Potential Titles: Fling/Flung
Jun. 5th, 2010 08:06 pmFlinging luminous lances of rain - Daisy Aldan "Women at Windows"
And fling your cares behind - William Thompson Bacon "Pen and Ink"
and suddenly flings in a rain of gold - Elizabeth Bartlett "I would remember"
Fling to them mountains to overcome - Stephen Vincent Benet "November Prothalamion"
The sun flings off the shadows - Edmund Blunden "The March Bee"
And flings their turmoil to the sky - Maxwell Bodenheim "Advice to a River Steam-Boat"
People fling their powdered souls at you - Maxwell Bodenheim "To --" [The Little Review Nov. 1914 (v.1, no.8)]
Fling wide immortality's portal - C.S. Calverley "Flight"
Flings frail palaces at the sky - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book IV. The Woman in the Forest"
Toppling crests fling back the radiance - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds: Cumuli. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]
Fling our notes to the sun - Countee Cullen "To You Who Read My Book"
Flings a crystal veil - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature L: The Snow"
Flings loose its shadows - Eleanor Downing "The Pilgrim"
Flings its radiance over life's changing way - Mary Gardiner "The Sacrifice" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
Each note the free birds fling - Theodosia Garrison "The Gifts of Gold"
Who flings her royal radiance round me - Grace Greenwood "A Lay" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
Flinging its kisses to the budding trees - Henry B. Hirst "Thoughts in Spring" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.2, Aug. 1841]
Fling these bitter drops to the wild swans - Li Qingzhao "The Wild Swans" transl. from Chinese to French by Judith Gautier and from French to English by James Whitall
What might come of flinging oneself into thirst - Tariq Luthun "Finding Myself in the Direct Messages of Someone I Do Not Know Is in Kuwait"
A tempest flinging fire - Edwin Markham "To High-born Poets"
Which Memory flings around the past - "Memory" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]
Flinging yellow clay on dust - Edna St Vincent Millay "The Poet and His Book"
Fling down that map and measure - Joaquin Miller "Usland to the Boers"
Fling the hawk at her quarry - O'Gnive, bard of Shane O'Neill, c.1560 "The Downfall of the Gael" transl. by Sir Samuel Ferguson
Fling it to a whistling lad - Dorothy Parker "For an Unknown Lady"
Flinging magnetic curses amid the toil - Carl Sandburg "Chicago"
Fling a thousand banners out - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Summer Rain"
My arm could fling Time from His throne - Arthur Stringer "Life-Drunk"
And fling the ashes to the wind - "There's Someone I Think Of" transl. by Burton Watson
Flings her light despairing - Iris Tree "[Lulled are the dazzling colours of the day]"
Fling us a handful of stars - Louis Untermeyer "Caliban in the Coal Mines"
And fling a very ecstasy of green - Mary Webb "The Water-Ousel"
Sweet is the music that Memory flings - Miss S.J.C. Whittlesey "Fadde and Gone" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
Fling ourselves round with dust lilies - William Carlos Williams "Ballet"
A fling of crows disperses and is gone - Christian Wiman "Hard Night"
The oak flings largesse to the beggar breeze - William Henry Withrow "October"
Shower of fiery sparkles flinging - "Work Away" [Harper's New Monthly v.3 no.14, July 1851]
O'er the torrents fling your bridges - "Work Away" [Harper's New Monthly v.3 no.14, July 1851]
Authority flings a struck match in our direction - Yi Lei "A Single Woman's Bedroom" transl. by Tracy K. Smith and Changtai Bi
I had no stone of scorn to fling - Francis Brett Young "The Pavement"
A boomerang flung from your throat - Lauren K. Alleyne "How could I have known I would need to remember your laughter,"
The tones from giants flung - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.XI--Sunset"
Flung to us a spark, a thread of fire - Maurice Baring "Diffugere Nives, 1917"
Casually flung among a cloud of pines - Stephen Vincent Benet "The First Vision of Helen"
Flung across the intervals - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Vision of Poets"
Suffer its broad flung shadow not - Francis Burrows "The Prayer to Demeter"
The scornful earth-flung pence - W. Wilfred Campbell "Pan the Fallen"
Flowers around our banquet flung - Giosue Carducci "At the Table of a Friend" transl. by Frank Sewall
Flung a challenge in the teeth of life - Arthur Colton "West-Easterly Moralities"
Flung her name against the dark - H.D. "Nossis"
Have flung my worship before your feet - H.D. "Toward the Piraeus"
Flung a menace at the earth - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature XXXVII: A Thunder-storm"
The thunder-stone flung forth - Edward Dowden "A Day of Defection"
