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The spell will only work if you don't choke - Brooke Abbey "How to Adult"

Kaleidoscopic hints, to be worked up in farce or tragedy - Thomas Bailey Aldrich (uncredited) "An Idyl" [The Atlantic Monthly v.07 no.39, Jan. 1861]

Through the crooked working of his mind - Thomas Bailey Aldrich "Wyndham Towers"

Where spined and shelled imps bent to their work - Mike Allen "La Donna del Lago"

The hard work of staying alive - Julia Alvarez "Keeping Watch"

Praising them all for honest, quiet work - Stephen Vincent Benet "Blood Brothers"

Learn the work song of smaller creatures - Omar Berrada "A Thistle Will Do"

A few centuries of honest work - Wendell Berry "Anglo-Saxon Protestant Heterosexual Men"

When those who work are idling - Elizabeth Bishop "Suicide of a Moderate Dictator"

Working in sweat and skin and bone - Carina Bissett "Seven Swans"

Prophecy is no light work - Antoinette Brim-Bell "Duplex: Black Mamas Praying"

Worked on the bone of a lie - R. Browning "Master Hughes of Saxe-Gotha"

Whose high work remains unknown - Michelangelo Buonarroti "I. On Dante Alighieri" transl. by John Addington Symonds

Paid by work so frail as mine - Michelangelo Buonarroti "XIII. To Vittoria Colonna. Brazen Gifts for the Golden" transl. by John Addington Symonds

Works adverse to my wish - Michelangelo Buonarroti "XV. The Lover and the Sculptor" transl. by John Addington Symonds

The paragon of all their works - Michelangelo Buonarroti "XXIV. The Doom of Beauty" transl. by John Addington Symonds

Each working the grindstone in turn - Lewis Carroll "The Hunting of the Snark"

Against the work of death - C.P. Cavafy "The Horses of Achilles" (translated by John Marvrogordato)

Indignant at this work of death - C.P. Cavafy "The Horses of Achilles" (translated by Daniel Mendelsohn)

The zigzag work of bees - Robin Chapman "The Door-to-Door Saleswoman"

Work supersedes alphabetical order - Catherine Chen "My Poem Asks to Be Read Right to Left"

Do their best work on vegan fare - May Chong "Catering"

The work of Hell in all the ages - Helen Gray Cone "Soldiers of the Light"

Fire only works on the brim of stone - Brody Parrish Craig "Southern Comfort"

Spies on Heaven's work - Rev. William Crowe "Lewesdon Hill"

The work of frosted fruit - H.D. "Lais"

How in your works they knew your wantonness - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Most noble ladies, cherish your fair fame]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)

Their handless work of transmutation - Natalie Diaz "Duned"

A work of all good yokes - Natalie Diaz "Skin-Light"

Half engineering, half a work of art - Thomas M. Disch "The Clouds"

The works and sufferings of light - Chris Dombrowski "Going Home"

Phones that work in the dark - Stephen Dunn "Let's Say"

Worked on smaller debris first - A.M. Fals "Space in Our Relationship"

Working the strange colors of clamor and bells - Annie Finch "A Mabon Crown"

When the wind works against us in the dark - Robert Frost "Storm Fear"

The great work of those patient things - Zona Gale "Paradise and Purgatory"

The work that the years have done - James Harris Guy "Fort Arbuckle"

Working loom of ceaseless pleasure - Richard Haywarde "The Beating of the Heart" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

Work his will, and bow before his rod of iron - Oliver Herford "How the Lion Became King"

The trembling work of a spider - Jane Hirshfield "My Debt"

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

For construction workers and dreamers - Jordan Jace "I Want"

And all their works dissolve - Robinson Jeffers "Carmel Point"

Any breath works as thread - Joe Jimenez "Broken Retablo for Being on My Back, My Feet Bare & in the Air"

Hidden in the works of a mysterious clock - Laura Kasischke "Near misses"

The wreathed trellis of a working brain - John Keats "Psyche"

to work its internalized heresies - Kaie Kellough "if who"

The perfect work of wisdom - Fanny Kemble "Lines, Written in London"

Working hard to deny the fact of bones - Christopher Kennedy "Ghost in the Land of Skeletons"

Unmoved among the ruins of the works of God - "The King of Darkness: On the Fallen Angels" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.12 no.337, Oct. 25, 1828]

Even gravity works at night - Amy King "You Make the Culture"

Making remarkable machines that almost worked - David C. Kopaska-Merkel "Wise and Now-Departed Uncles"

My fingers working at nothing - Stephen Kuusisto "Letter to Borges from London"

A surgeon of time attending to the inner workings - Danusha Laméris "The Watch"

Large schemes of undone work - Amy Levy "A Minor Poet"

Artist working only with light and stone - Cecilia Llompart "Do Not Speak of the Dead"

Working to dissolve its myths - danilo machado "(telling)"

Worked with rose and saffron - Dorothea Mackellar "Bazar"

The devil works overtime - George Reginald Margetson "Stanzas from The Fledgling Bard and The Poetry Society"

To ruin the great work of time - Andrew Marvell "Horatian Ode Upon Cromwell's Return from Ireland"

