Potential Titles: Free
Jun. 7th, 2010 06:55 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Carefree laughter echoing in the dark - Chad Frame "A Union Victory"
Wandering by the carefree stream - Fenton Johnson "The Miracle"
Ashamed beside the carefree fish - Tao Yuan-ming aka T'ao Ch'ien "On Being Assigned as Military Advisor to the Garrison Army, Written when Passing Ch'ua" transl. by Burton Watson
To keep the garden free of insects and apparitions - Duane Ackerson "Poultry"
What odds if we at last are free? - John Albee "Evolution"
Only the empty hand is free to hold - Julia Alvarez "That Moment"
The first star of evening has bidden them free - S.D. Anderson "A May Song" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.5, May 1849]
I've broken free from orbit - Lae Astra "Binary Star System"
Wild until we are free - Cameron Awkward-Rich "Cento Between the Ending and the End"
And free your wounded soul - Zahir-Ud-Din Muhammad Babur "Poems of Babur (3)" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun
Learn to break free - Rachel Barenblat "So Much (Ahavah Rabbah)"
height of climb and width of free - Elizabeth Bartlett "challenge"
Time's alchemy will free - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Poet's Dream"
Free from error's chain - Ardelia Maria Barton "Freedom"
In three elements free - Henry Charles Beeching "Prayers"
Into the free companionship of air - Stephen Vincent Benet "Nos Immortales"
Suddenly free of panic - Robert Bly "Thoughts in the Cabin"
Sets the impatient spirit free - Charlotte Bronte "Lament Befitting These 'Times of Night'"
To free the deadly hope from your gut - Mahogany L. Browne "My face is an iteration, but the song in my belly is ancestral"
When passion's course was free - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "The Words of Rosalind's Scroll"
That fate had left me free - William Cullen Bryant "Green River"
Where Birds from Fowlers nets are free - John Bunyan "Upon the Lark and the Fowler"
When blind desire ran free - Michelangelo Buonarroti "LI. First Reading. Love in Youth and Age" transl. by John Addington Symonds
Live and roam free as the Carp - Regie Cabico "A Carpapalooza: An American Anthem"
For when time would slip free altogether - Scott Cairns "Draw Near"
A crystal case broken to free some glory - Edward Carpenter "Aphrodite"
When the ends of the world waxed free - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book I. The Vision of the Kings"
Terror and theft set free - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book VIII. The Scouring of the Horse"
From long debts keep free - John Clare "The Woodman"
Which buys bold hearts free - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"
With a free forgiveness in his face - Arthur Hugh Clough "The Song of Lamech"
The world pronounce you free - Frank Barbour Coffin "The Negro's 'America'"
Until the sea shall free them - Leonard Cohen "Suzanne"
Free with the hawk and the wind - Arthur Colton "Verses from 'The Canticle of the Road'"
Bonds to bind the free - Adelaide Crapsey "Adventure"
Those Autumn ghosts go free - Arthur Shearly Cripps "A Lyke-Wake Carol"
The lightning flashes free - Allan Cunningham "At Sea"
The captive bird that struggles to be free - Rev. Thomas Dale "The Anniversary"
Knight-errants bold and free - Ruben Dario "A Sonnet on Cervantes" transl. by Thomas Walsh and Salomon de la Selva
Free encounter with Eternity - Fanny Stearns Davis "Profits"
From such faithless rascals keep you free - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Most noble ladies, cherish your fair fame]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
Sailed my name up high and free - Rebecca Kai Dotlich "Room of Wishes"
The penitentiary of free speech - Denise Duhamel "Delta Flight 656"
As sunlight is free of the glare of sand - Roger Dutcher & Joanne Merriam "Heatwave"
My free song, my storm song - Dovid Edelshtot "My Last Will - Oh, My Good Friends" (translated by Bernart Bartleby? Maybe?)
