"

In the gloom of Death's eclipse - Meredith Nicholson "Estranged"

Bewildered warfare in the gloom - Alfred Noyes "Farabi and Avicenna"

Placed one toe in the river of gloom - Naomi Shihab Nye "Coming Soon"

The mutiny of Memory's gloom - "The Ocean Wanderer"

The world's grim shadow glooms between - J. Ives Pease "My Love" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]

Magnolias gloom the earth with densest shades - George B. Peck "The Vision: Inscribed to Teachers to Contrabands in the South" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.6, Dec. 1864]

Dim terrors in the gloomy deep - H. Perceval "Callirhoe"

Pierce far away the midnight gloom - Laura Ann Young Pinney "Within the Golden Gate"

Come fate with her darkest, her gloomiest band - A.J. Requier "Love" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

The Twilight folds her gloom - James Whitcombe Riley "Slumber-Song"

A celebration that would defy the gloom of the year - Alberto Ríos "Christmas on the Border, 1929"

Where western glooms are gathering - Edwin Arlington Robinson "Luke Havergal"

Nor feared hell's gloomy sentry - Henry W. Rockwell "Sonnets: Proem"

From a gloom of a world forgotten to the light of a world to be - Rennell Rodd "At Tiber Mouth"

Makes bright the midnight gloom - Alice Wellington Rollins "Baby-Hood"

Who now make merry at the gloom - Helen Rowland "The Rubáiyát of a Bachelor"

Wild-omened scarlet glooms - Thomas Runciman "Miscellaneous Poems V"

In veil of woven gloom - Abram Joseph Ryan (aka Father Ryan) "Song of the Deathless Voice"

Dropped through crimson gloom to darkness - Siegfried Sassoon "The Death-Bed"

Night's gloomy jaws veil him darkly - Friedrich Schiller "Monument of Moor the Robber"

Weird shadows jigged athwart the gloom - Robert W. Service "The Dreamer"

Hung in the gloom of thought - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Alastor: or, the Spirit of Solitude"

The gloom of the long polar night - Percy Bysshe Shelley "The Daemon of the World"

All stern and robed in gloom - Dora Sigerson Shorter "Love"

When the gloom of crimson lifts - Clark Ashton Smith "The Hashish-Eater; or, The Apocalypse of Evil"

Because my gloom gets some respite - James Stephens "Skim Milk"

Archival gloom, prophetic flame - George Sterling "The Testimony of the Suns"

Titanic glooms of chasmed fears - Charles Warren Stoddard "Ave Maria Bells"

The gnomes in thy bordering gloom - Alfred B. Street "Racket River"

Through the mingled gloom and green - Arthur Stringer "Autumn"

Gloom and frost are free to spoil and ravage here - J. Bayard Taylor "A Requiem in the North" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]

Thoughts through narrowing glooms of shade - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: VIII. The Lery"

Bright sun dispelled the gloom of rolling centuries - M.E. Thropp "The City of Mexico. Written While the War Was Pending" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

Split moon cuts the fearless gloom - S.R. Tombran "A Time Traveler's Field Notes"

Brightens the gloom of the anchorite's cell - Charles E. Trail "They May Tell of a Clime. To -- --" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

The gloom is radiant in a dance - Iris Tree "Lamp-Posts"

Spill the wind of light into our gloom - Iris Tree "[Sun-aureoled lilies are your priestesses]"

My thoughts are tangled fast in gloom - Ts'ao Chih "Presented to Piao, the Prince of Pai-ma" transl. by Burton Watson

Deep in the gloom of days of isolation - W.J. Turner "Soldier in a Small Camp"

While a thousand chimneys vomit gloom - Henry van Dyke "Sea-Gulls of Manhattan"

Slope and embankment in deepening gloom - Wang Ts'an "Seven Sorrows" transl. by Burton Watson

Harmodius' sword bright flashing through the gloom - E. A. Warriner "Battle of the Wilderness" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.2, August 1864]

In their awful gloom were drowned - Arthur Weir "The Secret of the Saguenay"

Scatter the ancient mist of gloom - "The Whale's Last Moments: A Lamp-Light Musing"

The gloom of the jealous night - Oscar Wilde "In the Gold Room"

Fame beyond the eternal gloom - L.A. Wilmer "To Mira" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]

And other woes have chased the gloom - X. "My Mother's Grave" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)

Out of those tyrannous glooms - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"


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