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somethingdarker ([personal profile] somethingdarker) wrote2011-11-05 09:25 pm

Potential Titles: Wind

East Wind.


North Wind.


South Wind.


West Wind.


The winds and waves control - A.L.O.E. "Song of Hope"

Reluctantly obeying lofty winds - Lascelles Abercrombie "Ryton Firs: The Voices in the Dream"

Something crimson is in the wind - Duane Ackerson "Operation Macbeth"

Invectives of the wind - Harold Acton "Ventilation"

Winds, rushing from their caves - John Lynch Adair "Joy Returneth with the Morning"

Wind falls through my hair - Carl Adamshick "Black Snow [I live between the bus stop]"

Winged with wind - Adonis "Thunderbolt" (translated by Samuel Hazo)

And depart on the winds of space - Conrad Aiken "Senlin: a Biography (Part I, Section II)"

Through dark and wind - Conrad Aiken "The Vampire"

Dead winds above us stir - Conrad Aiken "The Vampire"

When Dionysian winds stop beating - Daisy Aldan "Mutilated Fire"

Who sing in the wind with mouths of giants - Daisy Aldan "Stones: Avesbury"

Bread, wind and red tomatoes - Daisy Aldan "Women at Windows"

The winds with their enticing whispers - Daisy Aldan "Your Letter"

The wind of the upper air - Richard Aldington "Au Vieux Jardin"

The white wind loves you - Richard Aldington "The Poplar"

Ruffled and speckled by galloping wind - Richard Aldington "Round-Pond"

Among winds and waters holy - Mary Aldis and Arthur Davison Ficke "Chloroform"

Tossed on the wind of fortune - "All Together" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.5, May 1862]

Nodding with the rhythm of the wind - Mike Allen "Carrington's Ferry"

His slicing of the wind destroyed his vision - Ahmad Almallah "Some Verse for the Depressed Rebel"

Brought to life by the wind only - Alise Alousi "What Every Driver Must Know"

No music but the wind's - Alun "Tintern Abbey" transl. by Edmund O. Jones

Take the hurricane out of the wind - Julia Alvarez "Ars Politica"

The winds of time would carry me - Julia Alvarez "Life Lines"

Chimes to announce the wind - Hala Alyan "Turnpike // Ghost"

The whimsies and pulls of different heedless winds - Mouna Ammar "Bold as a Feather"

Find myself on the wings of unknown winds - Mouna Ammar "Bold as a Feather"

Unfurled to the winds of curiousity and imagination - Mouna Ammar "When I miss them"

A biting wind and a graveyard couth - Lennox Amott "Drink"

Leaps on the back of the wind - Maya Angelou "Caged Bird"

Need a wind to strike sharply - Maya Angelou "A Georgia Song"

Conquering wind and marking mist - Raymond Antrobus "After Reading 'Deaf School' by the Mississippi River"

The wind's breath is full of salt from the sea - Betsy Aoki "A crowd of yakubyō gami (pestilence yōkai)"

Dead ringer in the wind, but worst - William Archila "Little soul lost, little shining ghost"

A bride of the wind - Homero Aridjis (transl. by George McWhirter) "The angel and the woman"

Enough of the wind - Simon Armitage "The Present"

Which in every wind is blown - Matthew Arnold "Quiet Work"

Though never winds have whispered it - Matthew Arnold "Religious Isolation"

Lilies the wind wanders over - F.D. Ashburn "Song [You roses that lean away]"

an origami placed before a calcified wind - Wale Ayinla "To Disappear into a Song Wide Enough to Drown"

On winds from dreamland blowing - Albion Fellows Bacon "Inspiration"

Not the wind I hear - Peter Balakian "Ode to the Duduk"

Hear the bad news kiss the wind - Peter Balakian "Ode to the Duduk"

Influence with Wind and Water - James Baldwin "Staggerlee wonders"

Light the mazes of the wind - Benjamin West Ball "MDCCCXLVIII-IX"

Withered leaves and sighing winds - Benjamin West Ball "Monody of the Countess of Nettlestede"

Fanned by winds eternal - Benjamin West Ball "The Penitent"

A banner the wind holds up - Mary Jo Bang "In This One World"

Moody and viewless as the changing wind - Anna Laetitia Barbauld "Eighteen Hundred and Eleven"

Hopes that fall like leaves before the wind - Maurice Baring "Diffugere Nives, 1917"

Aroused in the thrill of wind - Lou Barrett "Once and Sixteen"

The wind has no armor - Elizabeth Bartlett "Achilles Had His Heel"

Sunless cliffs no wind has known - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Cave"

Since the wind was the same wind - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Changing Wind"

Out of the wind and the flame - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Creation"

When harsh winds blow the wrong way - Elizabeth Bartlett "Dry Sanctuary"

The dry wind through stony streets - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Refugees"

To outride wind, tide and stars - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Sailor's Story"

search the wild wind - Elizabeth Bartlett "search the wild wind"

With wings against the wind - Elizabeth Bartlett "Self-Evident"

To trace the course of wind and tide - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Test"

Warned how these solar winds would leave - Samiya Bashir "Second Law"

Where revels the cold wind - Charles Baudelaire "Mist and Rain" transl. not credited

Drinking the winds that flee - Charles Baudelaire "Music" transl. not credited

Only the bitterness of harvest wind - Lucius Beebe "Autumn Lament"

Lamented wind of perfect sunrisings - Esther Belin "I hope to God you will not ask"

A tension blocking the wind - Esther Belin "I hope to God you will not ask"

Strange and ghastly winds - Clive Bell "The Legend of Monte della Sibilla"

When the wind sang like a scream - Oliver Baez Bendorf "New Moon Newton"

That wailing wind in the darkness - Stephen Vincent Benet "Ad Atticum"

A wind to shuffle the kings to sand - Stephen Vincent Benet "Colloquy of the Statues"

A chattering wind piped loud of snows - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Plow"

Black wind runs trotting to the dark - Stephen Vincent Benet "The Song of Cold and Pain"

Your wild songs to the wind - C. E. de la Poer Beresford "To M. S."

In the chorus of the wind - Samuel A. Betiku "Psalm with Displaced Body Rattled in its State of Rest"

The winds a thousand devils hold - Paul Bewsher "The Horrors of Flying"

A thin wind across a wire - Terry Blackhawk "Chambered Nautilus, with Tinnitus and Linden"

Planting their flags on the wind - Terry Blackhawk "Not Wafting, but Dofting"

No dustbowl wind can lift this history of loss - Kimberly Blaeser "Apprentice to Justice"

Watch the wind reborn - Richard Blanco "My Campo Santo"

Aimless petal of the wind - Maxwell Bodenheim "Advice to a Butterfly"

With words as deliberate as wind - Max Bodenheim "Color and a Woman"

Dangle to the whims of winds - Maxwell Bodenheim "Cry, Naked and Personal"

In the wind's golden elusiveness - Maxwell Bodenheim "Minna (IX)"

Like the birth of little winds - Max Bodenheim "Silence"

More slender than the motives of wind - Max Bodenheim "To a Corpulent Singer"

How dreary the winds - Otto Leland Bohanan "Villanelle"

Makes a tambourine of the wind chime - Jaswinder Bolina "Phantom Camera"

A wild bird riding the wind and screaming bitterly - Arna Bontemps "Homing"

Wash me with a wave of wind upon the barley - Arna Bontemps "Nocturne at Bethesda"

And I have broken down before the wind - Arna Bontemps "Nocturne of the Wharves"

Tying down the wind with rope or chain or tackle - Bruce Boston "Wind People"

The wind bares you for a god's descent - Gordon Bottomley "King Lear's Wife"

Wind salts our throats - Julia Bouwsma "Dear ghosts, you say all our bones are made of paper"

A people sculpted of wind - Julia Bouwsma "Interview with the Dead"

Tired winds from the south - Kay Boyle "Monody to the Sound of Zithers"

As raw wind shrugged us off - Elizabeth Bradfield "Pursuit"

The wind plays tricks on the eyes - Russell Brakefield "Field Recordings"

And keeps quiet the worrying wind - Russell Brakefield "Field Recordings"

Anchors cut by the wind - Russell Brakefield "Field Recordings"

And sell their bodies to the wind - Russell Brakefield "Halcyon and Her Mortal Lover"

Wind through the tree of what I mean - William Brewer "My Somniloquist"

A common fritillary avoiding the wind in the yucca - Traci Brimhall "Mouth of the Canyon"

Hurry by to the wind's desire - Vera M. Brittain "Boar's Hill, October, 1919"

And whisper when the wild winds blow - Anne Bronte "Memory"

Which so whirls in passion's wind - Charlotte Bronte "Preference"

Fresh winds shook the door - Emily Bronte "Stars"

The winds in wild distraction rave - Patrick Bronte "Winter-Night Meditations"

Waters blown by changing winds - Rupert Brooke "The Dead"

Like biscuits in the wind - Calef Brown "Biscuits in the Wind"

Outside flick of life at the mercy of these coming winds - Nickole Brown "Mercy"

When the wind frenzied up a snow globe of petals - Nickole Brown "time bending / tongue / entwine / the betwixt"

Divested the attention of the wind - Paul Cameron Brown "Investiture"

The war of winds and clouds - T.E. Brown "The Childhood of Kitty of the Sherragh Vane"

To feel the mystic wind - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "A Drama of Exile"

Speaks with the wind - Joseph Bruchac "Speaking"

But the wind still sings the same song - Joseph Bruchac "Tutuwas"

To load the May wind's restless wings - William Cullen Bryant "The Planting of the Apple Tree"

Visible silence hanging in November winds - Anthony Butts "All Saints' Day"

Hangs crystalline on pillows of wind - Anthony Butts "Crystalline"

Marches with wind and tide - May Byron "Sea-Ghosts"

Hark! the wind is sorrowing still - E.W.C. "November" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.5, Nov. 1863]

And the reckless wind is telling now - E.W.C. "November" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.5, Nov. 1863]

Laughs with the wind as it saunters past - E.W.C. "The Wild Azalea" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.5, May 1864]

Rifled in the wizard wind - Joseph Campbell writing as Seosamh MacCathmhaoil "Lament of Padraic Mor Mac Cruimin Over His Sons"

The beagles run like wind - Joseph Campbell writing as Seosamh MacCathmhaoil "Reynardine"

Futile as those icy-fingered winds - W. Wilfred Campbell "Unabsolved"

For the hate of the winds that laugh - W. Wilfred Campbell "The Vengeance of Saki"

Stand like a poisoned wind - W. Wilfred Campbell "The Vengeance of Saki"

Pilfers from every port of the wind - Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey "A More Ancient Mariner"

When the silver winds return - Bliss Carman and Richard Hovey "Spring Song"

About the cheetahs and the wind - Paul Carroll "Untitled [I want to write a poem the birds will understand]"

The fires of all the winds - Anne Carson "The Glass Essay"

The wind is weary of the rain - Walter Richard Cassels "Gone"

With acid teeth bite the wind as it passes - Rosario Castellanos "Silence Concerning an Ancient Stone" transl. by George D. Schade

The old wind singing through - Willa Cather "Spanish Johnny"

Done with the estranged wind - Tina Chang "Color"

When the wind changes its mind - Tina Chang "Hybrida: A Zuihitsu"

Wind tied to a tree - Tina Chang "Wonder Cabinet"

A blow that bends the wind - James Salvius Cheng "Cat Amongst the Cabbages"

A star blown on the wind - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book IV. The Woman in the Forest"

The third great thunder on the wind - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book IV. The Woman in the Forest"

Wheels of wind and star - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book VIII. The Scouring of the Horse"

Their nimble feet in mazy trances wind - William Chiddon "Idyll: In Imitation of Theocritus"

We felt screams disturb the wind - May Chong "Kamcia"

Acid wind strikes my eyes - Chou Pang-Yen "[Leaves fall, slanting sun lights the river]" transl. by Burton Watson

Ripped from their wires in the wind - John Ciardi "Abundance"

Hostile winds and angry waves - Thomas Clarke "Sir Copp canto I"

A wind that always blows colder - Pearl Cleage "We Speak Your Names"

imagine his growl filling the wind - Lucille Clifton "imagining bear"