Let my tears stream free - Enheduana "The Exaltation of Inana" transl. by Sophus Helle
From vain pursuits and vainer meeds set free - R.C.K. Ensor "Ode to Reality"
Where the clustering nuts fall free - Ettrick Shepherd "A Boy's Song"
Airy shapes of Oreads circling free - Eleanor Farjeon "Pan-Worship"
To the cold wind free - Sir Samuel Ferguson "Cean Dubh Deelish"
Free and burning and bright green - Sophie Fink "The Dogs Don't Forgive Us"
Thought has shaken his ankles free - Robert Frost "Bond and Free"
The free blowing curves of the grain - Zona Gale "Contours"
Each note the free birds fling - Theodosia Garrison "The Gifts of Gold"
With free rejoicing heart - Barnabe Googe "The Fly"
What every hour is free to learn - Gerald Gould "Oxford"
Free as the eagle and full as the tide - "Great Heart" [The Continental Monthly v.III - May, 1863 - no.V]
Like the ample moon and free - Louise Imogen Guiney "The White Sail"
We shall grow free of heart - Ivor Gurney "Spring. Rouen, 1917"
Make her free disposal - Hadewijch of Brabant (translated by Columba Hart) "Triumph Hard-Won"
Left myself to her free power - Hadewijch of Brabant (translated by Columba Hart) "Vale Millies"
A language that could free you - Joy Harjo "For Anna Mae Pictou Aquash,
The free spirit of its eagle flight - Felicia Hemans "The Abencerrage Canto I"
A world from all temptation free - Oliver Herford "Mephisto"
Hazard so much free of compulsion - Sir Geoffrey Hill "Genius Loci"
Free from the ancient gyves that bind and gall - John Northern Hilliard "Iconoclasm" [The Fly Leaf no. 3 v.1 Feb. 1896]
Futures not free of obstacles - Ellen Hopkins "By Some Stroke of Heaven"
And somewhat more free - Langston Hughes "Theme for English B"
Free, as sorrow is - Jean Ingelow "The Letter L"
And set our answer free - Jean Ingelow "Winstanley"
And another day set free - Emily Pauline Johnson "Day Dawn"
A chase frees me of gravity - Fady Joudah "Libra"
Shouted in our ears for free - Stuart Kestenbaum "Prayer in the Strip Mall, Bangor, Maine"
Be free of lye, lime, and liars - Jill Khoury "Sleep Hygiene"
Go free in detachment - Kim Unsong "Detachment"
Souls fly free - Kim Unsong "Photons & Souls"
An aficionado of the wilted, the shopworn, and the free - Ted Kooser "In the Alley"
Frees his thoughts to soar - Kuo P'u "Poem on the Wandering Immortal" transl. by Burton Watson
As the winds are free - Emma Lazarus "City Visions"
Wake and be free - DH Lawrence "Autumn Sunshine"
Now behold me free - Amy Levy "Medea"
Leap free as the waves - S. Anna Lewis "The Unmasked"
And waits to be made free once more - Amy Lowell "The Coal Picker"
Free of motion as the wind - James Russell Lowell "Prison of Cervantes"
Break free and transcend the transparent boundary - Emilie Lygren "Meditation"
Whereon the wild goats wander fearlessly and free - Denis Florence MacCarthy "Alice and Una"
Our thoughts as boundless, and our souls as free - A.A. Macnichol "The Sea-Rover" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]
Rejoice that the winds are free - George Martin "Montreal Carnival Sports"
The ruins where the will is free - J. Michael Martinez "Treaty of Guadalupe"
None but the wicked and the mad go free - John Masefield "The Haunted"
Free of known enemy - Airea D. Matthews "etymology"
The spruce's fair free limbs - Claude McKay "Winter in the Country"
To pry you free from sanity - Dante Micheaux "Outside, the Prophet"
To some free land of exile - Lewis Morris "The Epic of Hades book I: Tartarus: Phaedra"
Cruel as Rome that was free - Charles Pelham Mulvaney "Poppoea"
Only wanted to set something free - Caroline Harper New "The Elephant Mother"
Such leave is a free man's due - "Niels Ebbeson, 1340" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier
Our water isn't free either - Naomi Shihab Nye "It Was or It Wasn't"
Satin's for the free - Dorothy Parker "The Satin Dress"
Free the mind from Old-World trammels - George B. Peck "The Vision: Inscribed to Teachers to Contrabands in the South" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.6, Dec. 1864]
The right dance sets me free - Terese Mason Pierre "'Streets,' by Persephone"
The free breeze of the prairie - Peter Perkins Pitchlynn "Song of the Choctaw Girl"
On lightning pinions wild and free - Geo. D. Prentice "Lines Written on St. Valentine's Day"
To let forbidden thoughts go free - Geo. D. Prentice "Unhappy Love"
As fearless as free - Theodore H. Rand "The Stormy Petrel"
Mark the knave who swears he's free - "Remember Traitors" [Beadle's Dime Union Song Book No.2 1861]
Be set free from the stone - Rainer Maria Rilke "Song of the Statue" transl. by Jessie Lemont
Free to walk in the Paradise of sadness - Arthur Rimbaud "A Season in Hell [Delirium I]" transl. by James Sibley Watson
The free exalt of star and tree - Charles G.D. Roberts "Wayfarer of Earth"
While Death stalks free in the silent world - Lloyd Roberts "At the Year's End"