With God's gauntlet flung - John Erskine "Ash Wednesday"
Smoke-beings flung in constellations - Martin Espada "Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100"
Flung their troubles round my door - Patrick Joseph Hartigan writing as John O'Brien "The Parting Rosary"
And flung the planets over his shoulder - Mary Karr "Disappointments of the Apocalypse"
Who had flung their faces on the stones - Emma Lazarus "The Feast of Lights"
Mock the roses flung away - Don Marquis "The Tavern of Despair"
Red knowledge of a window flung wide - John Masefield "Lollingdon Downs"
Flung out a magical wild melody - Theodore Maynard "There Was an Hour"
having flung d'artagnan clear to luna's tepid stone - Andy Miller "All Those Bleached Bones"
Flung out upon the freezing storm - Mrs. R.S. Nichols "The Midnight Dream"
Flung toward heaven's toppling rage - Robert Nichols "Ardours and Endurances: The Aftermath III. Thanksgiving"
Her mantle she flung to the wind - "The Outlaw of Loch Lene" transl. by Jeremiah Joseph Callanan
Through the narrows flung - Walter S. Percy "Paupack"
The fiends in hell have flung the dice - Arthur Quiller-Couch "The Doom of the Esquire Bedell"
And flung into the falling sky - Roger Reeves "The Head of the Cottonmouth"
Feverish light flung hard upon their faces - Paisley Rekdal "Bats"
Flung such luminous notes - Lola Ridge "Cactus Seed"
As the vulture fell like a flung stone - Lola Ridge "Firehead part VI: The Merchant of Babylon 1: Before Dawn"
Flung from a broken star on its mad race - Amy Redpath Roddick "A Scientific Puzzle"
You that so flung your crimson to the sun - Carl Sandburg "Poems Done on a Late Night Car"
Across the darkness flung the ribbons of the Northern Light - Francis Sherman "A Canadian Calendar: X. Fellowship"
Bright chips of sunlight flung skyward - Joyce Sidman "Always Together"
Flung through the void's expanse - Clark Ashton Smith "Lament of the Stars"
Flung me the apple of eternal laughter - Iris Tree "[From the fathomless depth of my boredom]"
The darkness flung aside - Louis Untermeyer "In the Subway"
Leopard skin about her shoulders flung - Helen Hay Whitney "The Joy of Life"
Resume its far-flung harvests - Alfred Noyes "The Hill-Flowers"
Far-flung blossoms of desire - Emile Verhaeren "The Sunlit Hours XII" transl. by Charles Royier Murphy
Granite and steel upflung became my fountains - William Rose Benét "The City"
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And fling your cares behind - William Thompson Bacon "Pen and Ink"
and suddenly flings in a rain of gold - Elizabeth Bartlett "I would remember"
Fling to them mountains to overcome - Stephen Vincent Benet "November Prothalamion"
The sun flings off the shadows - Edmund Blunden "The March Bee"
And flings their turmoil to the sky - Maxwell Bodenheim "Advice to a River Steam-Boat"
People fling their powdered souls at you - Maxwell Bodenheim "To --" [The Little Review Nov. 1914 (v.1, no.8)]
Fling wide immortality's portal - C.S. Calverley "Flight"
Flings frail palaces at the sky - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book IV. The Woman in the Forest"
Toppling crests fling back the radiance - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds: Cumuli. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]
Fling our notes to the sun - Countee Cullen "To You Who Read My Book"
Flings a crystal veil - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature L: The Snow"
Flings loose its shadows - Eleanor Downing "The Pilgrim"
Flings its radiance over life's changing way - Mary Gardiner "The Sacrifice" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]
Each note the free birds fling - Theodosia Garrison "The Gifts of Gold"
Who flings her royal radiance round me - Grace Greenwood "A Lay" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
Flinging its kisses to the budding trees - Henry B. Hirst "Thoughts in Spring" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.2, Aug. 1841]
Fling these bitter drops to the wild swans - Li Qingzhao "The Wild Swans" transl. from Chinese to French by Judith Gautier and from French to English by James Whitall
What might come of flinging oneself into thirst - Tariq Luthun "Finding Myself in the Direct Messages of Someone I Do Not Know Is in Kuwait"
A tempest flinging fire - Edwin Markham "To High-born Poets"
Which Memory flings around the past - "Memory" [Southern Literary Messenger v.II no.1 Dec. 1835-6]
Flinging yellow clay on dust - Edna St Vincent Millay "The Poet and His Book"
Fling down that map and measure - Joaquin Miller "Usland to the Boers"
Fling the hawk at her quarry - O'Gnive, bard of Shane O'Neill, c.1560 "The Downfall of the Gael" transl. by Sir Samuel Ferguson
Fling it to a whistling lad - Dorothy Parker "For an Unknown Lady"
Flinging magnetic curses amid the toil - Carl Sandburg "Chicago"