Though the wind of autumn mocked - Virginia Woodward Cloud "The Gate"

My wind is turned to bitter north - Arthur Hugh Clough "A Song of Autumn"

Gave the wind my wedding ring - Leonard Cohen "By the Rivers Dark"

Against the prevailing winds of horror - Leonard Cohen "I Draw Aside the Curtain"

When wind and hawk encounter - Leonard Cohen "The Mist"

The cutting wind is a cruel foe - Mary Elizabeth Coleridge "The Witch"

The guide of homeless winds - Samuel Taylor Coleridge "France: An Ode, 1797"

In the wind of my hand - Billy Collins "Reading Myself to Sleep"

And beggared midnight winds - Arthur Colton "Let Me No More a Mendicant"

Free with the hawk and the wind - Arthur Colton "Verses from 'The Canticle of the Road'"

The crying wind and the lonesome hush - Padraic Colum "An Old Woman of the Roads"

The wind wore sandals - Hilda Conkling "Autumn Song"

But the wind remembers - Hilda Conkling "Mushroom Song"

Turn your faces to the wind - Hilda Conkling "Rambler Rose"

With the wind on your forehead - Hilda Conkling "Snow-Capped Mountain"

Because of the wind - Hilda Conkling "Three Loves"

A meditative measure of wind and rain - CAConrad "(Soma)tic 5: Storm SOAKED Bread"

Death may be riding the wings of the wind - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds: Rain Clouds. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]

As when the wind rejoices - Susan Coolidge "April"

From blows of fate or winds of care - Susan Coolidge "A Home"

Grievous day of wrathful winds - Susan Coolidge "Outward Bound"

The winds and waves obey - Benjamin Copeland "Out of the Depths"

Hearing on the winds the passing knell - Cora "A Thought of the Future" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

Go to lecture with the wind - Frances Cornford "Autumn Morning at Cambridge"

The howling wind is their war-cry - Joseph Seamon Cotter Jr. "The Band of Gideon"

In this valley with the moaning wind - Joseph Seamon Cotter Jr "Sonnet [I would not tarry if I could be gone]"

Blown on trumpets of the wind - James H. Cousins "Legend of the Blemished King"

The veins in your neck slung with wind - Dorsey Craft "The Pirate Anne Bonny Does Not Care about Football"

Such random consolations as the wind deposits - Hart Crane "Chaplinesque"

How the wind feasts and spins - Hart Crane "Recitative"

A wind abides the ensign of your will - Hart Crane "Recitative"

Turning as with serious purpose before stupid winds - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"

Wanton mistress to the veering winds - Adelaide Crapsey "Birth-Moment"

The wind in gardens where pale roses die - Adelaide Crapsey "Oh, Lady, Let the Sad Tears Fall"

A vapour that the wind dispels - Adelaide Crapsey "Saying of Il Haboul"

when the wind turns to sugared maple - jason b crawford "Untitled 1975-86"

Message to the circling winds - Francis Blake Crofton "The Battle-Call of Anti-Christ"

The cruel wind is at our heels - George Cronyn "Clouds"

Winds of tickling laughter - George Cronyn "Dionysus Eleutherios: The Prayer"

My burning face in the arms of the wind - George Cronyn "The Flower's Way"

The feet of the sweet winds - George Cronyn "Night-Flowers"

Thread-bare winds from the hollow west - George Cronyn "Song in Winter"

Runs crafty down the wind - Rev. William Crowe "Lewesdon Hill"

The warring winds of heaven - Rev. William Crowe "Midnight Devotion. Written in the Great Storm, 1822"

Who bent his daring sail to untried winds - Rev. William Crowe "On the Death of Captain Cook"

Let the impatient wind push me - Shutta Crum "At the River"

In a land of scarlet suns and brooding winds - Countee Cullen "Brown Boy to Brown Girl"

A wind that follows fast - Allan Cunningham "At Sea"

The hounds of the wind - Olive Custance "The Storm"

Wild hounds of the wind and rain - Olive Custance "The Storm"

Hyacinth which the wind combs back - H.D. "Evadne"

Lost pace with the winds - H.D. "Orion Dead"

The wind among the torn shells - H.D. "Sea Violet"

Baffled in wind and blast - H.D. "Stars Wheel in Purple"

A weighted leaf in the wind - H.D. "Storm"

We no longer sleep in the wind - H.D. "The Wind Sleepers"

The wind shrieking in the zinc roof - Noemia da Sousa "Poem of Distant Childhood" transl. by Allan Francovich and Kathleen Weaver

No discourse but the moving wind - Danske Dandridge "Beneath the Pines"

The wind like an old friend - Jim Daniels "Listening to '96 Tears' by? and the Mysterians While Looking Down from My Third-Floor Window at a Kid Crossing the Panther Hollow Bridge"

And the wave the wind surprises weeps - Rubén Darío "Nightfall in the Tropics" Thomas Walsh

Gathering its forces like mad winds - Russell W. Davenport "Poems V"

Within the wind a core of sound - John Davidson "In Romney Marsh"

Ask the strange hands of the wind - Geffrey Davis "Not to Be Confused with 'Poem'"

Each shift of the winds of remembering - Geffrey Davis "What I Mean When I Say Farmhouse"

Threaded on the wind - Deborah L. Davitt "Blå Jungfrun"

Caught by the arm of a strong wind - Mitchell Dawson "Poems: Termaggio"

A dust devil gathering wind - Tyree Daye "The Death of Jimmy as the Dog He Always Was"

As by conflicting winds close driven - Juan Bautista de Arriaza "Tempest and War, or the Battle of Trafalgar. Ode" [Modern Poets and Poetry of Spain 1860 ed. and transl. by James Kennedy]

A fragile flower in the wind - Sor Juana Ines de la Cruz [Untitled] transl. by Samuel Beckett

When the March winds wake - Walter de la Mare "All That's Past"

Where the bluebells and the wind are - Walter de la Mare "Bluebells"

A mist on faint winds borne - Walter de la Mare "The Enchanted Hill"

And the wind where nothing is - Walter de la Mare "The Mermaids"

The wind's wings waken - Leconte de Lisle "The Black Panther" (translated by W.J. Robertson)

Skating on the whims of the wind - Diane DeCillis "Foreboding Frog"

That make wind chimes of words - Diane DeCillis "Nest"

Streets where the wind talked to us - Diana Marie Delgado "They Chopped Down the Tree I Used to Lie Under and Count Stars With"

the wind finds its voices after - Ekaterina Derysheva "stigmas on the body of air" transl. by Ryan Hardy, Asher Maria, and Kevin M.F. Platt

Futile the winds to a heart in port - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Love VII"

Too fragile for winter winds - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Time and Eternity XI"

Upon a pile of wind - Emily Dickinson "Book 3: Nature XII"

Offended by the wind - Emily Dickinson "She sped as the Petals of a Rose"

Tie my hands to the wind - Chelsea Dingman "Here, the Sparrows Were, All Along"

What only the wind knows - Chelsea Dingman "Here, the Sparrows Were, All Along"

The oaks lean into the wind - Chelsea Dingman "In the Third Trimester, They Can't Find a Heartbeat"

Till those tearful winds abate - Irving Sidney Dix "March Wind Blow"

In spite of wind and weather - James B. Dollard "Song of the Little Villages"

His ragged anthem a wind - Chris Dombrowski "Hear them all"

A wind that stirs the torn tickets - Chris Dombrowski "Hear them all"

The wind's a mixture of linen and salt - Chris Dombrowski "Little Derivative and Forgivable Anthropomorphism with Dawn"

Death was a wind searching the back of his hand - Chris Dombrowski "Naive Melody"

Procured by the wind as its instrument - Chris Dombrowski "Nostrums (Bill Monroe)"

Wind in the dead chime of the aspen - Chris Dombrowski "Rex's Georgic: Hunting Morels in Last Year's Burn"

Down here in this lack of wind - Chris Dombrowski "Still Life with Starlight"

Allowed the wind its interludes - Chris Dombrowski "They Knew Each Leaf Contained the Rain and Sun"

A kite without a wind to fill it - Chris Dombrowski "Vespers Beginning as Sheep Tallow in the Hands of a Priest"

A pulsing wind below the glass - Cass Donish "You, Emblazoned"

Hollow the wind against me - Marie-Ovide Dorceley "Sojourner"

Padded in white and wind - Rebecca Kai Dotlich "Room of Quiet"

The mother of the stars and winds - Edward Dowden "Helena"

Melancholy winds of autumn rise - Edward Dowden "Memorials of Travel IX: Dover"

And swift winds bore my songs away - Edward Dowden "Song and Silence"

The brave pure winds commingling - Edward Dowden "Speakers to God"

In your wings the central winds of heaven - Edward Dowden "Sunsets"

And gashed their shadowy limbs of wind - Joseph Rodman Drake "The Culprit Fay"

Imperiled by the current and the wind - Boris Dralyuk "The Catch: On Translation"

A kiss on the lip of the wind - Carol Ann Duffy "North-West"

I would not curse the wind - Michael Dumanis "Nebraska"

Weary of the wind - Paul Laurence Dunbar "Absence"

The cruel wind is rising with a whistle and a wail - Paul Laurence Dunbar "Waiting"

Her voice will blend with wind - Camille T. Dungy "Ars Poetica: Cove Song"

The absent, arbitrary wind - Stephen Dunn "A Small Part"

Came as chainless as the wind - Toru Dutt "Savitri"

Whose ancient voice is lifted on the wind - Max Eastman "Earth's Night"

Blazing always in the unprocessed wind - Carolina Ebeid "Wearing a Mask, Speaking into the Camera"

Suspended in the wind - Katherine Edgren "Iowa Senryu"

Anchored and concealed from the wind - Katherine Edgren "Wind Chill: 15 Below"

Who weep with wind - Jaye Elizabeth Elijah "fire danger high today"

Vacant shuttles weave the wind - T.S. Eliot "Gerontion"

That tremble in the wind - Ralph Waldo Emerson "The River"

Hung my verses in the wind - Ralph Waldo Emerson (uncredited) "The Test" [The Atlantic Monthly v.07 no.39, Jan. 1861]

A wind that blew a thousand years ago - "The End of All" [Atlantic Monthly v.8 no.22, Aug. 1859]

And the seven northern winds - Enheduana "Temple Hymns: 27. E-Ugalgala, the Temple of Ishkur in Karkara" transl. by Sophus Helle

That secret the wind kept from the surface of the sea - Gabriel Ertsgaard "Stardust Word"

The wind scatters my wilted petals - Charlie Espinosa "Sunflower Astronaut"

A beard of wind and dirt - John Olivares Espinoza "Economics at Gemco"

And sift them on the wind - The Ettrick Shepherd "May of the Moril Glen"

Peach blossoms blown across the wind - Donald Evans "Buveuse d'Absinthe"

Once sought the wind - Mari Evans "Through a Glass"

The wind is in your voice - Noah Falck "Fatigue Performance"

Combat every hostile wind - William Falconer "The Shipwreck: Canto I"

To court the veering winds - William Falconer "The Shipwreck: Canto I"

Though you bind it with the blowing wind - Eleanor Farjeon "The Night Will Never Stay"

Music up and down the wind - Eleanor Farjeon "Pan-Worship"

As he shuffles the wind aside - Joseph Fasano "The Figure"

The wind lies open on your lap - Joseph Fasano "The Figure"

And the wind kneels down in me - Joseph Fasano "Mahler in New York"

In your furious, tearing wind - Jessie Redmon Fauset "Rain Fugue"

A brutal, cold wind of memory - Andrew Feld "Crying Uncle"

To the cold wind free - Sir Samuel Ferguson "Cean Dubh Deelish"

A wind had blown away the sun - Lawrence Ferlinghetti "A Coney Island of the Mind, 20"

A great wind of complaining - Arthur Davison Ficke "Swinburne, an Elegy"

Few but the winds ever know - George Blackstone Field "The Spectre"

Bees in the wind of the dawn - Michael Field "Paschal's Mass"

Glowing in wind and change - Annie Finch "A Mabon Crown"