Your resolve to find something free - Valencia Robin "Naming Yourself"
Wreck of the lost human soul left free - Rennell Rodd "Actea"
Shaking you free from your perilous berth - Amy Redpath Roddick "A Scientific Puzzle"
Free as breeze from heaven - Alice Wellington Rollins "Love Will Find Out a Way"
And scandal was free - Metta Same "Fish & Duck Skills"
Polished free of the rust of hypocrisy - Sanai "The Walled Garden of Truth" [selections] transl. by D. Pendleton
My spirit from its shell breaks free - Friedrich Schiller "To the Fates"
Free to inhabit my life - Charif Shanahan "If I Am Alive To"
And bade the frozen streams be free - Shelley "The Invitation, to Jane"
Free from the fetters of Karma - Shinran Shonin "Buddhist Psalms" transl. by L. Adams Beck and S. Yamabe
knows nothing of the work that sets you free - Avi Silver "Passing Diamonds"
As greyhound from the leash set free - Frank E. Smedley "Maude Allinghame: A Legend of Hertforshire"
freeing the minions from their mindcontrol helmets - Cislyn Smith "Borrower"
The deer to the hills so free - E.M. Smith-Dampier "Ballad of London Town"
Gave to the clowns a free hand - Marin Sorescu "Shakespeare" transl. by Michael Hamburger
Shorn of dreams and free of thirst - George Sterling "The Cynic"
In solitude go free - George Sterling "The Gulls"
Free my thoughts from this tangle - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 188: Lordly Encounters-- and Others" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
A passion of thought set free - Algernon Swinburne "The Death of Richard Wagner"
Convoluted Enochian cyphers occupying and freeing up the mind - Bogi Takács "Torah and Secular Learning"
Gloom and frost are free to spoil and ravage here - J. Bayard Taylor "A Requiem in the North" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]
Only the lonely are free - Sara Teasdale "Morning Song"
Opposed free hearts - Alfred, Lord Tennyson "Ulysses"
Free as range of eye or mind - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: V. The Sea.--Safety"
Touched by Ariel's power, free of air, and earth, and waves - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: V. The Sea.--Safety"
Free Pandora and infectious truths - Emma Trelles "Corazón in Fall"
In a daydream I break free - Devin S. Turk "Statue of David with Top Surgery Scars"
Dreaming to be set free - Enrique Villasis "Birds in Flight, 1965"
Aware of the fresh free giver - Walt Whitman "Starting from Paumanox"
Free to wander, and free to bide - A.D.T. Whitney "Along, Long, Long"
That breaks the thing it frees - Helen Hay Whitney "The Golden Fruit"
Then in love set each one free - Myra Viola Wilds "Thoughts"
When the flag is shaken free - Humbert Wolfe "England"
Shakes me free of its blue dust - Jay Wright "The Healing Improvisation of Hair"
That thief already scheming to break free - Yi Lei "A Single Woman's Bedroom" transl. by Tracy K. Smith and Changtai Bi
lift the light free of its verticals - Monica Youn "Whiteacre"
Go elsewhere to be free - Matthew Zapruder "This Handwriting"
Birds that freed themselves from the cages of our bodies - Duane Ackerson "What If"
Dreamed, long since freed of any limits - Mike Allen "Carrington's Ferry"
All things freed of black and white - Mike Allen "Chagall's Lamp"
Freed from the sorrows I lament - Christine de Pisan "Virelay [Sweet, in whom my joy must be]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
Freed forever from his thrall - Ralph Waldo Emerson "To Rhea"
Once freed to mortal ears - Louise Imogen Guiney "For a Child"
The fount freed at its silver height - Louise Imogen Guiney "Spring"
Freed from every thorn - Felicia Hemans "The Domestic Affections"
Light imperious talk of water freed - Rosalie Dunlap Hickler "January Thaw"
Night from her gloomy dungeon freed - E. Curtiss Hine, U.S.N. "A Vision" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]
Whose Children Were Freed Without Her - Ashley M. Jones "What It Means To Say Sally Hemings"
Barely freed from the nettles - Pablo Neruda "The Poet" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Freed from the painted dead - Theodore H. Rand "In Autumn's Dreamy Ear"
Freed from the harsh fires of the soul - Lola Ridge "Firehead part VI: The Merchant of Babylon 1: Before Dawn"
Freed the elephant from his curse - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 221: The Poet's Petition and Praise" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
His life from rumors freed - Sir N. Wotton "Character of a Happy Life"
That rhythm freed of rule - Jay Wright "Kumu"
Too freely through the fields of air - A.L.O.E. "Blanche"
If the lava flowed freely - J.M. Allen "Eruption"
freely as the stars that follow - Elizabeth Bartlett "challenge"
Golden hours we freely spent - Arthur Colton "Twenty Years Hence"
Within rules freely accepted - Stephen Dunn "Lucky"
That pours freely through my damaged skull - Robert Frazier "A Rebel's Pale Eyes ..."
