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Glaring scenes with characters of scorn - Mark Akenside "The Pleasures of Imagination, Book the Third"

The television yōkai glares white - Betsy Aoki "A crowd of yakubyō gami (pestilence yōkai)"

Down a glaring maze of walls - Maxwell Bodenheim "Advice to a Forest"

Torn fire glares on beauty - Louise Bogan "A Tale"

And glimmer shifting in the fitful glare - Edward Carpenter "As Round a Lighthouse to--"

Bathed forever in the noon-day glare - Thomas S. Chard "Across the Sea"

The broad highway's glaring white ascent - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"

Death's fell daemons through the flashes glare - Luís de Camões "The Lusiad; or, The Discovery of India: Book I. Argument" transl. by William Julius Mickle

Tenderer than the glaring day - Edward Dowden "Sea Voices"

As sunlight is free of the glare of sand - Roger Dutcher & Joanne Merriam "Heatwave"

With form canine endued, and eyeballs glaring fire - Euripedes "Hecuba" transl. by Michael Wodhull

The harsh glare of the footlights - John Gould Fletcher "Irradiations"

And gazed upon the awful glare - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Slag"

The glare of wisdom blind my eyes - Edgar A. Guest "The Simple Things"

Through the shock of cold and glare - Marilyn Hacker "Nearly a Valediction"

Turned from the sun's fierce glare - Frances E.W. Harper "Go Work in My Vineyard"

And face the glare and tumult of the busy world - Sophia Magaretta Hensley "A Shadow"

A thing of Vapor, Fume and Glare - Oliver Herford "The Jinn"

In whose dull glare no Future lies - Henry B. Hirst "Lethe" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXII no.3, Mar. 1848]

The glare of many a spectral Truth might haunt me - H.G.K. "Day-Dreams of an Exile: VI" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXXIII, Nov. 1851, v.LXX]

The London glare climbs upward to make the sad skies glow - Sheila Kaye-Smith "Willow's Forge"

No terror in the lightning's glare - Fanny Kemble "The Wind"

Tired of gaudy glare - Charles Kingsley "Ode to the Northeast Wind"

The rounds of glare and shadow - Archibald Lampman "The Poet's Song"

When the marigold glare overcast you - D.H. Lawrence "Scent of Irises"

The glaring streets of brick and stone - Emma Lazarus "City Visions"

Empty in the August glare - Eugene Lee-Hamilton "A Pageant of Siena"

Bruised by the stone glare of the limelight - Ada Limon "How to Give Up"

A dim red glare through mud bespattered glass - Amy Lowell "J--K Huysmans"

Dust descending in the glaring white gap - Medbh McGuckian "Painting by Moonlight"

Shroud you in their glare - George Meredith "The Woods of Westermain"

The windless noon's hot glare - N. Scott Momaday "The Bear"

The firelit glow of a great hearth's gleam and glare - E. Nesbit and Caris Brooke "[Where do we fly, under deep dark sky?]"

Fall's white glare and drumming zest - Robert Nichols "The Man of Honour"

Through its dark-knit glare - Mary Oliver "Bone"

Fierce glares of lightnings, and the laughter of the fiends - Kostes Palamas "The Return" transl. by Aristides E. Phoutrides

The bleak glare aching over all - Adrienne Rich "An Atlas of the Difficult World"

He marked the circumference of the glare - David St. John "Los Angeles, 1954"

Where thousand terrors on him glare - Friedrich Schiller "The Artists" transl. not credited

Beyond the harbour lantern's broken glare - Edward Shanks "Boats at Night"

Distracting sound, and dust, and heat, and glare - B. Simmons "To a Caged Skylark, Regent's Circus, Piccadilly" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXCV, v.LXIV, Sept. 1848]

Granite beneath the glare of hostile spaces - Leonora Speyer "Of Mountains"

A skull that glared upon the stars - George Sterling "The Dream of Wilhelm II"

Grew brilliant in the tinsel glare - Iris Tree "[Winding down the streets in wearied gaiety]"

The elfish glare of a polar night - "The Whale's Last Moments: A Lamp-Light Musing"

A glare of lights appears and strobes - Dana Wilde "Abductions"

To confront the tyrant's stormy glare - Jane Francesca Agnes Wilde "The Enigma"

Hide the sabre's hideous glare - Helen Maria Williams "An Ode on the Peace"

In the faint glare of the new moon - Charles Wright "Natura Morta"

Under the lamplight's shielded glare - Francis Brett Young "The Pavement"

Beneath the glare of brazen skies - Francis Brett Young "Sonnet [Not only for remembered loveliness]"


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