Gives them leave to move through the wind - Annie Finch "Samhain"

Loudly wailed the winter wind - "The Fisherman's Keen, or the Lamentation of O'Donoghue of Affadown ('Roaring Water'), in the west of Co. Cork, for his three sons and his son-in-law, who were drowned" transl. by Anonymous

And winds and shadows fall toward the West - James Elroy Flecker "The Golden Journey to Samarkand"

By hotter winds our fiery hearts are fanned - James Elroy Flecker "The Golden Journey to Samarkand"

In the tower of the winds - John Gould Fletcher "Green Symphony"

Stiffly ungracious to the wind - John Gould Fletcher "Green Symphony"

Like the wind's deep-muttering breath - John Gould Fletcher "Impromptu"

The light wind upon the poplars - F.S. Flint "Lunch"

Echoing in the ancient wind - Lysz Flo "Railroad del Mar"

I build a marble Rome, I give it to the wind - Robin Flower "La Vie Cerebrale"

Drunk on loosened wind - Jennifer Elise Foerster "The Last Kingdom"

The wind's crystalline structures - Jennifer Elise Foerster "Origin of Planets"

Spent casks of wind - Jennifer Elise Foerster "Osten XVI"

Copper instruments of wind - Jennifer Elise Foerster "Sixteen Shadows 4"

In the wind of night the arras swells and swings - E. Fonton "A Vigil with St. Louis" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.1, Jan. 1864]

Black winds tunneled to her sleep - Carolyn Forche "Alfansa"

Veins of wind light up - Carolyn Forche "Barley Field"

Where wind becomes an aria - Carolyn Forche "Elegy"

With the attention the wind gives - Carolyn Forche "The Notebook of Uprising"

From the wind's open wounds - Carolyn Forche "On Earth"

Wind swallowing the ground - Carolyn Forche "The Place That Is Feared I Inhabit"

Of the substance of motionless wind - Carolyn Forche "The Place That Is Feared I Inhabit"

Small winds lift coyotes - Carolyn Forche "The Place That Is Feared I Inhabit"

Swallows carve lake wind - Carolyn Forche "Skin Canoes"

Will wander between the winds forever - John M. Ford "Troy: the Movie"

Whistles through her chest like bladed wind - Diamond Forde "Rememory"

A flame moving in the spirit's wind - John Freeman "The Body"

Rolled the slow thunders on the wind - John Freeman "Stone Trees"

The wind once blew itself untaught - Robert Frost "The Aim Was Song"

With doors that none but the wind ever closes - Robert Frost "Asking for Roses"

The blue's but a mist from the breath of the wind - Robert Frost "Blueberries"

Bring on a wind to blow in earnest from some quarter - Robert Frost "The Bonfire"

Such few people as winds might rouse - Robert Frost "I Will Sing You One-O"

For the pleasure of the wind - Robert Frost "My Butterfly"

Close the windows and not hear the wind - Robert Frost "Now Close the Windows"

Listening to a fresh access of wind - Robert Frost "Snow"

When the wind works against us in the dark - Robert Frost "Storm Fear"

The wind and dust of a thousand miles - Fu Hsuan "Woman" (translated by Arthur Waley)

On that day of wild joyous wind - Zona Gale "At Least..."

When there blow no winds - Zona Gale "Ballade of Eyes that See"

The winds take fright and question - Zona Gale "Ballade of Listening"

Day of wind and laughter - Zona Gale "Half Thought"

And the wind has no song - Zona Gale "Half Thought"

In silken talk with wind - Zona Gale "A Meeting"

Where long winds flows - Zona Gale "When Did Spring Die?"

The wind he's attached to - Tess Gallagher "Ring"

Wind becomes spirit becomes ghost - John Gallaher "My Life in Brutalist Architecture #1"

Wind spins across the landscape - Roberto Carlos Garcia "This Moment/Right Now"

In wind that is reborn - Danielle Legros Georges "What Is Water?"

A warning on the wind - Manmohan Ghose "[Thou who hast follow'd far]"

Against me the wind and the storm rebel - Sri Aurobindo Ghose "Invitation"

Meet the sun and the wind - Kahlil Gibran "On Clothes"

And the winds long to play with your hair - Kahlil Gibran "On Clothes"

With nothing but the thirsty wind to chew - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Gorse"

Wind that felt like glass - brian g. gilmore "detroit airport, december 2009 (a sermon)"

Summer wind into your woe - brian g. gilmore "mardi gras in east lansing"

The smell of the wind stalks them - Louise Gluck "Before the Storm"

Say a prayer for the wind - Louise Gluck "Poem"

With the wind for a sword - Louis Golding "For My Friend"

With the wrath of a wind from hell - Louis Golding "The Quest"

Winds are leashed around thy wings - Louis Golding "To the Swift"

What land where the winds meet - Louis Golding "The Wind, Whence Blowing"

Finding he'd but shot the wind - Hannah Flagg Gould "The Young Sportsman"

When that call came down the wind - Mona Gould "So Fair a Season"

The wind to his advantage - Cynthia Grady "Underground Railroad"

Words lost in boreal winds - Lore Graham "Absence"

To clear our heads of everything but wind - J.P. Grasser "Letter to My Great, Great Grandchild"

Great winds over the sky - Robert Graves "The Face of the Heavens"

No music without violence or wind - torrin a. greathouse "Belt Is Just Another Verb for Song"

Wind bruised into melody - torrin a. greathouse "Belt Is Just Another Verb for Song"

Speed with the light-foot winds to run - Julian Grenfell "Into Battle"

The rising wind's menacing roar - Gerald Griffin "Hy-Brasail"

With winds blent in their wild career - Rufus W. Griswold "The Sunset Storm" [Graham's Magazine v.XXI no.3, Sept. 1842]

To the wind's violent tenderness - Wendy Guerra "Peninsular Psalm" transl. by Nancy Naomi Carlson and Esperanza Hope Snyder

The feathery step of the faithful wind - Louise Imogen Guiney "Aglaus"

While summer winds blew blithe - Louise Imogen Guiney "The Rise of the Tide"

The shuddering wind went into hiding - Louise Imogen Guiney "The Rise of the Tide"

Wind from heaven's memorial sphere - Louise Imogen Guiney "The Wooing Pine"

Wild Valkyries ride the wind - Arthur Guiterman "The Twilight of the Gods"

The roughness of the wind unkind - Ivor Gurney "Girl's Song"

Makes communion with this wind - Ivor Gurney "The Poplar"

In winds of Beauty swinging - Ivor Gurney "Winter Beauty"

And cut my pattern from a wind - Katherine Hale "I Who Cut Patterns"

Have bound the winds and stars - Katherine Hale "Miracles"

Pines sigh but it isn't the wind - Han-Shan "[I climb the road to Cold Mountain]" transl. by Burton Watson

Pines and bamboo sing in the wind - Han-Shan "[I look far off at T'ien-t'ai's summit]" transl. by Burton Watson

Contained the wind in my eyes - Nathalie Handal "La Carta del Capitan"

The wind a hawk, and the fields in snow - Arthur Sherburne Hardy "Iter Supremum"

Where earthquakes are wind - Myronn Hardy "Mosquito"

When the wind raved round the land - Thomas Hardy "Trafalgar"

Without winds becoming words - Joy Harjo "Becoming Seventy"

Shadows breathed in cool wind - Joy Harjo "The Black Room"

In a tongue of wind off the Atlantic - Joy Harjo "The Book of Myths"

Of fire in the prophecy wind - Joy Harjo "The Book of Myths"

Or some strange wind whistling hard - Joy Harjo "A Hard Rain"

Stones bearing libraries of the winds - Joy Harjo "How to Write a Poem in a Time of War"

To answer the winds in song - Joy Harjo "Weapons, or What I Have Taken in My Hand to Speak When I Have No Words"

What is it the wind has lost - Jim Harrison and Ted Kooser "Braided Creek"

Where wind and water meet - Sadakichi Hartmann "Drifting Flowers of the Sea"

The wind imprisons each of the trees - Robert Hass "Tomas Transtromer: Song"

The wind shall be thy changeful loom - Robert Stephen Hawker "Featherstone's Doom"

Perish with a season's wind - Alfred Hayes "My Study"

Walking on the back of the wind - Terrance Hayes "Coffin for Head of State"

The wind's vowel blowing through the hazels - Seamus Heaney "Aisling"

The wild beating blows of the strong handed winds - Ben Hecht "Moods"

Streaming to the winds of heaven - Felicia Hemans "The Ruin and its Flowers"

First crocus in a world of winds and snows - William Ernest Henley "Hawthorn and Lavender IV"

Calling his dooms to the Winds - William Ernest Henley "The Song of the Sword"

In the winds of thy fierce breaking - Jeannette Fraser Henshall "The Chastening"

His ample robes on the wind unrolled - José María Heredia "The Hurricane" transl. by William Cullen Bryant

A way to measure out the wind - Robert Herrick "God Unsearchable"

Wings from the wind to please her - Thomas Heywood "Good-Morrow"

Leaving that to wind and rain - Bob Hicok "No Stones"

Let midnight gather up the wind - Conrad Hilberry "Christmas Night"

Two starlings sail down the wind - Conrad Hilberry "March Birthday"

Wind in a thin body of dust - Conrad Hilberry "The Moon Seen as a Slice of Pineapple"

Feel the sad wind rising - Conrad Hilberry "Oboe"

With help from the wind - Conrad Hilberry "Waning Moon"

Gusts of wind that frisk about - Jennie Earngey Hill "Nature's Game"

The season hauls the wind inside - Brenda Hillman "& After the Power Came Back"

Only the wind that spoke of its bees - Jane Hirshfield "On the Fifth Day"

Synthetic wind of pulsing jellyfish - Tony Hoagland "Better than Expected"

Everlasting pipe and flute of wind and sea and bird - Ralph Hodgson "The Song of Honour"

Where your name goes missing in the wind - Carlie Hoffman "The Year Made Out of a Cut in Your Civilization"

The winds and waves for guides - Robert Hogg "A Wish Burst"

Still bringing out the wind - Erin Coughlin Hollowell "Maria and Oceanus"

And gliding rebuffed the big wind - Gerard Manley Hopkins "The Windhover"

Hot winds from the waste of despair - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]

The shrewd and curious wind - William Dean Howells "The Empty House"

Fall winds strip the ash tree - Hsieh Hui-Lien "Fulling Cloth for Clothes" transl. by Burton Watson

A punch that knocks the wind and spirit clear - Brian Hugenbruch "Worlds I Didn't Hear"

The wind has undressed the moon - Langston Hughes "March Moon"

And lash the wet-flanked wind - Richard Hughes "The Singing Furies"

The first wind of night - Richard Hughes "Tramp (The Bath Road, June)"

The wind lacks even strength to sigh - Richard Hughes "Weald"

Wind summons a black moon at dawn - fahima ife "porous aftermath"

The wind of romance hard against it - Holly Iglesias "I Can Afford Neither the Rain"

That my sighs may be borne on the wind - "II: Xopancuicatl, Otoncuicatl, Tlamelauhcayotl | A Spring Song, an Otomi Song, a Plain Song" transl. from Nahuatl by Daniel G. Brinton

The winds at our command - "In Hebrid Seas" (Translation by Thomas Pattison)

Could feel the wind of distance - Mark Irwin "Human Pageant"

Throw seed to every wind - Washington Irving "Written in the Deepdene Album"

The wailing wind and murky road - Ihsan Ismayil (Umun) "Verses of Falling" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun

The wind forgets to be weather - Laura Riding Jackson "The Spring Has Many Silences"

That even the wind will not betray - Laura Riding Jackson "The Spring Has Many Silences"

A rush of sunlight and wind - Elizabeth Jacobson "14 Love Songs"

By the river where the wind stops - John James "Materia"

Hear an emptiness in the wind - John James "Poem Around Which Everything Is Structured"

Winds that walk the stair of heaven - Elinor Jenkins "The Letter"

The wind burns the grasses bare - Amaud Jamaul Johnson "Line of Reason"

A search light through the wind - Amaud Jamaul Johnson "Tar Baby"

As wailing winds went in and out - Edwin R. Johnson "Death in Life" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.5, Nov. 1864]