Freely pass the kindly joke - Leslie Pickney Hill "Christmas at Melrose"
Water of light poured freely - Naomi Shihab Nye "Peace"
That the night walks freely - Cynthia Dewi Oka "Redacted from a Know-Your-Rights Training Agenda"
Led us freely into the moonlight - Ruben Quesada "XI"
Giving too freely of the fountaining sap - Arthur Stringer "Before Renewal"
Freely concede the game - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 6: Krishna Growing Up" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
And water running freely past the remnants - Keith Taylor "Mapping the River"
A freely flowing scarlet kite - Amy Ludwig VanDerwater "Colorful Actor"
From goblets freely poured - Arthur Weir "L'Ordre de Bon Temps"
Condemned to freely glow - Matthew Zapruder "Canada"
That in dreams I may wander freer - G.G. Foster "Song of Sleep" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]
Freer yet its currents swell - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Summer Rain"
Free-born bird with echo babbling after - Gretta "Lily Leslie" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXV no.3, Sept. 1849]
A broken elevator trying to contain its freefall - Alise Alousi "Skip"
Your free-range genesis - Lynn Powell "Needing the Baroque"
The last freestanding rebellion - Faylita Hicks "The Fantastic Life of My Guardian Angels"
The waves prefer their cold free-will - Lermontof "[One wave upon another leaps]" transl. by John Pollen [probably Mikhail Lermontov]
Guilt, that rent-free tenant - Rasha Abdulhadi "Pocketful of Warding Stones"
Wind-free in meadows - Louis Golding "To A.L.O."
The yoke-freed oxen low - Emma Lazarus "In Exile"
Navigation Links:
Go to F word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.
Wandering by the carefree stream - Fenton Johnson "The Miracle"
Ashamed beside the carefree fish - Tao Yuan-ming aka T'ao Ch'ien "On Being Assigned as Military Advisor to the Garrison Army, Written when Passing Ch'ua" transl. by Burton Watson
To keep the garden free of insects and apparitions - Duane Ackerson "Poultry"
What odds if we at last are free? - John Albee "Evolution"
Only the empty hand is free to hold - Julia Alvarez "That Moment"
The first star of evening has bidden them free - S.D. Anderson "A May Song" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIV no.5, May 1849]
I've broken free from orbit - Lae Astra "Binary Star System"
Wild until we are free - Cameron Awkward-Rich "Cento Between the Ending and the End"
And free your wounded soul - Zahir-Ud-Din Muhammad Babur "Poems of Babur (3)" transl. by Aziz Isa Elkun
Learn to break free - Rachel Barenblat "So Much (Ahavah Rabbah)"
height of climb and width of free - Elizabeth Bartlett "challenge"
Time's alchemy will free - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Poet's Dream"
Free from error's chain - Ardelia Maria Barton "Freedom"
In three elements free - Henry Charles Beeching "Prayers"
Into the free companionship of air - Stephen Vincent Benet "Nos Immortales"
Suddenly free of panic - Robert Bly "Thoughts in the Cabin"
Sets the impatient spirit free - Charlotte Bronte "Lament Befitting These 'Times of Night'"
To free the deadly hope from your gut - Mahogany L. Browne "My face is an iteration, but the song in my belly is ancestral"
When passion's course was free - Elizabeth Barrett Browning "The Words of Rosalind's Scroll"
That fate had left me free - William Cullen Bryant "Green River"
Where Birds from Fowlers nets are free - John Bunyan "Upon the Lark and the Fowler"
When blind desire ran free - Michelangelo Buonarroti "LI. First Reading. Love in Youth and Age" transl. by John Addington Symonds
Live and roam free as the Carp - Regie Cabico "A Carpapalooza: An American Anthem"
For when time would slip free altogether - Scott Cairns "Draw Near"
A crystal case broken to free some glory - Edward Carpenter "Aphrodite"
