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somethingdarker ([personal profile] somethingdarker) wrote2010-04-08 09:07 pm

Potential Titles: Dwell

In this uncertainty you now dwell - Brooke Abbey "How to Adult"

Nigh to all who dwell in sweet accord - Ibn al-Fāriḍ "Khamriyyah" [excerpt. There is a vineyard planted by the Lord] transl. by Leonard Chalmers-Hunt

Better dwell with youth upon the mountains - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry LXXX: Youth and Age" transl. by Sir John Bowring

Dwells in a desert by her ruins made - Thomas Bailey "Ireton"

Full many a martyred spirit dwells - Benjamin West Ball "Monody of the Countess of Nettlestede"

That loves to dwell 'midst skulls and coffins - Robert Blair "The Grave"

And down in one hole they did dwell - G. Boare "What Became of Them?"

In the wallflower's fragrance dwell - Anne Bronte "Memory"

Can dwell on moonlight glimmer - Charlotte Bronte "Evening Solace"

The universe of ocean dwelt - W. Wilfred Campbell "Sebastian Cabot"

Dwelt with the nomad tents of rain - Bliss Carman "The White Gull"

Dwells in Temples never made by hands - Thomas S. Chard "The Seven Sleepers"

That dwell in the corners of the sky - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book VIII. The Scouring of the Horse"

To dwell with wicked spirits - Arthur Hugh Clough "Fragments of the Mystery of the Fall. Scene XI"

To dwell a weeping hermit there - William Collins "Ode: Written in the Year 1746"

Buried in dust and lost in silence, dwell - George Crabbe "The Library"

where dwells the breath of all persisting stars - E. E. Cummings "Amores (VII)"

Nereids who dwell in wet caves - H.D. "Acon"

Where the coiled sea-serpents dwell - Danske Dandridge "Lost at Sea"

Where dwells the essences of unborn thought - Rufus Dawes "Marriage" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.5, Nov. 1841]

Here Echo dwells in lonely mood - Irving Sidney Dix "The Glen"

Where my soul dwells - John Donne "Elegy V: His Picture"

Seven long ages doomed to dwell - Joseph Rodman Drake "The Culprit Fay"

And the Squire's eyes dwell on laughter - Eleanor Farjeon "The Quest"

The Knight's eyes dwell on a star's white crest - Eleanor Farjeon "The Quest"

Where music dwells alone - Arthur Davison Ficke "Swinburne, an Elegy"

Who dwell in a conquered sphere - George Blackstone Field "Men of the Line"

Yet make his sorrowing subjects dwell on both - "The Ghost of Chatham"

Which dwells not in fruit or in flower - William Gibson "To a Canary Bird" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Must dwell in glory all alone - Edgar A. Guest "The Simple Things"

Weird singing mermaids dwell - Louise Imogen Guiney "Saint Cadoc's Bell"

Where Memory the fabler dwells - Sir John Hanmer "Chimes of Antwerp"

The ironbark eucalyptus dwells in ignorance and beauty - Mark Jarman "Dispatches from Devereux Slough"

Where Dante dwells with Beatrice - Sophie Jewett "The Translator to the Author" (preface to Jewett's translation of "The Pearl"

Where many echoes dwell - Dorothy Vena Johnson "Palace"

Dwelt among the pleasant stars - Joyce Kilmer "Wherever, Whenever"

To the place where my childhood had dwelt - Rev. James Gilborne Lyons "The Return to Lezayre" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal no.456, 25 Sept. 1852]

A song is but fire for those who dwell in hell - Shannan Mann "In Hell"

The mused soul that dwells in dust - Don Marquis "Chant of the Changing Hours"

Dwelt in an alien glamor - Don Marquis "A Golden Lad (D.V.M.)"

There devils might fear to dwell - J. Fairfax McLaughlin writing as Pasquino "The American Cyclops, the Hero of New Orleans, and Spoiler of Silver Spoons"

Old love shall dwell with old delight - Henry Newbolt "To a River in the South"

The owl that dwells in the hollow tree - Winthrop Mackworth Praed "The Bridal of Belmont"

Life dwells in the neck of the future - Yousif M. Qasmiyeh "An infinite outing; or the cemetery"

Where the starry armies dwell - Bernard Rascas "The Love of God" transl. by William Cullen Bryant

Dwell on each glance of affection - A.J. Requier "Love" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Rose to the realms where heroes dwell - "Resurgamus" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.2, Feb. 1862]

Where the dead dreamers dwell - Charles G.D. Roberts "The Unknown City"

Where nothing ordinary dwells - Edwin Arlington Robinson "The Gift of God"

Dwell mid the currents of time - George Santayana "Fair Harvard"

Dark fanes where truth has ceased to dwell - The Shepherd of Sharondale "The Infant's Burial" (The Knickerbocker v.23:5, May 1844)

Stars, that dwell in noonday skies, shine on - Fannie Isabelle Sherrick "Easter"

Joys unalloyed shall still dwell in your mind - "Summer" Chatterbox: Stories of Natural History. 1880]

Thieves and robbers dwell therein - Jeremy Taylor "Hymn for Advent; or Christ's Coming to Jerusalem in Triumph"

Multitudes that dwell inside - Edward Thomas "The Dark Forest"

Or sink where anguish dwells - Helen Maria Williams "To Sensibility"

Dwelt among the untrodden ways - William Wordsworth "She dwelt among the untrodden ways"

Dwells in the angel of the well - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 19" transl. by Katherine Silver


Robust dwellers, prodigal of time - Kenneth Rookwood "The Ruins of Burnside" [The Knickerbocker Feb. 1844]

Vagrant dwellers in the houseless woods - William Wordsworth "On Revisiting the Banks of the Wye"


Dwelling.


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