Snows, and suns, and mad winds meet - Emily Pauline Johnson "At Crow's Nest Pass"

These cold winds circling - James Weldon Johnson "The Passionate Lover"

Words kindred to the wind - Lionel Johnson "Celtic Speech"

In vehement wind and vehement wave - Lionel Johnson "Gwynedd"

The winds of my fellowship - Lionel Johnson "In England"

Memories of open wind convey - Lionel Johnson "In Falmouth Harbour"

Stern thoughts and strong winds - Lionel Johnson "In Falmouth Harbour"

Winds wild with stormy mirth - Lionel Johnson "Lucretius"

Thy winds have all their will - Lionel Johnson "Moel Fammau"

As lilies to a pleading wind - Lionel Johnson "The Petition"

Red Wind of blight and blood - Lionel Johnson "The Red Wind"

Red Wind of burning death - Lionel Johnson "The Red Wind"

The wind in the angry woods - Lionel Johnson "Summer Storm"

A voice on the winds - Lionel Johnson "To Morfydd"

Salting her death in the wind house - Taylor Johnson "States of Decline"

To hear the wind's footfalls - Annie Fellows Johnston "Echoes from Erin"

Stand against the wind - Patricia Spears Jones "Autumn, New York, 1999"

Pigeons for hair, wind for feet - Saeed Jones "Postapocalyptic Heartbeat"

To answer the wind at play - Thomas S. Jones, Jr. "You and I"

A chair for a voice, a desk for the wind - Fady Joudah "Domicile, House, Cusp"

The wind does not discriminate - Fady Joudah "Every Hour Has an Animal"

The music of his clouds, his winds, his birds - Fredoon Kabraji "The Lovers"

A good mile and a half of wind - Ilya Kaminsky "A Widower"

Our days upon the high winds - Holly Karapetkova "The Woman Who Wanted a Child"

Wind in the basement - Janet Kauffman "The Knife in the Fish"

The four winds trumpet over dunes - Janet Kauffman "Such Winds"

She does not wither in such winds - Janet Kauffman "Such Winds"

Impaled on slivers of wind - Bob Kaufman "Walking Parker Home"

Admonitions to the winds and seas - John Keats "Hyperion"

Enchantment with the shifting wind - John Keats "Hyperion"

Clumps of woodbine taking the soft wind - John Keats "[I stood tip-toe upon a little hill]"

The soft wind upon their summer thrones - John Keats "[I stood tip-toe upon a little hill]"

A wind of ancient romance blows - Helen Keller "The Song of the Stone Wall"

the wind pushing water out of itself - Donika Kelly "When the Fact of Your Gaze Means Nothing, Then You Are Truly Alongside"

And join the wild wind's voice - Fanny Kemble "An Entreaty"

Music of the wood, the wave, the wind - Fanny Kemble "An Entreaty"

And the wild winds sang requiem - Fanny Kemble "To --- [When we first met, dark wintry skies were glooming]"

Wind plays the spy - Jane Kenyon "Small Early Valentine"

Wind of the wild sweet morning - Arthur Ketchum "The Wind's Word"

Whispering wind of the shadow - Arthur Ketchum "The Wind's Word"

Practices bending to the wind - Vandana Khanna "Why Sita Is Chosen"

As Wind along the Waste - Omar Khayyam "The Rubaiyat of Omar Khayyam" transl. by Edward Fitzgerald (First Edition)

In strongest Tempests he will rule the Wind - Anne Killigrew "To my Lady Berkeley, Afflicted upon her Son, My Lord Berkeley's Early Engaging in the Sea-Service"

Called down wind to shatter - Aline Murray Kilmer "Shards"

Winds that blow against a star - Joyce Kilmer "As Winds That Blow Against a Star"

That never a wind may reach - Joyce Kilmer "The White Ships and the Red"

Jovial wind of winter - Charles Kingsley "Ode to the Northeast Wind"

Forty years' strange winds had fanned - William Kirby "The Sparrows"

sacrifice denied to the wind - Ruth Ellen Kocher "Skit: Sun Ra Welcomes the Fallen"

Listen to the wind beg - Yusef Komunyakaa "The Surge"

Facing what I think is the wind - Christopher Kondrich "Caedmon"

Slender face carved by wind - Christopher Kondrich "Degree of Nothing"

Showing their ribs to the wind - Ted Kooser "Home Storage Barns"

Where a cold wind pinches clothespins down an empty line - Ted Kooser "Song of the Ironing Board"

Blow through an empty station on a mechanical wind - Edgar Kunz "Good Deal"

When I set my ears into the wind of the hall - Ellen Kushner "Gwydion's Loss of Llew"

The wind tangles the net of branches that holds it - Ellen Kushner "Gwydion's Loss of Llew"

I would renounce them, wind, leaf, and tree - Ellen Kushner "Gwydion's Loss of Llew"

The wind will keep its ancient lullaby - L.L. "The Graves of Gallipoli" [The Anzac Book: Written and Illustrated in Gallipoli by the Men of Anzac, 1916]

At every hour the wind awoke - Archibald Lampman "After Rain"

The wind alone can tame you - Archibald Lampman "Among the Millet"

The shepherd wind your keeper - Archibald Lampman "Among the Millet"

Labour of the autumn wind - Archibald Lampman "April"

Tempting the wind - Archibald Lampman "By an Autumn Stream"

The whistle of a winter wind - Archibald Lampman "Chione"

Where the quick winds shiver - Archibald Lampman "Freedom"

Where the winds restore us - Archibald Lampman "Freedom"

Save the wind's secret stir - Archibald Lampman "In November"

The speech of wind and water - Archibald Lampman "The Islet and the Palm"

By great winds in awful unison - Archibald Lampman "New Year's Eve"

Winter with wind and iron - Archibald Lampman "Sapphics"

Winds that strain the oak - Archibald Lampman "Voices of Earth"

Fall into the wind toward the first day - Deborah Landau "Flesh"

As had braved the winds of March - Letitia Elizabeth Landon "The Oak"

Playthings of the sun and wind - Emily Lawless "From the Burren III: Resurgence"

Where the wild wind dashes - Emily Lawless "From the Burren X: A Garden"

Out of the unsettled seas and winds - D.H. Lawrence "Grapes"

An impetuous wind - D.H. Lawrence "Study"

As the winds are free - Emma Lazarus "City Visions"

The thresholds of the four winds - Richard Le Gallienne "May Is Building Her House"

Harp fingered of winds and rains - Richard Le Gallienne "Tree-Worship"

To catch the sweetheart wind - Richard Le Gallienne "Tree-Worship"

Seldom whispers to the wind anymore - Angel Leal "The Witch Recalls Her Craft"

Imagine the death of the wind - Joseph Lease "True Faith"

With weedy havoc tossed by searching winds - Agnes Lee "The Silent House"

Wind in its dissonance of leaves - Muna Lee "Caribbean Marsh"

Strife of winds and birds - Eugene Lee-Hamilton "Apollo and Marsyas"

Emptiness where the young winds wrestle - R.B. Lemberg "Between the Mountain and the Moon"

Under the limber fingers of the wind - R.B. Lemberg "Between the Mountain and the Moon"

Ask the wind to show my path - R.B. Lemberg "Long Shadow"

all the vanished names of the wind - Michael Leong "For My Cats Gaspara & Alfonsina"

The wind’s fine veil - Megan Levad "Foundling"

Winds trying to hold each other - Dana Levin "Zozo-ji"

Winds Off the Moon - Philip Levine "In a Light Time"

Quivers awake in the hot winds off the sun - Philip Levine "Making Light of It"

Your laughter thrown in the wind's face - Philip Levine "My Fathers, The Baltic"

Wind bearing the voices of the world - Philip Levine "Waking in March"

Hung motionless above the changing winds - Philip Levine "Winter Words"

The passionate wind of spring - Amy Levy "The Birch-Tree at Loschwitz"

The sea and the wind's wild breath - Amy Levy "Felo de Se"

Silence more cold than the wind - Amy Levy "The Sequel to 'A Reminiscence'"

Pushed into the wind - J. Patrick Lewis "the child"

The Spring wind alone can understand - Li Bai "Songs to the Peonies Sung to the Air: 'Peaceful Brightness'" transl. by Florence Wheelock Ayscough

Rainbows for robes, wind for horses - Li Po "Song of a Dream Visit to T'ien-mu: Farewell to Those I Leave Behind" transl. by Burton Watson

Find evil winds and waves - Li T'ai-Po "The Crosswise River" translated by Florence Ayscough and adapted by Amy Lowell

Each breath was a swirl of wind - Vivian (Xiao Wen) Li "Ave Maria"

We solved the problem of the wind - Ada Limon "First Lunch with Relative Stranger Mister You"

What is wisdom when the wind howls - Sandra J. Lindow "The Wolf from the Door"

The dry hot wind called Science - Vachel Lindsay "The Scientific Aspiration"

A full light wind of lilac - Amy Lowell "Lilacs"

The ridges of the wind - Amy Lowell "The Taxi"

Shout into the ridges of the wind - Amy Lowell "The Taxi"

The bitter wind of doubt has blown - Amy Lowell "To Elizabeth Ward Perkins"

Spiced winds which blew when earth was young - Amy Lowell "To John Keats"

No rude wind of doctrine - James Russell Lowell "Credidimus Jovem Regnare"

The reckless wind of thought - James Russell Lowell "Endymion"

Free of motion as the wind - James Russell Lowell "Prison of Cervantes"

The fickle wind will break its truce - James Russell Lowell "To a Friend Who Gave Me a Group of Weeds and Grasses, After a Drawing of Durer"

Who feed upon the wind and stars - Mina Loy "Apology of Genius"

A tree that genuflected before the wind - Leopoldo Lugones "Journey" (translated by Muna Lee)

And wait for the wind - Thomas Lux "A Clearing, a Meadow, in Deep Forest"

We were playmates of the wind - Sidney Royse Lysaght "Shelter and Fellowship"

Where the wind first taught the trees - Sidney Royse Lysaght "The World's End"

Between the searing water and the whirling wind - Laura Ma "Cradling Fish"

Twice as agile as the wind - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "raven"

If you whisper when the wind blows - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "willow"

As by some vagrant wind - Isabel Ecclestone Mackay "The Gatekeeper"

Whose kiss was in the wind - Isabel Ecclestone Mackay "Rose Dolores"

Laugh with the wind - Isabel Ecclestone Mackay "Song of the Sleeper"

And grapples with great winds - Percy MacKaye "Fight: The Tale of a Gunner at Plattsburgh"

The mad young autumn wind - Percy MacKaye "School"

A flame in the wind of death - Dorothea Mackellar "Fire"

Sought in the bitter wind - Dorothea Mackellar "Pilgrim Song"

The wind's caress bears you along - Dorothea Mackellar "Seagull"

Spice of the first warm wind - Dorothea Mackellar "Spring on the Plains"

Hear the wind murmuring loud - Kate Seymour MacLean "Bird Song"

With the changeful wind upon the changeful sea - A.A. Macnichol "The Sea-Rover" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]

Solar wind strokes the ice-wall into light - Toby MacNutt "Perihelion"

No more they dread the wind - James MacPherson "Fragments of Ancient Poetry: I: Shilric, Vinvela"

On the top of the hill of winds - James MacPherson "Fragments of Ancient Poetry: II"

Forlorn on the hill of winds - James MacPherson "Fragments of Ancient Poetry: X"

My ghost shall stand in the wind - James MacPherson "Fragments of Ancient Poetry: X"

Loads the wind with his groans - James MacPherson "Fragments of Ancient Poetry: XI"

The winds of many voices - Naomi Long Madgett "Afterthought"

Your voice quieting howling winds - Naomi Long Madgett "Trinity: A Dream Sequence"

Surged through sun and azure wind - Naomi Long Madgett "Without Condition"

Do not ask why the wind broods - Randall Mann "?"