When the ends of the world waxed free - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book I. The Vision of the Kings"
Terror and theft set free - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book VIII. The Scouring of the Horse"
From long debts keep free - John Clare "The Woodman"
Which buys bold hearts free - Arthur Hugh Clough "Dipsychus"
With a free forgiveness in his face - Arthur Hugh Clough "The Song of Lamech"
The world pronounce you free - Frank Barbour Coffin "The Negro's 'America'"
Until the sea shall free them - Leonard Cohen "Suzanne"
Free with the hawk and the wind - Arthur Colton "Verses from 'The Canticle of the Road'"
Bonds to bind the free - Adelaide Crapsey "Adventure"
Those Autumn ghosts go free - Arthur Shearly Cripps "A Lyke-Wake Carol"
The lightning flashes free - Allan Cunningham "At Sea"
The captive bird that struggles to be free - Rev. Thomas Dale "The Anniversary"
Knight-errants bold and free - Ruben Dario "A Sonnet on Cervantes" transl. by Thomas Walsh and Salomon de la Selva
Free encounter with Eternity - Fanny Stearns Davis "Profits"
From such faithless rascals keep you free - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Most noble ladies, cherish your fair fame]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
Sailed my name up high and free - Rebecca Kai Dotlich "Room of Wishes"
The penitentiary of free speech - Denise Duhamel "Delta Flight 656"
As sunlight is free of the glare of sand - Roger Dutcher & Joanne Merriam "Heatwave"
My free song, my storm song - Dovid Edelshtot "My Last Will - Oh, My Good Friends" (translated by Bernart Bartleby? Maybe?)
Let my tears stream free - Enheduana "The Exaltation of Inana" transl. by Sophus Helle
From vain pursuits and vainer meeds set free - R.C.K. Ensor "Ode to Reality"
Where the clustering nuts fall free - Ettrick Shepherd "A Boy's Song"
Airy shapes of Oreads circling free - Eleanor Farjeon "Pan-Worship"
To the cold wind free - Sir Samuel Ferguson "Cean Dubh Deelish"
Free and burning and bright green - Sophie Fink "The Dogs Don't Forgive Us"
Thought has shaken his ankles free - Robert Frost "Bond and Free"
The free blowing curves of the grain - Zona Gale "Contours"
Each note the free birds fling - Theodosia Garrison "The Gifts of Gold"
With free rejoicing heart - Barnabe Googe "The Fly"
What every hour is free to learn - Gerald Gould "Oxford"
Free as the eagle and full as the tide - "Great Heart" [The Continental Monthly v.III - May, 1863 - no.V]
Like the ample moon and free - Louise Imogen Guiney "The White Sail"
We shall grow free of heart - Ivor Gurney "Spring. Rouen, 1917"
Make her free disposal - Hadewijch of Brabant (translated by Columba Hart) "Triumph Hard-Won"
Left myself to her free power - Hadewijch of Brabant (translated by Columba Hart) "Vale Millies"
A language that could free you - Joy Harjo "For Anna Mae Pictou Aquash,
The free spirit of its eagle flight - Felicia Hemans "The Abencerrage Canto I"
A world from all temptation free - Oliver Herford "Mephisto"
Hazard so much free of compulsion - Sir Geoffrey Hill "Genius Loci"
Free from the ancient gyves that bind and gall - John Northern Hilliard "Iconoclasm" [The Fly Leaf no. 3 v.1 Feb. 1896]
Futures not free of obstacles - Ellen Hopkins "By Some Stroke of Heaven"
And somewhat more free - Langston Hughes "Theme for English B"
Free, as sorrow is - Jean Ingelow "The Letter L"
And set our answer free - Jean Ingelow "Winstanley"
And another day set free - Emily Pauline Johnson "Day Dawn"
A chase frees me of gravity - Fady Joudah "Libra"
Shouted in our ears for free - Stuart Kestenbaum "Prayer in the Strip Mall, Bangor, Maine"
Be free of lye, lime, and liars - Jill Khoury "Sleep Hygiene"
Go free in detachment - Kim Unsong "Detachment"
Souls fly free - Kim Unsong "Photons & Souls"
An aficionado of the wilted, the shopworn, and the free - Ted Kooser "In the Alley"
Frees his thoughts to soar - Kuo P'u "Poem on the Wandering Immortal" transl. by Burton Watson
