Potential Titles: View
Oct. 4th, 2011 06:24 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Hypnotized by the beauty of this strange new view - Duane and Cathy Ackerson "Moon Mirror"
Those hostile clouds blocked his view - Mike Allen "Kandinsky's Garden"
To show him views from all angles at once - Mike Allen "Picasso's Rapture"
New views burying the old - Howard Altmann "After Hours"
Long corridors of views into the heart - Julia Alvarez "Small Portions"
More pure and hallowed to the view - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.VI--Summer"
When London's faded glories rise to view - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"
Views her shadow in the stream - William Lisle Bowles "Banwell Hill: Part First"
Hiding secret fires from view - Charlotte Bronte "Preference"
Those who only view the husk - Tommaso Campanella "XXXVI. Against Hypocrites" transl. by John Addington Symonds
From their lofty refuge viewed - Roger Casement "Benburb"
Only an instant's interim to view them - Richard Chwedyk "Rich and Pam Go to Fermilab and Later See a Dead Man"
And view the earth with baleful eye - Joseph Seamon Cotter Jr. "The Band of Gideon"
Makes an angel worth the view - Nathalia Crane "The History of Painting"
Opening the view to thousands of landing geese - Chris Dombrowski "First Hour"
Arriving beyond view before the thought of it - Eric Ekstrand "Family Solo"
To a target viewed clear on the sight - Gilbert Frankau "A Song of the Guns"
The view from the precipice - Louise Gluck "An Adventure"
Where one can view new stars - Regan Good "A Monstrous Catalpa Tree Grows from a Drain"
Crouches and cowers from mortal view - Harry Graham "The Triumph of Jam"
From a view to the death in the morning - John Woodcock Graves "John Peel"
Veering unbid into my view - Thomas Hardy "At Moonrise and Onwards"
All with the same end in view - Oliver Herford "An Alphabet of Celebrities"
The herds of the dread sea horse to view - Mary Howitt "The Northern Seas"
That will not view the Skies - Anne Killigrew "An Ode"
Views it with her double-eye - Aditi Machado "Experiment with Aspic"
View the damage without regretting - W.S. Merwin "Testimony"
Flickering like a wolf in and out of view - Maggie Nelson "Today's Snow"
This curtained memorial hidden from view - Jess Nevins "My Last Duke"
Each leaf expands its view - Naomi Shihab Nye "Morning Song"
To view the reeling years - Dorothy Parker "Song of Perfect Propriety"
Within view of a rough sea - Carl Phillips "The Last of Fanfare"
Thousands eager to hear your views - Ishmael Reed "A Black Genius"
When the queen ascended into view - Ariana Reines "The Rose"
Fortune's juggling wheel to view - Friedrich Schiller "Reproach-To Laura"
Viewed in the hollow mirror of remorse - Friedrich Schiller "Resignation" transl. not credited
A privileged view of questionable worth - Ann K. Schwader "Deconstructing Night"
To view the city wrapped in silence deep - P. Seshadri "Thoughts"
A stand of hawthorns blocking my view - Lisa Sewell "Letter from a Haunted Room"
Rested to view the ruins - Gary Soto "How I Got to Walk Down Six Thousand Feet Barefoot"
Viewing time is a stoning - Russell Thorburn "The TV Guide as the Book of Job"
Coiled around my brittle turquoise view - Emma Trelles "Corazón in Fall"
Good for viewing the lingering past - Emma Trelles "Night of Telescopes"
And clouds shut out the view - William Watson "The Blind Summit"
A school of porpoise flashed in view - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"
No record of our viewing - Katie Willingham "Terrifying Robot Update"
Past view come here often - Zheng Min "A Small Room" translator not credited. Source: https://projects.zo.uni-heidelberg.de/archive2/DACHS_Leiden/poetry/MD/Zheng_Min_trans.pdf
concrete highways with unchanging views - Maria Zoccola "Dry Land"
A tin voice giving the overview - Mary Jo Bang "You Could Say She Was Willful, but Compared to What?"