Sport for the winds that come after - Edwin Markham "The Toilers"

Haunted by little winds and daffodils - Edwin Markham "The Valley"

A wind of rapture blew - Edwin Markham "The Whirlwind Road"

Heard the wind draw out of the west - Jeannette Marks "Dragon"

I shall be pale lace of wind - Jeannette Marks "Even as Here"

The wind that tramps eternity - Jeannette Marks "Obscurity"

A gray heron battling up against the wind - Jeannette Marks "Obscurity"

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

Guided by star and blowing wind - Jeannette Marks "Two Candles"

Heard a voice in the calling wind - Don Marquis "Haunted"

Driven along by the carnival winds - Don Marquis "A Mood of Pavlowa"

Responsive to the wind - George Martin "Eudora"

Rejoice that the winds are free - George Martin "Montreal Carnival Sports"

Dandelions giving shape to the wind - Herbert Woodward Martin "Blue"

Listens to the wind's mediation - Herbert Woodward Martin "Contemplations on Snow"

Hugged by a timeless wind - Herbert Woodward Martin "On Reading Wendell Berry's 'Sabbaths'"

A wind settles in the body - J. Michael Martinez "Xicano"

The listening winds received this song - Andrew Marvell "Bermudas"

And trod as if on the Four Winds - Andrew Marvell "The Nymph Complaining for the Death of Her Fawn"

Where the wind's like a whetted knife - John Masefield "Sea-Fever"

The leaves whirl in the wind's riot - John Masefield "On Malvern Hill"

In a wind from outer hell - John Masefield "One of the Bo'sun's Yarns"

A wind's in the heart of me - John Masefield "A Wanderer's Song"

Tell my sorrows to the winds of dawn - Baba Rahim Mashrab "Love Ghazal of Mashrab (4)" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun

And exhume it to the winds - Edgar Lee Masters "Editor Whedon"

Who do not know the ways of the wind - Edgar Lee Masters "Serepta Mason"

Wind through the swaying spires of skyscrapers - Ted Mathys "The National Interest"

Picking my name out of the wind - Jamaal May "The Tendencies of Walls"

Prophecy the March winds blow - Theodore Maynard "Birthday Sonnet"

A joy as cleansing as the wind - Theodore Maynard "Sonnet for the Fifth of October"

In the wind and bitter rain - Theodore Maynard "The Stirrup Cup"

That flee before a blowing wind - Theodore Maynard "To a Bad Atheist"

Outrun the wind - Guadalupe Garcia McCall "Ti-ki-ri, ti-ki-ri, ti-ki-ri, tas!"

Will masquerade as the wind - Shara McCallum "No Ruined Stone"

Winds and rains who have lost their names - Brandy Nālani McDougall "Ka ‘Ōlelo"

Sing as th' winds request - James E. McGirt "Born Like the Pines"

A cornucopia of wind and grass - Campbell McGrath "The Everglades"

Too loud the wind's mad roar - Claude McKay "Jasmines"

While happy winds go laughing - Claude McKay "Spring in New Hampshire"

Punished mildly by wind - Marc McKee "Hello, New Year"

Quiet after the wind's frenzy - D'Arcy McNickle "The Mountains"

Moaning my name through the wind - Ryan Mecum "The Time I Bought Matsuo Basho"

The wind will tally our losses - Erika Meitner "Untitled [and the moon once it stopped was sleeping]"

Dancing with a timid wind - Gustav Melby "The Lost Chimes"

The wind has teeth, the wind has claws - George Meredith "Hard Weather"

The wind's wolves through the woods are loose - George Meredith "Hard Weather"

The game the wind plays - George Meredith "The Orchard and the Heath"

Beneath a wind unheard - George Meredith "Phoebus with Admetus"

Have wakened in a wind of messages - W.S. Merwin "Night Above the Avenue"

Forsaken by great winds - Charlotte Mew "I Have Been Through the Gates"

A flock of winds came winging - Alice Meynell "The Roaring Frost"

Silence strays amongst the winds - Alice Meynell "To the Beloved"

Move unchained as wind across the world - Adam Mickiewicz "Baydary" transl. by Edna Worthley Underwood

And the afternoon wind raises welts of sunlight - Joseph Millar "Job"

A wind with a wolf's head - Edna St. Vincent Millay "The Ballad of the Harp-Weaver"

Listening to the wind and looking at the wall - Edna St Vincent Millay "The Philosopher"

The chill of acid wind - Edna St Vincent Millay "The Suicide"

Where the wind comes from - A.A. Milne "Wind on the Hill"

Does wind stay trapped in a room - Rajiv Mohabir "Kabira"

Wind drowned in clouds - Jenny Molberg "Atropos"

The wind burns my wishes on the air - N. Scott Momaday "A Darkness Comes"

Beautiful in the whispers of the wind - N. Scott Momaday "Lines for My Daughter"

The wind bending the reeds westward - N. Scott Momaday "Prayer for Words"

My horse is the slithering wind - N. Scott Momaday "The Rider of Two Gray Hills"

A perfect destiny on a whisper of the wind - N. Scott Momaday "Shade"

Wind and mere are phantom-choked with voices - Harriet Monroe "With a Copy of Shelley"

Something ferried by the wind - Kamilah Aisha Moon "Dear God Please Make Me a Bird"

Sown by tearing winds - Marianne Moore "Those Various Scalpels"

And winds are wandering to repose - T. Moore "The Humming-Bird"

Every wind an open gate - T. Sturge Moore "The Sea is Kind"

A wayward, wilful wind that blew hot - William Moore "It Was Not Fate"

In winds that come from all directions - Marjorie Moorhead "Head in the Clouds"

The winds of sin whispered in my ear - Gabriel Ascencio Morales "The Harrowing | Desgarrador"

As I listen to its winds one last time - Gabriel Ascencio Morales "The Harrowing | Desgarrador"

Wind scraped by steel - Cindy Hunter Morgan "Deckhand: Scent Theory"

Unharnesses as the wind - Christopher Morley "America, 1917"

Thirst for wind and open space - Christopher Morley "At the Dog Show"

Hymned by every balmy wind - Lewis Morris "Suffrages"

As wind ripens their talent for exodus - Rusty Morrison "please advise stop [the rustle of a Sunday bundle of newspapers tucked under my father's arm stop]"

cover their faces with wind - Valzhyna Mort "crossword"

Maple leaves abducted by the wind - Stanley Moss "Winter Flowers"

Violent winds come to work mischief - Mu Hua "Rhyme-Prose on the Sea" transl. by Burton Watson

No wind with answers blowing - T. Emmett Mueller "Purified on the Only Visible Moon"

This blue wind with cool caresses - Harryette Mullen "Conversation in Isolation"

Even the wind wondered - Angel Nafis "How Each Sister Handles the Apocalypse"

As fickle as the wind that blows, and veers - John Napier "Who Knows?"

Lonely perfect tassels to the wind - Isabel Neal "Drought Essay"

Violets trail off in an innocent wind - Maggie Nelson "Sleepy Demise of the Season"

This unseen force that some called wind - Mark Nepo "Stopped Again by the Sea"

More tempered by winds - Pablo Neruda "Autumn Testament" transl. by Alastair Reid

In the green mouth of the wind - Pablo Neruda "Autumn Testament" transl. by Alastair Reid

Your winds weep with rage - Pablo Neruda "Brother Cordillera" transl. by Alastair Reid

Scattered its delirium to the winds - Pablo Neruda "Chilean Mockingbird" transl. by Jack Schmitt

Spoonful of confused wind - Pablo Neruda "The Destroyed Street" translated by Donald D Walsh

How did you come to this vinegar wind - Pablo Neruda "Elegy" transl. by Jack Schmitt

A fish trapped in the wind - Pablo Neruda "The Enigmas" transl. by Jack Schmitt

The shouts of the wind in the shadow - Pablo Neruda "Epithalamium" transl. by Donald D. Walsh

The four stormy stations of the wind - Pablo Neruda "Getaway" transl. by Alastair Reid

By the great winds of the sky - Pablo Neruda "History" transl. by Dennis Maloney

Whistled with the warrior wind - Pablo Neruda "The House" transl. by Jack Schmitt

The wind hauls on my widowed voice - Pablo Neruda "In My Sky at Twilight" transl. by W.S. Merwin

Silence of water and wind - Pablo Neruda "Man" transl. by Jack Schmitt

This island the Wind God inhabits - Pablo Neruda "Men IX" transl. by William O'Daly

Casts its clocks to the wind - Pablo Neruda "Migration" transl. by Jack Schmitt

The petrel's wind flew over eternity - Pablo Neruda "Not Only the Albatross" transl. by Jack Schmitt

Wounded beneath the wind - Pablo Neruda "The Oceanics" transl. by Jack Schmitt

Dictionary of the wind - Pablo Neruda "Ode to a Stamp Album" transl. by Margaret Sayers Peden

The crackling factories of wind - Pablo Neruda "Ode to the Double Autumn" transl. by Mark Eisner

Broke loose with the wind - Pablo Neruda "Poetry" transl. by Alastair Reid

Ask the wind more questions - Pablo Neruda "Soliloquy at Twilight" transl. by Alastair Reid

Solitude swept by wind and salt - Pablo Neruda "Solitudes" transl. by Dennis Maloney

Like a curtain of armored wind - Pablo Neruda "Song for the Mothers of Slain Militiamen" translated by Richard Schaaf

Streets of sea and wind - Pablo Neruda "To Don Asterio Alacaron, Clocksmith of Valparaiso" transl. by Alastair Reid

The strings of the wind's violin - Pablo Neruda "The Unburied Woman of Paita" transl. by Maria Jacketti

Sown by the seed of the wind - Pablo Neruda "Vegetation" transl. by Jack Schmitt

The statute of the wind - Pablo Neruda "Wandering Albatross" transl. by Jack Schmitt

The keen wind robs the flowers - E. Nesbit "March Violets"

Wooed by the wind's soft word - E. Nesbit "Mummy Wheat"

Where caged winds slumber - E. Nesbit "Out of the Fulness of the Heart the Mouth Speaketh"

Holding our wings against the wind - Mari Ness "Tongueless"

Even in a letter of wind - Aimee Nezhukumatathil "One Vote"

The wind becomes a palimpsest - Diana Khoi Nguyen "Đổi Mới"

Crossed and looped a net to the wind - Hoa Nguyen "Netting (Language Ghost)"

On the wings of the six o'clock wind - Grace Nichols "Joy-riders"

Under the first urge of the wind - Robert Nichols "A Faun's Holiday"

Muffled wind among the crags - Robert Nichols "Polyphemus His Passion: A Pastoral"

Heard a fierce wind riding by - Meredith Nicholson "October"

The wind and its mad, warring tone - Meredith Nicholson "October"

By bitter winds o'erblown - Meredith Nicholson "Where Love Was Not"

Clothed in wind and cold - Lorine Niedecker "Poems at the Porthole"

Rival the flying wind's swiftness - Nineteen Pieces of Old Poetry (translated by Arthur Waley)

Forests of wind storms newly risen - tiana nobile "Moon Yeong Shin"

The wind calculating your lesson - Alice Notley "The Wind"

A bitter wind that scourges us - Alfred Noyes "Avicenna's Dream"

Winds sleep in the rocky caverns - "Nurse's Song" transl. by Eleanor Hull

Of wind knotted with cries - Naomi Shihab Nye "Almost, Never"

Smooth ripple of the wind's second name - Naomi Shihab Nye "Always Bring a Pencil"

Flat tables spread with wind - Naomi Shihab Nye "At Portales, New Mexico"

The dark wind of our breath - Naomi Shihab Nye "How Palestinians Keep Warm"

As wind claims the whole sky - Naomi Shihab Nye "Wind and the Sleeping Breath of Men"

with horns that fly in the wind - Brandon O'Brian "Population Changes"

Flesh unto flowers, and flame unto wind - Edward J. O'Brien "Song"

Chatter their comparisons to the wind - Frank O'Hara "Ann Arbor Variations"

The tyrannous anger of the wounding wind - Eochadh O'Hosey (or Hussey) 17th century "O'Hussey's Ode to the Maguire" transl. by James Clarence Mangan

Wounding wind that burns as fire - Eochadh O'Hosey (or Hussey) 17th century "O'Hussey's Ode to the Maguire" transl. by James Clarence Mangan

Borne on the wind's wings, flashing fire - Eochadh O'Hosey (or Hussey) 17th century "O'Hussey's Ode to the Maguire" transl. by James Clarence Mangan

Would rather drink the wind - Mary Oliver "The Arrowhead"

Without the push of wind - Mary Oliver "Black Oaks"

The crown of the wind - Mary Oliver "From the Book of Time"

In the wedge of the wind - Mary Oliver "Lilies"

Even when there is no wind - Mary Oliver "The Lily"

In the baskets of the wind - Mary Oliver "November"

All winds blow cold at last - Mary Oliver "The Orchard"

The wheels of the wind - Mary Oliver "Rain, Tree, Thunder and Lightning"

The wind roused up in the oak trees - Mary Oliver "Stars"

The burning mouth of the wind - Mary Oliver "West Wind 6"

The patience of trees in the wind - Mary Oliver "What is the greatest gift"

Some shining coil of wind - Mary Oliver "Where Does the Temple Begin, Where Does It End?"