As the winds are free - Emma Lazarus "City Visions"
Wake and be free - DH Lawrence "Autumn Sunshine"
Now behold me free - Amy Levy "Medea"
Leap free as the waves - S. Anna Lewis "The Unmasked"
And waits to be made free once more - Amy Lowell "The Coal Picker"
Free of motion as the wind - James Russell Lowell "Prison of Cervantes"
Break free and transcend the transparent boundary - Emilie Lygren "Meditation"
Whereon the wild goats wander fearlessly and free - Denis Florence MacCarthy "Alice and Una"
Our thoughts as boundless, and our souls as free - A.A. Macnichol "The Sea-Rover" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]
Rejoice that the winds are free - George Martin "Montreal Carnival Sports"
The ruins where the will is free - J. Michael Martinez "Treaty of Guadalupe"
None but the wicked and the mad go free - John Masefield "The Haunted"
Free of known enemy - Airea D. Matthews "etymology"
The spruce's fair free limbs - Claude McKay "Winter in the Country"
To pry you free from sanity - Dante Micheaux "Outside, the Prophet"
To some free land of exile - Lewis Morris "The Epic of Hades book I: Tartarus: Phaedra"
Cruel as Rome that was free - Charles Pelham Mulvaney "Poppoea"
Only wanted to set something free - Caroline Harper New "The Elephant Mother"
Such leave is a free man's due - "Niels Ebbeson, 1340" transl. by E.M. Smith-Dampier
Our water isn't free either - Naomi Shihab Nye "It Was or It Wasn't"
Satin's for the free - Dorothy Parker "The Satin Dress"
Free the mind from Old-World trammels - George B. Peck "The Vision: Inscribed to Teachers to Contrabands in the South" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.6, Dec. 1864]
The right dance sets me free - Terese Mason Pierre "'Streets,' by Persephone"
The free breeze of the prairie - Peter Perkins Pitchlynn "Song of the Choctaw Girl"
On lightning pinions wild and free - Geo. D. Prentice "Lines Written on St. Valentine's Day"
To let forbidden thoughts go free - Geo. D. Prentice "Unhappy Love"
As fearless as free - Theodore H. Rand "The Stormy Petrel"
Mark the knave who swears he's free - "Remember Traitors" [Beadle's Dime Union Song Book No.2 1861]
Be set free from the stone - Rainer Maria Rilke "Song of the Statue" transl. by Jessie Lemont
Free to walk in the Paradise of sadness - Arthur Rimbaud "A Season in Hell [Delirium I]" transl. by James Sibley Watson
The free exalt of star and tree - Charles G.D. Roberts "Wayfarer of Earth"
While Death stalks free in the silent world - Lloyd Roberts "At the Year's End"
Your resolve to find something free - Valencia Robin "Naming Yourself"
Wreck of the lost human soul left free - Rennell Rodd "Actea"
Shaking you free from your perilous berth - Amy Redpath Roddick "A Scientific Puzzle"
Free as breeze from heaven - Alice Wellington Rollins "Love Will Find Out a Way"
And scandal was free - Metta Same "Fish & Duck Skills"
Polished free of the rust of hypocrisy - Sanai "The Walled Garden of Truth" [selections] transl. by D. Pendleton
My spirit from its shell breaks free - Friedrich Schiller "To the Fates"
Free to inhabit my life - Charif Shanahan "If I Am Alive To"
And bade the frozen streams be free - Shelley "The Invitation, to Jane"
Free from the fetters of Karma - Shinran Shonin "Buddhist Psalms" transl. by L. Adams Beck and S. Yamabe
knows nothing of the work that sets you free - Avi Silver "Passing Diamonds"
As greyhound from the leash set free - Frank E. Smedley "Maude Allinghame: A Legend of Hertforshire"
freeing the minions from their mindcontrol helmets - Cislyn Smith "Borrower"
The deer to the hills so free - E.M. Smith-Dampier "Ballad of London Town"
Gave to the clowns a free hand - Marin Sorescu "Shakespeare" transl. by Michael Hamburger
Shorn of dreams and free of thirst - George Sterling "The Cynic"
In solitude go free - George Sterling "The Gulls"