In the rearview oblique glimpses - Chrysanthemum "Aubade for the Habana Inn"
Looking back from the rearview and parked alone - Joseph Millar "Job"
Our glory-days in the rear-view mirror - Andre F. Peltier "Miyagi's Wisdom and the Lunch-Table Debates"
Moody and viewless as the changing wind - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"
The perplexed and viewless streams - Rupert Brooke "The Great Lover"
Clouds on viewless columns bloomed - John Davidson "London"
To hail us from a viewless world - Robert Montgomery "Beautiful Influences" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.12 no.337, Oct. 25, 1828]
The viewless spirit of the zephyr - George D. Prentice "Lines in Memory of My Lost Child"
As if zero were already a viewpoint - Mary Jo Bang "The Bread, the Butter, the Orange Marmalade"
Navigation Links:
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Those hostile clouds blocked his view - Mike Allen "Kandinsky's Garden"
To show him views from all angles at once - Mike Allen "Picasso's Rapture"
New views burying the old - Howard Altmann "After Hours"
Long corridors of views into the heart - Julia Alvarez "Small Portions"
More pure and hallowed to the view - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.VI--Summer"
When London's faded glories rise to view - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"
Views her shadow in the stream - William Lisle Bowles "Banwell Hill: Part First"
Hiding secret fires from view - Charlotte Bronte "Preference"
Those who only view the husk - Tommaso Campanella "XXXVI. Against Hypocrites" transl. by John Addington Symonds
From their lofty refuge viewed - Roger Casement "Benburb"
Only an instant's interim to view them - Richard Chwedyk "Rich and Pam Go to Fermilab and Later See a Dead Man"
And view the earth with baleful eye - Joseph Seamon Cotter Jr. "The Band of Gideon"
Makes an angel worth the view - Nathalia Crane "The History of Painting"
Opening the view to thousands of landing geese - Chris Dombrowski "First Hour"
Arriving beyond view before the thought of it - Eric Ekstrand "Family Solo"
To a target viewed clear on the sight - Gilbert Frankau "A Song of the Guns"
The view from the precipice - Louise Gluck "An Adventure"
Where one can view new stars - Regan Good "A Monstrous Catalpa Tree Grows from a Drain"
Crouches and cowers from mortal view - Harry Graham "The Triumph of Jam"
From a view to the death in the morning - John Woodcock Graves "John Peel"
Veering unbid into my view - Thomas Hardy "At Moonrise and Onwards"
All with the same end in view - Oliver Herford "An Alphabet of Celebrities"
The herds of the dread sea horse to view - Mary Howitt "The Northern Seas"
That will not view the Skies - Anne Killigrew "An Ode"
Views it with her double-eye - Aditi Machado "Experiment with Aspic"
View the damage without regretting - W.S. Merwin "Testimony"
Flickering like a wolf in and out of view - Maggie Nelson "Today's Snow"
This curtained memorial hidden from view - Jess Nevins "My Last Duke"
Each leaf expands its view - Naomi Shihab Nye "Morning Song"
To view the reeling years - Dorothy Parker "Song of Perfect Propriety"
Within view of a rough sea - Carl Phillips "The Last of Fanfare"
Thousands eager to hear your views - Ishmael Reed "A Black Genius"
When the queen ascended into view - Ariana Reines "The Rose"
Fortune's juggling wheel to view - Friedrich Schiller "Reproach-To Laura"
Viewed in the hollow mirror of remorse - Friedrich Schiller "Resignation" transl. not credited
A privileged view of questionable worth - Ann K. Schwader "Deconstructing Night"
To view the city wrapped in silence deep - P. Seshadri "Thoughts"
A stand of hawthorns blocking my view - Lisa Sewell "Letter from a Haunted Room"
Rested to view the ruins - Gary Soto "How I Got to Walk Down Six Thousand Feet Barefoot"
Viewing time is a stoning - Russell Thorburn "The TV Guide as the Book of Job"
Coiled around my brittle turquoise view - Emma Trelles "Corazón in Fall"
Good for viewing the lingering past - Emma Trelles "Night of Telescopes"
And clouds shut out the view - William Watson "The Blind Summit"
A school of porpoise flashed in view - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"
No record of our viewing - Katie Willingham "Terrifying Robot Update"
Past view come here often - Zheng Min "A Small Room" translator not credited. Source: https://projects.zo.uni-heidelberg.de/archive2/DACHS_Leiden/poetry/MD/Zheng_Min_trans.pdf
concrete highways with unchanging views - Maria Zoccola "Dry Land"
A tin voice giving the overview - Mary Jo Bang "You Could Say She Was Willful, but Compared to What?"
In the rearview oblique glimpses - Chrysanthemum "Aubade for the Habana Inn"
Looking back from the rearview and parked alone - Joseph Millar "Job"
Our glory-days in the rear-view mirror - Andre F. Peltier "Miyagi's Wisdom and the Lunch-Table Debates"
Moody and viewless as the changing wind - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"
The perplexed and viewless streams - Rupert Brooke "The Great Lover"
Clouds on viewless columns bloomed - John Davidson "London"
To hail us from a viewless world - Robert Montgomery "Beautiful Influences" [Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.12 no.337, Oct. 25, 1828]
The viewless spirit of the zephyr - George D. Prentice "Lines in Memory of My Lost Child"
As if zero were already a viewpoint - Mary Jo Bang "The Bread, the Butter, the Orange Marmalade"
Navigation Links:
Go to V word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.