Lilies turning from the wind - Mary Oliver "Work"

I can forgive the wind - January Gill O'Neil "The Blower of Leaves"

Reels with the wind's savage play - Caroline F. Orne "A New England Legend" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]

And still the adverse winds blew on - Caroline F. Orne "A New England Legend" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]

The winds walk around it - Gregory Orr "The City of Poetry"

Bowed by a ceaseless wind - Gregory Orr "River Inside the River"

Ragged holes through which a black wind blows - Gregory Orr "These Words"

Such fabled winds of change - Brenda Marie Osbey "On Contemplating the Breasts of Pauline Lumumba"

dust carried by solar wind - Jena Osman "Mercury Rising (A Visualization)"

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

Hold converse with the wind and leaves - Manuel José Othón "The River" transl. by Alice Stone Blackwell

Her mantle she flung to the wind - "The Outlaw of Loch Lene" transl. by Jeremiah Joseph Callanan

Becomes the texture of the wind - Sodïq Oyèkànmí "Stream of Dreams Where My Mouth Asks Not Be Blood-Light"

Sheltered from rough winds - M.P. "The Vales" [Chambers's Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.15 v.I, April 12 1884]

To the kiss of the winds above - Conde Benoist Pallen "The Raising of the Flag"

Howl at the wind, whimper in the rain - Pao Chao "Rhyme-Prose on the Desolate City" transl. by Burton Watson

Winds that sighed in Homer's strings - Dorothy Parker "Hearthside"

Of wailing wind and graveyard panoply - Dorothy Parker "I Shall Come Back"

Whose greens vary according to light and wind - Cecily Parks "Hackberry"

At rest in a wind's disruption - Carl Phillips "Crossing"

What's meant to be wind - Carl Phillips "Entire Known World So Far"

Fall asleep to the wind at night - Carl Phillips "So the Edge of the World"

With forever having been a wind - Carl Phillips "So the Edge of the World"

To catch a wind god breathing - Carl Phillips "Vikings"

As to which wind to bow down for - Carl Phillips "What They Did, Who They Did it With"

From the under-world forever came a wind - Stephen Phillips "Orestes"

Some land of wind and drifting leaves - Stephen Phillips "Orestes"

Hand of wind and flame - Frederick Erastus Pierce "God and the Farmer"

The wind in the mallow flowers - Po Chu'i "Pouring Out My Feelings after Parting from Yuan Chen" transl. by Burton Watson

The wind came out of the cloud by night - Edgar Allan Poe "Annabel Lee"

Winds that chase with lifted spear - Alexander Posey "An Outcast"

The wind is rude and cold - Alexander Posey "A Vision of Rest"

Trifling with the wind - Lynn Powell "Indian Summer"

That neither wind nor frost could close - E.J. Pratt "The Ice-Floes"

The calculated way the wind uprises - E.J. Pratt "Overheard in a Cove"

Whom the winds had buffeted - E.J. Pratt "Re-Born"

While howls the wintry wind - Alexander Pushkin "[I've overlived aspirings]" transl. by John Pollen

Burning despite the ghostly winds - Rahim Yasin Qaynami "I Was That Person" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun

Joined my prayer to the wind and trees - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "The All-Mother's Awakening"

The road winds down in deepening shadow - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "Dawn Among the Olive Groves"

A pilgrim wind will pause to look - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "Finis"

Ere they were kissed by winds - Theodore H. Rand "Partridge Island"

Down the sorrow of the wind - Herbert Randall "Cry of the Wounded Loon"

Answer when the wild winds call - Herbert Randall "Feel of the Wander-Lure"

May the winds caress my throne - Herbert Randall "Hymn Ancestral"

The haunts of the wind's domain - Herbert Randall "Romp of the Sea"

Down the spaces of the wind - Herbert Randall "The Tryst of Nations"

And winds make faces at the moon - Herbert Randall "Twin Lights"

Bartering with the wind - Roger Reeves "Prayer to the Gods of the Night, II"

her breath moves all the winds of time - Marcie R. Rendon "Dream Songs"

Bent as light, as wind - Barbara Jane Reyes "Brown Girl Has Walked Into the Wild, Palms Open"

The wind that has shaken off its dust - Lola Ridge "Altitude"

Creak when the wind steps on you - Lola Ridge "Betty"

The wet rags of the wind - Lola Ridge "Celia"

A wisp of the battering wind - Lola Ridge "The Destroyer"

Caught between two winds - Lola Ridge "Firehead part I: He 2: The Man from Joppa"

A wind frail as a kitten's paw - Lola Ridge "Firehead part IV: The Stone 2: The Mother"

Who wrestled with all the winds - Lola Ridge "Firehead part IX: Resurrection 2: John Walks in the Morning"

Missed no gesture of the wind - Lola Ridge "Frank Little at Calvary"

Shall enter like the wind - Lola Ridge "Reveille"

Day is at the gates and a young wind - Lola Ridge "The Song of Iron"

A torch blown along the wind - Lola Ridge "To the Others"

The winds with their fringes of gold - James Whitcombe Riley "The Circus Parade"

The border says stop to the wind - Alberto Rios "The Border: A Double Sonnet"

More rabid than mired winds - Raquel Salas Rivera "the independence (of puerto rico)"

Strange winds from the forgotten day - Charles George Douglas Roberts "Night in a Down-Town Street"

Reinless run of wind and sun - Charles G.D. Roberts "Wayfarer of Earth"

A thousand little summer winds are singing in the wheat - Lloyd Roberts "England's Fields"

Snow and the winds that eat into the bone - Lloyd Roberts "Flowers of the Sky"

His servants are the wind and rain - Lloyd Roberts "The Fruit-Rancher"

And still the winds are hungry-cold - Lloyd Roberts "One Morning when the Rain-Birds Call"

And winds beyond the heavens are dancing in the light - Lloyd Roberts "Spring Madness"

Swing the doors to the four great winds - Lloyd Roberts "There's Music in My Heart To-day"

Ceaseless winds that eddy down to whip the iron street - Lloyd Roberts "The Winter Harvest"

The wind sweeps in from the iron seas - Lloyd Roberts "Winter Winds"

Dead flowers on the wind - Corinne Roosevelt Robinson "From a Motor in May"

Where shifting winds were driving his argosies - Edwin Arlington Robinson "Late Summer"

No voice from these on any landward wind - Rennell Rodd "Atalanta"

Quiet for murmuring winds at strife - Rennell Rodd "Disillusion"

The warning blown back on every wind - Rennell Rodd "Disillusion"

Autumn's wind uncloses the heart of all your flowers - Rennell Rodd "A Song of Autumn"

Brought in by the winds of our own stormy reluctance - Levi Romero "the cherry end of your cigarette against the pale sky"

All this nonsense of wind and drizzle - Patrick Rosal "Children Walk on Chairs to Cross a Flooded Schoolyard"

Wanted to be the wind - Alireza Roshan "The Book of Absence" (translated by Erfan Mojib and Gary Gach)

Warm from the least wind - Christina Georgina Rossetti "The Ghost's Petition"

The wistful musing of the wind - Thomas Runciman "Sonnets VIII"

Every bitter wind of heaven - Captain Owen Rutter "The Song of Tiadatha"

Winds that are wearied of night - Abram Joseph Ryan (aka Father Ryan) "Song of the Deathless Voice"

Blessed with a few gusts of wind - Ira Sadoff "Ithaca"

Wind in the shadow of time - Gilbert Saenz "Dream Journey"

The wind intermittent in our faces - Marjorie Saiser "Crane Migration, Platte River"

Unsubdued in war of winds and waters - Arthur L. Salmon "Solitude"

Who ordained the eight winds - "The Saltair na Rann, or Psalter of the Verses: I. The Creation of the Universe: Creation of the Winds with their Colours" transl. by Eleanor Hull

Reborn in stone in wind in water - Sonia Sanchez "On the Occasion of Essence's Twenty-fifth Anniversary"

Ready for the dust and fire and wind - Carl Sandburg "Aztec Mask"

The way the wind measures the weather - Carl Sandburg "How Much?"

Build a house no wind blows over - Carl Sandburg "The Lawyers Know Too Much"

Slides by on a high wind calling - Carl Sandburg "Potomac Town in February"

The wind of the lake shore waits and wanders - Carl Sandburg "The Windy City"

Dust and a bitter wind - Carl Sandburg "The Windy City"

Above the wind's low laughter - Margaret E. Sangster "At Dawn: II. The Pioneer"

To share the wind - May Sarton "Friendship and Illness"

Cities are only wind and flame - D.L. Sayers "For Phaon"

And the Armada went to every wind - Friedrich Schiller "The Invincible Armada" transl. not credited

Spitting against the wind - Philip Schultz "Googling Ourselves"

The dissonance of unbridled wind - Philip Schultz "Luxury: Three"

The net they cast upon the wind - James Marcus Schuyler "April"

The wind tears up the sun - James Marcus Schuyler "Poem [The wind tears up the sun]"

A wind made terrible by time - Ann K. Schwader "Climate of Fear"

A tattered wind alone replied - Ann K. Schwader "Finale, Act Two"

Sand upon the wind's tongue scouring - Ann K. Schwader "Horizon of the Aten"

The winds that blow contagion - Ann K. Schwader "In the Burned Places"

A solar wind too strong to ride - Ann K. Schwader "Why We Left"

The glee of the mad wind - Clinton Scollard "A Sea Change"

The four great winds rejoice - Clinton Scollard "A Sea Rover"

When cold has stilled the wind - Duncan Campbell Scott "Frost"

The weights of the winds and the rains - Frederick George Scott "Calvary"

A wind of scattered straws - Frederick George Scott "Samson"

Lingering on the morning wind - Sir Walter Scott "The Field of Waterloo"

What the wind told the trees - Tim Seibles "Unmarked"

The wind has a lesson to teach - Robert W. Service "The Three Voices"

Wind which tenders astonishment - Purvi Shah "You believed only a girl born of dandelion can be ferocious--"

Though mounted on the wind - William Shakespeare "Sonnet LI"

Hoisted sail to all the winds - William Shakespeare "Sonnet CXVII"

Stirred by apple-scented wind - Clara Shanafelt "Fantastic"

Poppies, by every wind undone - "She Defines Her Position" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.6, Nov. 1863]

Charmed eddies of autumnal winds - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Alastor: or, the Spirit of Solitude"

Beneath the sinuous veil of woven wind - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Alastor: or, the Spirit of Solitude"

The Spirit of wind with lightning eyes - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Alastor: or, the Spirit of Solitude"

The haunt of every gentle wind - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Alastor: or, the Spirit of Solitude"

Ivy-fingered winds - Percy Bysshe Shelley "The Daemon of the World"

The death dirge of the melancholy wind - Percy Bysshe Shelley "The Daemon of the World"

The winds of Heaven mix - Percy Bysshe Shelley "Love's Philosophy"

The lightest wind was in its nest - Shelley "The Recollections"

And the wind's strange way was their way - Francis Sherman "In Memorabilia Mortis"

We dream of the castaway wind - Sun Yung Shin "A History of Domestication"

From the leash of wind and rain - Dora Sigerson Shorter "The Ballad of the Little Black Hound"