Fling a thousand banners out - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Summer Rain"
My arm could fling Time from His throne - Arthur Stringer "Life-Drunk"
And fling the ashes to the wind - "There's Someone I Think Of" transl. by Burton Watson
Flings her light despairing - Iris Tree "[Lulled are the dazzling colours of the day]"
Fling us a handful of stars - Louis Untermeyer "Caliban in the Coal Mines"
And fling a very ecstasy of green - Mary Webb "The Water-Ousel"
Sweet is the music that Memory flings - Miss S.J.C. Whittlesey "Fadde and Gone" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
Fling ourselves round with dust lilies - William Carlos Williams "Ballet"
A fling of crows disperses and is gone - Christian Wiman "Hard Night"
The oak flings largesse to the beggar breeze - William Henry Withrow "October"
Shower of fiery sparkles flinging - "Work Away" [Harper's New Monthly v.3 no.14, July 1851]
O'er the torrents fling your bridges - "Work Away" [Harper's New Monthly v.3 no.14, July 1851]
Authority flings a struck match in our direction - Yi Lei "A Single Woman's Bedroom" transl. by Tracy K. Smith and Changtai Bi
I had no stone of scorn to fling - Francis Brett Young "The Pavement"
A boomerang flung from your throat - Lauren K. Alleyne "How could I have known I would need to remember your laughter,"
The tones from giants flung - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.XI--Sunset"
Flung to us a spark, a thread of fire - Maurice Baring "Diffugere Nives, 1917"
Casually flung among a cloud of pines - Stephen Vincent Benet "The First Vision of Helen"
Flung across the intervals - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Vision of Poets"
Suffer its broad flung shadow not - Francis Burrows "The Prayer to Demeter"
The scornful earth-flung pence - W. Wilfred Campbell "Pan the Fallen"
Flowers around our banquet flung - Giosue Carducci "At the Table of a Friend" transl. by Frank Sewall
Flung a challenge in the teeth of life - Arthur Colton "West-Easterly Moralities"
Flung her name against the dark - H.D. "Nossis"
Have flung my worship before your feet - H.D. "Toward the Piraeus"
Flung a menace at the earth - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature XXXVII: A Thunder-storm"
The thunder-stone flung forth - Edward Dowden "A Day of Defection"
With God's gauntlet flung - John Erskine "Ash Wednesday"
Smoke-beings flung in constellations - Martin Espada "Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100"
Flung their troubles round my door - Patrick Joseph Hartigan writing as John O'Brien "The Parting Rosary"
And flung the planets over his shoulder - Mary Karr "Disappointments of the Apocalypse"
Who had flung their faces on the stones - Emma Lazarus "The Feast of Lights"
Mock the roses flung away - Don Marquis "The Tavern of Despair"
Red knowledge of a window flung wide - John Masefield "Lollingdon Downs"
Flung out a magical wild melody - Theodore Maynard "There Was an Hour"
having flung d'artagnan clear to luna's tepid stone - Andy Miller "All Those Bleached Bones"
Flung out upon the freezing storm - Mrs. R.S. Nichols "The Midnight Dream"
Flung toward heaven's toppling rage - Robert Nichols "Ardours and Endurances: The Aftermath III. Thanksgiving"
Her mantle she flung to the wind - "The Outlaw of Loch Lene" transl. by Jeremiah Joseph Callanan
Through the narrows flung - Walter S. Percy "Paupack"
The fiends in hell have flung the dice - Arthur Quiller-Couch "The Doom of the Esquire Bedell"
And flung into the falling sky - Roger Reeves "The Head of the Cottonmouth"
Feverish light flung hard upon their faces - Paisley Rekdal "Bats"
Flung such luminous notes - Lola Ridge "Cactus Seed"
As the vulture fell like a flung stone - Lola Ridge "Firehead part VI: The Merchant of Babylon 1: Before Dawn"
Flung from a broken star on its mad race - Amy Redpath Roddick "A Scientific Puzzle"
You that so flung your crimson to the sun - Carl Sandburg "Poems Done on a Late Night Car"
Across the darkness flung the ribbons of the Northern Light - Francis Sherman "A Canadian Calendar: X. Fellowship"
Bright chips of sunlight flung skyward - Joyce Sidman "Always Together"
Flung through the void's expanse - Clark Ashton Smith "Lament of the Stars"
Flung me the apple of eternal laughter - Iris Tree "[From the fathomless depth of my boredom]"
The darkness flung aside - Louis Untermeyer "In the Subway"
Leopard skin about her shoulders flung - Helen Hay Whitney "The Joy of Life"
Resume its far-flung harvests - Alfred Noyes "The Hill-Flowers"
Far-flung blossoms of desire - Emile Verhaeren "The Sunlit Hours XII" transl. by Charles Royier Murphy
Granite and steel upflung became my fountains - William Rose Benét "The City"
Navigation Links:
Go to F word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.