An earthquake was at work at her foundations - Myron L. Mason "Zenobia" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

All my long and weary work - Theodore Maynard "The Mystic"

Bring her silver work and spice - Theodore Maynard "The Ships"

By the dreadful work was wrought - J.H. McKenzie "The Titanic Disaster"

Worked so hard for my sorrow - Anis Mojgani "Sock Hop"

Violent winds come to work mischief - Mu Hua "Rhyme-Prose on the Sea" transl. by Burton Watson

Even after the world ends, there is work to do - Kyle Tran Myhre "When it Really is Just the Wind, and Not a Furious Vexation"

On pillars that nameless workers placed - Mark Nepo "Under the Temple"

Working out plans with bulls - Pablo Neruda "Bestiary" transl. by Elsa Neuberger

To participate in the work of the hive - Pablo Neruda "Celebration" transl. by Richard Schaaf

A work room for the unknown - Pablo Neruda "Men IX" transl. by William O'Daly

The sea works in my silence - Pablo Neruda "Nothing More" transl. by Dennis Maloney

She worked the bitter charm - E. Nesbit "Death"

not wanting to work with ashes - Hoa Nguyen "Autumn Poem 2012"

That now will work me woe - "Niels Ebbeson, 1340" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

Working upward across bone - Linda Pastan "I Am Learning to Abandon the World: for M"

His hands duplicated the work of eons - Andre F. Peltier "6: Carbon; C1" [superscript 1]

In that shadow our work is done - Adelaide Anne Proctor "A Chant"

Working to forget it - Ben Purkert "The Past Suffers Too"

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

The work of our hearts is dust - Charles Reznikoff "Meditations on the Fall and Winter Holidays"

Whose ardors work in men and tigers - Lola Ridge "Firehead part IV: The Stone 1: The Magdalene"

I forget how disaster works - Patrick Rosal "Children Walk on Chairs to Cross a Flooded Schoolyard"

Work all that my wishing would - Richard Rowlands "Lullaby"

To work inside hearts - Kay Ryan "Why it Is Hard to Start"

The endless work of overcoming - Kay Ryan "Why it Is Hard to Start"

By the oath of work - Carl Sandburg "Smoke and Steel"

A star chart might work better than a map - Ann K. Schwader "Abductee: Two Sonnets: Missing Time"

That he will work ere he pass onward - "The Seafarer" transl. from 'the early Anglo-Saxon' by Ezra Pound

Bring their prize assassins to the bloody work - Robert W. Service "The Dreamer"

That with gentle work did frame - William Shakespeare "Sonnet V"

Doing the scholarly work of facing the empire - Prageeta Sharma "Lateral Violence"

knows nothing of the work that sets you free - Avi Silver "Passing Diamonds"

Do this patient urgent work - Tracy K. Smith "[The will to see oneself as fragile]"

Crude works to shatter out of joint - Edmund Clarence Stedman "The Protest of Faith: to Rev. --"

An atom is working in deepest night - Susan Stewart "Let me tell you about my marvelous god"

Between my work and my dreams - Algernon Charles Swinburne "A Dark Month"

The Great Potter works no private favors - Tao Yuan-ming aka T'ao Ch'ien "Substance, Shadow, and Spirit" transl. by Burton Watson

The grasshopper works at his sewing-machine - Edward Thomas "The Child on the Cliffs"

The faithful work of drowning - Ocean Vuong "Telemachus"

The working of instinct near water - Rosemarie Waldrop "Pleasure Principle"

Working out the curse of Cain - Helen Hay Whitney "The Scarlet Thread"

Word and work irrevocably done - John Greenleaf Whittier "Response"

No work but leisure - Ella Wheeler Wilcox "War: Knitting"

Such little work required of me - Katie Willingham "Internal Reasons and the Obscurity of Blame"

Who work in wind and foam - "The Wives of Brixham"


Dragons in embossed brickwork marching - William Carlos Williams "March"

A nervous brushwork of grass - Jennifer Elise Foerster "Osten I"

Clockwork.

The dreamwork of trees - Lisel Mueller "Why I Need the Birds"

Their boots knew the footwork - Vickie Vertiz "Under the Spell of Conjunto"

Bundled guesswork disguised as intention - Donovon Kūhiō Colleps "Our Red Road"

By guesswork with a failing torch for light - Gilbert Frankau "Gun-Teams"

Of eleven maidens the handiwork - "Valdemar and Tove (A)" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier

Signposts in sorrow & paperwork - Stephanie Heit "Forecast"

Patchwork.

In this glittering piece-work world - Edwina Stanton Babcock "Ghost House"

Rope-work of wisteria, wands of oleander - Campbell McGrath "Joseph Brodsky in Venice (1981)"

Graffiti on the stonework - Timothy Donnelly "Globus Hystericus"

A rainbow tapework as a token of goodbye - Bogi Takács "A Self-Contained Riot of Lights"

Ringing of threadwork and carpet - Brian Turner "Phantom Noise"

The citrus peels our witch-work requires - Devan Barlow "A Moon Witch at the Party"

Workshop.

The work-song of the early bees - Fanny Kemble "To the Spring"


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