The winds that blow you backward - Dora Sigerson Shorter "A Vagrant Heart"

The thin wind of loneliness may howl - Joyce Sidman "Blessing from the Stars"

His fur hold the wind's breath - Joyce Sidman "Blessing on the Smell of Dog"

Sneeze at the wind - Joyce Sidman and Rick Allen "Big Brown Moose"

Just as the bitter wind - Joyce Sidman and Rick Allen "Vole in Winter"

That the winds forgot his very name - Margaret Sidney "Ballad of the Lost Hare"

Inherit the unrest of the wind - Dora Sigerson "The Wind on the Hills"

Blinded by bitter wind - Sue William Silverman "If the Girl Dies, or Doesn't"

The wind steering me toward my destiny - Desirae Simmons "What to Remember If I Lose My Way"

A full wind filling the trees - Michael Simms "Sometimes I Wake Early"

winter with its obsessed wind - Jake Skeets "Eating Wild Carrots with My Brothers on the Mesa"

Fox smell lying heavy on the wind - Tom Sleigh "The Fox"

Swift as the trackless wind - Frank E. Smedley "Maude Allinghame: A Legend of Hertforshire"

Winds that wrangle through the vast - Clark Ashton Smith "The Balance"

Like the song of a silver wind - Clark Ashton Smith "Chant of Autumn"

A wizard wind goes crying - Clark Ashton Smith "The Eldritch Dark"

One with dust and wind - Clark Ashton Smith "A Fragment"

Make a brief and broken wind - Clark Ashton Smith "The Hashish-Eater; or, The Apocalypse of Evil"

Now I have but the wind alone - Clark Ashton Smith "The Masque of Forsaken Gods"

Unseen spiders of bewildered winds - Clark Ashton Smith "Medusa"

What prophecies are on the wind? - Clark Ashton Smith "The Mystic Meaning"

Shadow of errant winds - Clark Ashton Smith "The Nereid"

The inconsolable crying of an evil wind - Clark Ashton Smith "Psalm"

Arcturus was a beacon to the winds - Clark Ashton Smith "Saturn"

The eldritch laughters of the wind - Clark Ashton Smith "Saturn"

The hollowness of the unharvestable wind - Clark Ashton Smith "A Song of Dreams"

Upon the wind's oblivious woe - Clark Ashton Smith "To Nora May French"

On the wings of the hastening wind - Clark Ashton Smith "The Wind and the Moon"

With tones like winter's frozen wind - Miss L. Virginia Smith "The Reconciliation"

A broom being swept by the wind - Maggie Smith "Rasp"

Thanks to the loud religion of wind - Patricia Smith "To Little Black Girls, Risking Flower"

Wind found its color - Patricia Smith "What Was the First Sound"

More fleet than those begot by winds - William Somerville "The Chase"

From the bitter wind gets grief - "A Song of Winter" transl. by Kuno Meyer

And gave to the wind to carry - Marin Sorescu "To the Sea" transl. by Michael Hamburger

This wind is troubling me again - Marin Sorescu "To the Sea" transl. by Michael Hamburger

No song of the wind and rain - George Soule "Rebellion"

Went mad with the wind's song - George Soule "Solitude"

Strange winds directed my poor aim - Leonora Speyer "Saul! Saul!"

Along strange winds your petals blew - Leonora Speyer "To a Song of Sappho discovered in Egypt"

Wind skinning itself in the trees - A.E. Stallings "The Dogdom of the Dead"

Hears nothing but the white vowels of the wind - A.E. Stallings "Epic Simile"

Wind brushing through stands of spears - A.E. Stallings "Epic Simile"

Your forebear was the sack of winds - A.E. Stallings "The Mother's Loathing of Balloons"

Wind uplifts the briony leaves - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Summer Rain"

Wild winds whistle and snow is come - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Wild Wind Whistle"

Save what the dreary winds and waves incur - James Stephens "The Shell"

On wings that feared no wind - George Sterling "The Aeroplane"

Like winds that have no home - George Sterling "An Altar of the West"

Secret with the homeless wind - George Sterling "Autumn (StC)"

Made sister to the wordless wind - George Sterling "Before Dawn"

Like a wind some hidden world put forth - George Sterling "A Character"

Thy doom upon the poisoned wind - George Sterling "The Day of Decision (CE)"

Where winds of sorrow blow - George Sterling "Evanescence"

With her dust upon the twilight winds - George Sterling "The Evanescent City"

Where the wind ran grey - George Sterling "Hesperian"

A whisper touched the wind - George Sterling "Justice"

Swept by winds that never blew before - George Sterling "The Last of Sunset"

Hold the sorrows of the wind - George Sterling "Lost Companion"

The wind of lonely places - George Sterling "The Muse of the Incommunicable"

By hesitating spirits of the wind - George Sterling "The Sibyl of Dreams"

Burden the winds with thunder - George Sterling "Sonnets on the Sea's Voice"

And winds of the forgotten morn - George Sterling "The Testimony of the Suns"

Awake no winds but bear her dust - George Sterling "The Tides of Change"

Weaves it with a troubled wind - George Sterling "White Magic"

The restless winds of thought - George Sterling "Willy Pitcher"

The grinding water and the gasping wind - Wallace Stevens "The Idea of Order at Key West"

Choirs of wind and wet and wing - Wallace Stevens "Le Monocle de Mon Oncle"

The wind attendant on the solstices - Wallace Stevens "The Man Whose Pharynx Was Bad"

Establishments of wind and light and cloud - Wallace Stevens "One of the Inhabitants of the West"

The wind pours down - Wallace Stevens "Ploughing on Sunday"

Within the thought of the wind - Wallace Stevens "Two Illustrations That the World Is What You Make of It"

The wind's kisses turn rough - Kelly Stewart "The Bandit King"

The whistling mane of every wind - Charles Warren Stoddard "Ave Maria Bells"

The bitter wind has banished the silent nightingale - Richard Henry Stoddard "A Winter Scene"

To beg the strong winds - Bianca Stone "The Murder"

Danced in the liquid wind - Alfred B. Street "The Song of the Axe"

Whose feet seemed shod with wind - Alfred B. Street "The Song of the Axe"

A tatter of sail in the wind - Arthur Stringer "Hill-Top Hours"

Afraid of the wind, afraid of the truth - Arthur Stringer "What Shall I Care?"

Decades of dry winds that whisper once - Blaize Kelly Strothers "The West Is Dead"

One of the wind's stories - Muriel Stuart "Man and His Makers"

The wistful lyre of winds forlorn - Muriel Stuart "Words"

Wind over mugwort and moxa - Su Tung-p'o "[Soft grasses, a plain of sedge]" transl. by Burton Watson

Spring wind shook the river - Su Tung-p'o "Written on a Painting Entitled 'Misty Yangtze and Folded Hills' in the Collection of Wang Ting-kuo" transl. by Burton Watson

Throws himself to the wind - Saheed Sunday "Fluorescence"

Flown off to the winds - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 56: The Pangs and Politics of Love" transl. by John Stratton Hawley

Maddened by the winds of estrangement - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 160: The Bee Messenger" transl. by John Stratton Hawley

The winds of our sighs speed the flow - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 178: The Bee Messenger" transl. by John Stratton Hawley

Tears to steep the wind with - William Albert Sutliffe "Song of the Spirit of the North" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]

A banner of gold to the summer wind cast - Miss Caroline E. Sutton "The Past" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.2, Feb. 1849]

Silver wind for your dancing place - May Swenson "Earth Your Dancing Place"

The invisible boiling wind of sound - May Swenson "Three Jet Planes"

Wan with wrath of wind and rain - Algernon Swinburne "Autumn and Winter"

Wild autumn exults in the wind - Algernon Swinburne "In Guernsey: To Theodore Watts"

Close from the wind and at ease from the tide - Algernon Swinburne "In Harbour"

The wind speaks only summer - Algernon Swinburne "A Landscape by Courbet"

All the wrath of waking wind and sea - Algernon Swinburne "A Night-Piece by Millet"

Thronging the ways of the wind - Algernon Swinburne "Recollections"

Mother of mutable winds and hours - Algernon Charles Swinburne "The Triumph of Time"

The wind's way in the deep sky's hollow - Algernon Swinburne "The Way of the Wind"

Shows the swallow the wind's way - Algernon Swinburne "The Way of the Wind"

We have wedded the winds to-day - John B. Tabb "A Cavalcade"

And the stern winds brood - Genevieve Taggard "The Vast Hour"

A sweet wind bears it company - T'ao Ch'ien [untitled] (translated by Arthur Waley)

The dreary wind ebbs, voiceless - J. Bayard Taylor "The Angel of the Soul" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.4, Oct. 1848]

And claim to love the wind and winter - Keith Taylor "Chasing the Ancient Murrelet"

Until the wind turns from the west - Keith Taylor "Circle in the Wind"

A dance in the wind at water's edge - Keith Taylor "Circle in the Wind"

A hand chisels letters into the wind - Keith Taylor "Circle in the Wind"

Fate is a wind - Sara Teasdale "Did You Never Know"

Wind goes shivering - Sara Teasdale "November"

Borne on the hush of the wind - Sara Teasdale "Old Tunes"

Took the wind and let it go - Sara Teasdale "Places III: Winter Sun (Lenox)"

Grown weary of the winds - Sara Teasdale "Sappho"

Hour of wind and light - Sara Teasdale "Swallow Flight"

Rise with holy wind - Craig Morgan Teicher "Lifted"

With the wind of east at morning - "Tempest on the Sea" transl. by Robin Flower

Wind and winter met together - "Tempest on the Sea" transl. by Robin Flower

To the wooing wind aloof - Alfred, Lord Tennyson "Mariana"

Wild winds bound within their cell - Tennyson "Mariana"

And fling the ashes to the wind - "There's Someone I Think Of" transl. by Burton Watson

The cold burning of hail and wind - Edward Thomas "March"

The winds blow fast as the stars are slow - Edward Thomas "Out in the Dark"

In the storm smoking along the wind - Edward Thomas "This Is No Case of Petty Right or Wrong"

With His hammer of wind - Francis Thompson "To a Snowflake"

The wind threads its needles through skin - Russell Thorburn "Tracking the Wolf"

Tameless playmate of the wind - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: V. The Sea.--Safety"

In order to be incited by wind - TC Tolbert "This Is What You Are"

Wind deserves a trophy - McKenzie Toma "Disintegrating Calculus Problem"

That shadowed wind - Z.G. Tomaszewski "Bat"

The wind's thousand thin fingers - Z.G. Tomaszewski "Correction"

Wind with the last word - Z.G. Tomaszewski "Sleep"

In unity with the wind - Z.G. Tomaszewski "Summer Song of Lake Michigan"

Against a wall of wind and sand - Edwin Torres "Neptune's Elegia"

Wind kissing the river - Paul Tran "Taurus Sun, Cancer Moon, Scorpio Rising"

And the winds of heaven are silent - "Treasure-Trove" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.5, Nov. 1863]

Roaring in a wind of memories - Iris Tree "[I met an Indian underneath a tree]"

Omens mouthed by winds of twilight - Iris Tree "Moods III"

The wind's persuasive violins and bells - Iris Tree "[Oh canst thou not hear in my heart all its whispering fears]"

And shut the fingers of wind upon the rushes - Iris Tree "[Shall we be christened poets]"

Spill the wind of light into our gloom - Iris Tree "[Sun-aureoled lilies are your priestesses]"

A sail that wind takes wantonly - J.B. Trend "During Music: Fantasy and Fugue"

Oblivious to the wind - Pimone Triplett "From Another Other Within, Without"

With sun and wind and lark - William Troy "Roads"

Snow whirled by the driving wind - Ts'ao Chih "Rhyme-Prose on the Goddess of Lo" transl. by Burton Watson

The bridle of the four winds - Marina Tsvetayeva "Insomnia" transl. by Elaine Feinstein and Angela Livingstone

The wind played in his trembling soul - W.J. Turner "The Caves of Auvergne"

A wind of shining ebony in Time's bright glass - Walter J. Turner "Giraffe and Tree"

Tossed them loose to the sun and the wind - Katherine Tynan "The Making of Birds"

