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The blessed clouds in pity creep downward - Ellen Tracy Alden "Jungenthor, the Giant"

Come creeping trustfully your own between - Ellen Tracy Alden "Neighbor Edith"

Creeping around the huge oak with its blossoms of gold - S.D. Anderson "A May Song" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.5, May 1849]

Branches from her own heart crept - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry CXXVI: Dream of the Holy Virgin" transl. by J.W. Wiles

The creeping barrage of occupation - Key Ballah "Skin & Sun"

Watching the night creep up on the noon - Mary Jo Bang "Don't"

before night creeps along the mist - Elizabeth Bartlett "washday in the tropics"

The ghosts of long-dead odours creep - Charles Baudelaire "The Flask" transl. not credited

The cypress shadows creeping - Clive Bell "To A.V.S. with a Book"

Creep and run and sail and fly - "A Big Playfellow" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]

When the creeping phlox covers the moon - Antoinette Brim-Bell "Insomniac Tankas"

That creep round twilight corners - Rupert Brooke "The Old Vicarage, Grantchester"

The silent ships of memory creep across the seas - Frank Oliver Call "The Ships of Memory"

Down to the buried kingdoms creep - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book VI. Ethandune: The Slaying of the Chiefs"

A creeping fear will seize the mind - Palmer Cox "The Brownies and the Whale"

Where the ivy crept around the ruined coping of the wall - C.A. Dawson "Sketches" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, 12 June 1886]

Creep up the tidal river to the quay - C.A. Dawson "Sketches" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, 12 June 1886]

Mute shadows creeping slow - Walter de la Mare "The Empty House"

To creep from out the silent skies - Walter de la Mare "Full Moon"

How noteless creep the hours - Ignatius L. Donnelly "The Forest Fountain" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

The mosses creep to her dancing feet - Julia C.R. Dorr "Over the Wall"

Creeping toward an unseen mark - J. Hal. Elliot "What Then?" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.6, June 1862]

Unfathomed currents creep - Eleanor Farjeon "Dream-Ships"

How the cold creeps in as the fire dies - Robert Frost "Storm Fear"

Covert in creeping green - Zona Gale "Exercise in Spenserians"

In lingering labyrinths creep - Thomas Gray "The Progress of Poesy"

And one by one old memories creep - J.H. "The Churchyard by the Sea" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.8-v.I, 23 Feb. 1884]

And the moss creeps after - Richard Hughes "The Ruin"

Orange creeping vines, parasitic, protecting you - Kathy Jetñil-Kijiner "Kaōnōn"

Crept down into its depths - Fanny Kemble "Written After Leaving West Point"

The creeping nets of sleep - Archibald Lampman "Before Sleep"

O'ergrown by creeping tendrils and rank moss - Emma Lazarus "The South"

And creeping mists assert their sway - Ida Lee "Suffolk"

Creeps the tide of shadow - Eugene Lee-Hamilton "Sister Mary of the Plague"

That hideous tenant crawls and creeps - Henry S. Leigh "An Allegory Written in Deep Dejection"

The fox that crept through the fern - Sidney Royse Lysaght "The Forest"

Creeping wind from unlit space - Jeannette Marks "Only Your Name"

The channels where deceit has crept - "The Misanthrope"

Creeping along to the thick far-away - William Moore "Dusk Song"

As creeps the tiger on the deer - Lewis Morris "The Epic of Hades book I: Tartarus: Tantalus"

The little children of the wind had crept inside - Miriam Clark Potter "The Children of the Wind"

And the shuddering shadows creep about - Miriam Clark Potter "The Common Things"

Creeps away to dream and rest - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "On a Battle Field"

Across my mind comes creeping - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "Rustic Courting XVII: Casend Hill"

The daybeams creep along the serried pines - Edward S. Rend, Jr. "Promise" [The Continental Monthly v.3 no.1, March 1863]

Until the twilight shadows creep - Grantland Rice "Play Ball"

Creeps down empty alleys - Rainer Maria Rilke "The Bride" transl. by Jessie Lemont

Mysteries come creeping into our garden - Amy Redpath Roddick "The Good Old Days"

Where fog trails and mist creeps - Carl Sandburg "Lost"

Creep beyond the subtle borderline of sleep - Ann K. Schwader "Darkest Anodyne"

Creep into their sorceries of sleep - Ann K. Schwader "Finale, Act Two"

The wraith of the mist goes creeping - Clinton Scollard "A Song for Joyce's Country"

Where creeping doubts and dumb, dull sorrows press - Edward Shanks "The Return"

O'er the lattice creeps the Eglantine - The Shepherd of Sharondale "The Floral Resurrection" (The Knickerbocker v.23:5, May 1844)

All of you who crawl and creep - Joyce Sidman "Welcome to the Night"

The cold came creeping - Joyce Sidman and Rick Allen "Dream of the Tundra Swan"

Crept amid the branches of the elm - L. Virginia Smith "Bless the Homestead Law"

Whose slow, annuling tide creeps nearer - George Sterling "The Wiser Prophet"

Cruel glaciers threatening creep - Elizabeth Drew Stoddard "March"

Footpath creeping through the long grass to the door - Miss Virginia Townsend "The House in the Lane" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.5, May 1864]

Where murder creeps and whispers - Iris Tree "[I think myself the fool of tragedy]"

Sent their misty vanguard creeping - Henry van Dyke "The Fall of the Leaves"

The bitter creeping plant of discontent - Henry van Dyke "Vera"

Creeping down by waterless defiles under an iron midnight - Edith Wharton "La Folle du Logis"

A lonely pathway crept - Ella Wheeler Wilcox "War: The Men-Made Gods"

Higher kilowatts of creeping joy - Jenny Xie "Origin Story"

Mottled with creeping rust stains - Shuyi Yin "Growing Chair"


Sly frosts shall take the creepers by surprise - Archibald Lampman "September"

Vines and creepers circle the crumbling frame - Lynette Mejía "Abandon"

A creeper clinging to the moss - "Selections from the 'Nineteen Old Poems of the Han'" transl. by Burton Watson


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