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Worship blended with the throbbing of delight - W.E.A. "The Buried Flower" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXCIII, July 1848, v.LXIV]

No other worship abides and endures - Elizabeth Akers "Rock Me to Sleep"

To worship winter's God - Grant Balfour "Where Union Dwelt"

To worship the bull from the sea - Terry Blackhawk "Out of the Labyrinth"

To worship idols or mimic fireflies - Maxwell Bodenheim "The Sword Converses with a Philosopher"

To worship on that height - Gordon Bottomley "King Lear's Wife"

Strength to behold Him and not worship - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Drama of Exile"

Blasphemous worship under roofs of gold - William Cullen Bryant "Hymn of the Waldenses"

Worships what recalls the sun - Michelangelo Buonarroti "XXVIII. The Heavenly Birth of Love and Beauty" transl. by John Addington Symonds

House of worship for pretenders - Taylor Byas "Conversion: On Cincinnati's Converted Churches, God, and Lucifer"

Worship mercy in routine - Ty Chapman "Alone in bed thinking about another breakup"

And worship calves of brass and clay - Thomas Clarke "Sir Copp canto I"

I worshipped the Invisible alone - Samuel Taylor Coleridge "Hymn Before Sunrise, in the Vale of Chamouni"

I have poured my worship on the dust - Mrs. Martha W. Cook "A Spirit's Reproach" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.2, August 1863]

Worshiping the instrument of cruelty - T.D. Curtis "The Cross and Crown: Prologue"

Have flung my worship before your feet - H.D. "Toward the Piraeus"

Surviving worshippers of the sky - Chris Dombrowski "Fluvial"

To worship the dark saint of the sea - Martin Espada "Alabanza: In Praise of Local 100"

Winning worship from the common eye - "False Estimations" [The Continental Monthly v.3 no.3, March 1863]

Grew still with silent worship - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"

Worship in no temple but the weather - Dana Gioia "Autumn Inaugural"

As who alone rewards its worshippers - "The Gold-Finder" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXXIX, v.LXXI, May 1852]

In worship before the poet kings - Louis Golding "Skylark Noon"

And pass the worship on intact - Edmund Gosse "Alere Flammam"

Trees worthy of all worship - Ivor Gurney "Trees"

Seemingly endless options of worship - Aaron Tyler Hand "Self-Portrait as Combinations Taco Bell/Pizza Hut/KFC"

Those few that worship the dream - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat XVII"

Looking for something to worship - Carly Inghram "Disappearing into a Fiction"

Learning to worship the strangers - June Jordan "These Poems"

Went to worship at the cathedral of emptiness - Mary Karr "Mall Crawl"

The ceaseless stream of worshippers - Fanny Kemble "The Vision of Life"

Has only worshipped in the true church of TV - Cassandra Khaw "We Aren't Their Fairytales, Baby"

Have their utmost worship's worth - Archibald Lampman "The Meadow"

Tiny temples where lizards worship - Angel Leal "Wildlife and Rainforests Inside My Father"

Who delight in the worship of Bacchus - Henry S. Leigh "Anacreontic (For a Cavalier Tea-Party)"

So I could worship at the altars of birds - Robin Coste Lewis "The Ark: Self-Portrait as Aphrodite Using Her Dress for a Sail, xxx"

If what we worship fail us - Amy Lowell "Hero-Worship"

Have worshipped so many lies - Sally Wen Mao "Occidentalism"

Worships his own desire - Don Marquis "The God-Maker, Man"

Worship Light as concept and as flame - Harry Martinson "Aniara 58" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg

Won't tell you that he worships Freedom - "The Masquerade of Freedom" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine no.CCCXX, v.LXVIII, Oct. 1850]

Quiet worship at our scented shrine - Claude McKay "Commemoration"

A worshipper of some far world - Robert Morris "The Student's Dream of Fame"

Construct temples to worship their Perfect Numbers - Sara Omer "Djinndroid"

For her worshipper the wind - Margaret Fuller Ossoli "The Dahlia, the Rose, and the Heliotrope"

Of worship more complete - Margaret Fuller Ossoli "Sub Rosa, Crux"

Converts and worshippers you soon shall find - T.W.P. "Letter Second: To Thomas Carlyle, Esquire, London" [The Knickerbocker v.22, no.1, July 1843]

To ward and worship all the light it sends - Josephine Preston Peabody "Vestal Flame"

Pure worship from so pure a mind - J.G. Percival "To a Belle" [The Knickerbocker v.10, no.6, December 1837]

And worships at thy burning shrine - Geo. D. Prentice "Lines Written on St. Valentine's Day"

Everything that a worshiper accords to an idol - Rachel Rodman "The Past Is a Foreign Country"

Today I worship the hammer - Carl Sandburg "The Hammer"

And blaspheme worshipping still - George Santayana "Odi et Amo"

Whose skill brings hosts to worship - W. Gilmore Simms "Heads of the Poets III: The Same" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]

A worship of a grimmer kind - George Sterling "The New Kings"

Worship at a faithless shrine - J.A. Tinnon "I'll Blame Thee Not"

Where love kindling desire worships unafraid - Rudolph Valentino "You"

Worships water over light - Emily van Kley "Sarracenia, Purpurea"

At many a wayside worshipped - John Hall Wheelock "Legend"

Stirs the worship of absence - Jay Wright "Kumu"

That brings the tongue to worship - Assetou Xango "Give Your Daughters Difficult Names"


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