Like harps the wind plays out of sight - Katherine Tynan "The Old House"

Before the wind's majestic feet - Louis Untermeyer "Midnight--By the Open Window"

Clean winds on my brow - Louis Untermeyer "Summer Night--Broadway"

Before the wind of joy - Louis Untermeyer "Thanks"

To the brittle wind - Paul Valery "Palme" as translated by May Sarton in 1954

And the desert sands whispered in the wind - Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez "From the Front of the Fourth World"

A warm still wind upon my face - Mark Van Doren "Possession"

A swift dark wind that turns the maples pale - Mark Van Doren "Travelling Storm"

Becoming a wind myself - A. Van Jordan "A Moment Alone"

Every word I spoke to the wind - A. Van Jordan "A Moment Alone"

Slivers sail the wind - Amy Ludwig VanDerwater "Dead Branch"

The wind a wordless rhapsody - Emile Verhaeren "Les Apparus dans mes Chemins: The Gardens" transl. by Alma Strettell

In the dark winds from the North - Emile Verhaeren "The Sunlit Hours II" transl. by Charles Royier Murphy

Cleaving the wind into fragments - Ocean Vuong "Prayer for the Newly Damned"

Climbing the wind - Derek Walcott "The Lighthouse"

Embroidering a new wind - G.C. Waldrep "brief lesson on marriage"

Threw sweet love upon the winds - Charles William Wallace "The Lone Wayside Wild Rose"

The winds enfold the mountains - Charles William Wallace "A Mortal"

With the wind of heaven blowing - D.A.E. Wallace "The Beggar-Maiden"

By storm's or wind's or water's might - Thomas Walsh "From Gardens Over Seas"

To rail at the dawn-watch wind - Wang Chien "Palace Song" transl. by Burton Watson

North border winds are rising - Wang Seng-Ta "To Match the Prince of Lang-yeh's Poem in the Old Style" transl. by Burton Watson

Where the wind stands straight - Edith Weaver "Lost Cinderella"

And weave but nets to catch the wind - John Webster "The Burial"

Sharp spines worn smooth by wind - Judy Patterson Wenzel "Seashell"

Nought left be the lost wind that grieves - Edith Wharton "Mistral in the Maquis"

Brave the passing wind of many winters - Henry Kirk White "Time"

Cold signals on the wind - Roberta Hill Whiteman "Depot in Rapid City"

Winds had their will of me - Helen Hay Whitney "Ave atque Vale"

Torn by winds and chilled with heedless snow - Helen Hay Whitney "The Coming of Love"

The four wide winds of evening - Helen Hay Whitney "Etoiles d'Enfer"

Catch the wind and twine the evening stars - Helen Hay Whitney "How we would Live!"

Seized by the angry wind - Helen Hay Whitney "In Autumn"

The wind lays ghostly kisses on my lips - Helen Hay Whitney "In the Mist"

Disdains the wind's rough courting - Helen Hay Whitney "Spring and Autumn"

Grieve not with the moaning wind - John Greenleaf Whittier "My Birthday"

Shrieking of the mindless wind - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"

His royal vows and oaths were all but wind - "The Whore"

Drawn tight against the city wind - Adam Wiedewitsch "If Night You Were a City"

I wish the wind may never cease - "The Wife of Usher's Well"

Struck by a wind together - William Carlos Williams "Approach of Winter"

Broken against cold winds - William Carlos Williams "A Celebration"

Winds of the white poppy - William Carlos Williams "The Dark Day"

Reply to the triple winds - William Carlos Williams "January"

Against treacherous bitterness of wind - William Carlos Williams "March"

My voice was a seed in the wind - William Carlos Williams "The Wanderer"

The wind coming that stills birds - William Carlos Williams "The Wanderer"

And gray winds hunt the foam - "The Wives of Brixham"

Who work in wind and foam - "The Wives of Brixham"

Have with the wind my litanies renewed - Humbert Wolfe "Balder's Song"

No wind stirring on a soundless sea - Humbert Wolfe "The Sicilian Expedition"

One made of wind and starlight - Cecilia Woloch "Prayer for 2018"

A mill that will go without water or wind - "Wonders of a Toy-Shop"

Remember the sweat & jeering wind - Nicholas Wong "First Martyr"

Embrace the cleansing wind - Nancy Wood "Feather"

When we had given our bodies to the wind - William Wordsworth "Skating"

Impatient as the wind - William Wordsworth "XXIX [Surprised by joy--impatient as the Wind]"

Lost voice carried over the winds - Tobias Wray "The Last Orgasm"

The crystal body of wind - Charles Wright "Double Salt"

For we have lived in the wind - Charles Wright "My Old Clinch Mountain Home"

Gravetree estuaries against the winds of Paradise - Charles Wright "What Becomes of the Brokenhearted..."

Wind in the cottonwoods wakes me - Jay Wright "The Healing Improvisation of Hair"

Fleeting as wind and the dews - John Wright "The Old Blighted Thorn"

Effaced by the insatiable winds - Willard Huntington Wright "What of the Night?"

The wind scatters tears upon dust - Elinor Wylie "Fire and Sleet and Candlelight"

Stand tall against the wind - Assétou Xango "Black Womxn Version II"

The wind will still carry their auras and prophecies - Emanuel Xavier "Legendary"

Stirred by the tendons of the wind - Jenny Xie "Distance Sickness"

Nerves quelled by a dry wind - Jenny Xie "Present Continuous"

Bone in the wind's throat - Jenny Xie "Reaching Saturation"

Soft as wind it passes - Lynn Xu "Tournesol" [excerpts]

A hater of the wind - W.B. Yeats "He thinks of his Past Greatness when a Part of the Constellations of Heaven"

Wind without borders - Yi Lei "Nature Aria" transl. by Tracy K. Smith and Changtai Bi

The luck of spring winds - Jane Yolen "Winter Finch"

That betrays not wind - C. Dale Young "Praise"

Song of the wind, surge of the sea - Francis Brett Young "Lament"

Blown under a wind that grieves - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"

A square of sky possess'd by the wind - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"

The wind won't go away so easily - Kevin Young "Dog Star"

Who rises to the cool and minty wind - Ray Young Bear "In the First Place of My Life"

Milkweeds dance-standing as the wind passes - Ray Young Bear "John Whirlwind's Doublebeat Songs, 1956"

Wind and rain await the opening flower - Yu Wu-ling "Offering Wine" transl. by Burton Watson

Meant for wind and motion - Adam Zagajewski "Epithalamium"

Where the wind steals music - Matthew Zapruder "Never to Return"

The wind's fugue tripling her internal rhythm - Cynthia Zarin "Orbit"

The earth's call to the scouring wind - Daniel Zeiders "Tornado Sirens"

Footprints vanish in the wind - Zheng Min "If Curses aren't Accompanied by Deep Thought #9: The Forgotten Yesterday (A dirge of ancient culture)" translator not credited. Source: https://projects.zo.uni-heidelberg.de/archive2/DACHS_Leiden/poetry/MD/Zheng_Min_trans.pdf

Put up with the devastation of wind - Zheng Min "Poverty" translator not credited. Source: https://projects.zo.uni-heidelberg.de/archive2/DACHS_Leiden/poetry/MD/Zheng_Min_trans.pdf

Why so drawn to the wind? - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver

How water and wind scar them - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver

The wind descend with its load of flames - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver

The wind and the condor - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver

Amid winds that vanquish the grass - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver

The wind will be the gravedigger - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver

Their mouths parched by so much wind - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 4" transl. by Katherine Silver

Trapped between winds and false bluster - Veronica Zondek "cold fire 5" transl. by Katherine Silver


Downwind through the winter weeds - Charles Wright "I've Been Sitting Here Thinking Back Over My Life..."

A fire-wind funneled to order - Georgiana Valoyce-Sanchez "From the Front of the Fourth World"

Do not avoid your headwinds - Mouna Ammar "Permission"

A steady cold channel of headwind - Anne Carson "Wife of Brain"

A grave where the hill-winds call - Nora Chesson "A Connaught Lament"

In the March-wind, ragged and forlorn - Henry van Dyke "Spring in the North"

Night-Wind.

Plague-wind, over a sterile shore - Cale Young Rice "The Immanent God"

Like the poison-wind's breath - Felicia Hemans "Guerilla Song"

Vocal with the seawind's breath - Robinson Jeffers "To an Old Square Piano"

Where the sea-winds only wander - John Hall Wheelock "My Lonely One"

Still feels the star-winds blow - Ann K. Schwader "Lavinia in Autumn"

Storm-wind shattering the boughs - Wilfred Childe "Rosa Innocens"

Time-winds out of Chaos - Vachel Lindsay "Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan"

Whirlwind.

Alone by the wind-beaten hill - Thomas Campbell "Exile of Erin"

Like a wind-bewildered crane - John Gould Fletcher "Toyonobu. Exile's Return"

The wind-bird with its white eyes - Mary Oliver "White-eyes"

Starved and wind-bitten oak - Stephen Vincent Benet "Grand Larceny"

Wind-bitten beech with badger barrows - John Masefield "Reynard the Fox"

Naked rents and wind-bleached jags - Helen Keller "The Song of the Stone Wall"

Wind-Blown.

The sound of wind-borne bells - William W. Story "The Violet"

With the trellis heavied by wind chimes - Janine Joseph "The Persistence of Symptoms"

Some wind-dancing afternoon - William Carlos Williams "Keller Gegen Dom"

Both alike are wind-driven weeds - Yin Shih "Parting from the Courtier Sung" transl. by Burton Watson

The windfalls of my mistakes - Carl Phillips "Capella"

Down the rivers of the windfall light - Dylan Thomas "Fern Hill"

Among the wind-felled bodies of my quince trees - R.B. Lemberg "The Broken Hill and the Breath"

Wind-fiends hunt the water - Dorothea Mackellar "The Grey Lake"

Through wind-flooded canyons - Natalie Diaz "Duned"

Vessels, wind-forsaken, on the waveless waters lie - "October Afternoon in the Highlands" [The Continental Monthly v.IV - Oct, 1863 - no.IV]

Wind-free in meadows - Louis Golding "To A.L.O."

When the wind-god shrieks aloud - George Martin "Aspiration"

Windmill.

Shrivelled and wind-moaning night - W. Wilfred Campbell "To the Ottawa"

Ridgeline ponderosas wind-pardoned - Chris Dombrowski "Fluvial"

Whirling tanagers sucked in a wind-pocket - Amy Lowell "Red Slippers"

Like April blossoms wind-pursued - Don Marquis "The Rondeau"

Cardboard crammed between wind-rattled panes - Nickole Brown "Wild Thing"

Frost whorling across a windshield - Rebecca Lindenberg "Ghostology"

Wind-shorn and struggling still - Dorothea Mackellar "High Places"

Down like a wind-smashed fence - Vachel Lindsay "Bryan, Bryan, Bryan, Bryan"

A silk windsock of snow blowing - Linda Pastan "Blizzard"

Listening for wind-songs in the tree heights - William Moore "Dusk Song"

That jeer from out the wind-stirred tapestries - Iris Tree "[Sun-aureoled lilies are your priestesses]"

Wind-Swept.

Crack their wind-swift fingers - Harold Acton "Words"

Deeps of the wind-torn west - Charles G.D. Roberts "The Summons"

wilting like the wind-touched crops - Giovannai Rosa "a force is a push, or a pull (5.8 million puerto ricans in america)"

Music become wind tunnel - Connor Yeck "The Thing (1982) as Silent Film"

In her wind-walled palace - Charles Warren Stoddard "Ave Maria Bells"

To alight upon the wind-warped upland thorn - Thomas Hardy "Afterwards"

Behind the wind-whipped branches - Willa Cather "I Sought the Wood in Winter"

One lone-wind-whipped weed - Blanche Taylor Dickinson "Things Said When He Was Gone"

Shrill the wind-winged heralds blew - Walter Crane "Queen Summer; Or, The Tourney of the Lily and the Rose"

The wind-winged clouds following - Mary Oliver "I don't want to live a small life"

The silver chill caught in our wind-woven walls - Mari Ness "ICE"


Windless.


Windy.


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