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Tamarind bushes welcomed them - Abdurehim Abdullah "Oh, Fathers!" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun

Requesting permission to be welcomed in - Mouna Ammar "ID"

What thresholds of welcome have you crossed and recrossed? - Marci Calabretta Cancio-Bello "The Houseguest"

Underneathness and the welcome of mosses - Camille T. Dungy "Characteristics of Life"

Lack of welcome for my kind - Peg Edera "Harbors of Miracle"

Makes a welcome of indifference - T.S. Eliot "The Waste Land III: The Fire Sermon"

Those same eyes welcomed me - Tom Feelings "I Saw Your Face"

Welcomed the dove with an olive - George Blackstone Field "The Coming of the Line"

Seek our welcome in a silent tear - Effie Fitzgerald "The Babes of Exile"

Welcome as blue to the midnight skies - G.G. Foster "Song of Sleep" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]

The winter that welcomes no guests - Rigoberto Gonzalez "In the Village of Missing Sons"

As welcome as the dust - Linda Gregerson "Father Mercy, Mother Tongue"

To welcome a dry spring - Jin Ha "In the Springtime" (translated by the author)

Sunbeams gave them welcome - Frances Ellen Watkins Harper "The Crocuses"

Welcome children of the Spring - Frances E.W. Harper "Dandelions"

A welcome mat of moonlight - Jim Harrison and Ted Kooser "Braided Creek"

The welcome parade put on by ghosts - Darrel Alejandro Holnes "Black Parade"

As welcome as the violets in March - Fenton Johnson "The Banjo Player"

No art to welcome spirits - Lionel Johnson "A Cornish Night"

Welcome unto this dungeon-house - Fanny Kemble "Lines on a Sleeping Child"

Give welcome to my silent feet - Joyce Kilmer "Madness"

Wide eyes of welcome open to you - Ted Kooser "Barn Owl"

A welcome cure for broken arms - Jennifer G. Lai "In My Mind's Coral, Mother Still Calls Us from Inside"

We rely on the welcome of strangers - Judy I. Lin "a poet of the diaspora reflects upon the codes of jiānghú"

Skies clear with deceitful welcome - Amy Lowell "Epitaph in a Church-Yard in Charleston, South Carolina"

Open for my welcoming - Amy Lowell "The Giver of Stars"

The color of the shore that welcomes - Sally Wen Mao "The Toll of the Sea"

Be welcome in resolute darkness - Herbert Woodward Martin "On Reading Wendell Berry's 'Sabbaths'"

making it hard for your homes to welcome me - Neha Maqsood "Things I Do to Remember Home"

Will welcome you with sweetgrass and sage - N. Scott Momaday "Song of Longing"

Welcome in those happier spheres - Morna "Ianthe"

Ringing like welcome music through the air - Caroline Elizabeth Sarah Norton "The Undying One, Canto I"

Welcome wraiths of joyous nights - W. Theodore Parkes "Bohemians, Hail!"

That this alcove echoes their welcome - Alexandra Lytton Regalado "La Mano"

The welcoming smell of words - Jack Ridl "The Nonattachment of Buddhism"

Be robbed of your welcome - Rainer Maria Rilke from The Book of Hours (translated by Babette Deutsch)

The owl from the steeple sing welcome - Sir Walter Scott "Proud Maisie"

Cries out in siren welcome to the night - Ann K. Schwader "Cordyceps zombii"

Shall welcome every child of Hydra's race - Ann K. Schwader "Mother's Night"

When the lands are bathed in welcome rain - P. Seshadri "Raksha Bandhan"

The welcome weight of hands holding - Elizabeth Shvarts "Nothing More to Say"

The true word of welcome was spoken - Robert Louis Stevenson "Home No More Home to Me"

Geometry a welcome language - Christine Stewart-Nuñez "Credo"

The welcome shape of the axe - Alfred B. Street "The Song of the Axe"

Completes a magic of strange welcome - Edward Thomas "Good-Night"

Each tendril the old welcome gives - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: VIII. The Lery"

A more welcoming slope of the night - Rosmarie Waldrop "Aging"


Convicts programmed for an unwelcome war - Mike Allen "Ascending"

The highest ideal of unwelcome - Mary Jo Bang "Ham Paints a Picture to Illustrate an Early Lesson: O Trauma!"

A word unwelcome to his ears - W.H.C.H. "Death of Rob Roy" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)

The unwelcome shark gliding beneath our lee - A.A. Macnichol "The Sea-Rover" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]

A guest unwelcome come unwillingly - Douglas Malloch "Life"


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