Free my thoughts from this tangle - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 188: Lordly Encounters-- and Others" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
A passion of thought set free - Algernon Swinburne "The Death of Richard Wagner"
Convoluted Enochian cyphers occupying and freeing up the mind - Bogi Takács "Torah and Secular Learning"
Gloom and frost are free to spoil and ravage here - J. Bayard Taylor "A Requiem in the North" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]
Only the lonely are free - Sara Teasdale "Morning Song"
Opposed free hearts - Alfred, Lord Tennyson "Ulysses"
Free as range of eye or mind - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: V. The Sea.--Safety"
Touched by Ariel's power, free of air, and earth, and waves - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: V. The Sea.--Safety"
Free Pandora and infectious truths - Emma Trelles "Corazón in Fall"
In a daydream I break free - Devin S. Turk "Statue of David with Top Surgery Scars"
Dreaming to be set free - Enrique Villasis "Birds in Flight, 1965"
Aware of the fresh free giver - Walt Whitman "Starting from Paumanox"
Free to wander, and free to bide - A.D.T. Whitney "Along, Long, Long"
That breaks the thing it frees - Helen Hay Whitney "The Golden Fruit"
Then in love set each one free - Myra Viola Wilds "Thoughts"
When the flag is shaken free - Humbert Wolfe "England"
Shakes me free of its blue dust - Jay Wright "The Healing Improvisation of Hair"
That thief already scheming to break free - Yi Lei "A Single Woman's Bedroom" transl. by Tracy K. Smith and Changtai Bi
lift the light free of its verticals - Monica Youn "Whiteacre"
Go elsewhere to be free - Matthew Zapruder "This Handwriting"
Birds that freed themselves from the cages of our bodies - Duane Ackerson "What If"
Dreamed, long since freed of any limits - Mike Allen "Carrington's Ferry"
All things freed of black and white - Mike Allen "Chagall's Lamp"
Freed from the sorrows I lament - Christine de Pisan "Virelay [Sweet, in whom my joy must be]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
Freed forever from his thrall - Ralph Waldo Emerson "To Rhea"
Once freed to mortal ears - Louise Imogen Guiney "For a Child"
The fount freed at its silver height - Louise Imogen Guiney "Spring"
Freed from every thorn - Felicia Hemans "The Domestic Affections"
Light imperious talk of water freed - Rosalie Dunlap Hickler "January Thaw"
Night from her gloomy dungeon freed - E. Curtiss Hine, U.S.N. "A Vision" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.5, Nov. 1848]
Whose Children Were Freed Without Her - Ashley M. Jones "What It Means To Say Sally Hemings"
Barely freed from the nettles - Pablo Neruda "The Poet" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Freed from the painted dead - Theodore H. Rand "In Autumn's Dreamy Ear"
Freed from the harsh fires of the soul - Lola Ridge "Firehead part VI: The Merchant of Babylon 1: Before Dawn"
Freed the elephant from his curse - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 221: The Poet's Petition and Praise" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
His life from rumors freed - Sir N. Wotton "Character of a Happy Life"
That rhythm freed of rule - Jay Wright "Kumu"
Too freely through the fields of air - A.L.O.E. "Blanche"
If the lava flowed freely - J.M. Allen "Eruption"
freely as the stars that follow - Elizabeth Bartlett "challenge"
Golden hours we freely spent - Arthur Colton "Twenty Years Hence"
Within rules freely accepted - Stephen Dunn "Lucky"
That pours freely through my damaged skull - Robert Frazier "A Rebel's Pale Eyes ..."
Freely pass the kindly joke - Leslie Pickney Hill "Christmas at Melrose"
Water of light poured freely - Naomi Shihab Nye "Peace"
That the night walks freely - Cynthia Dewi Oka "Redacted from a Know-Your-Rights Training Agenda"
Led us freely into the moonlight - Ruben Quesada "XI"
Giving too freely of the fountaining sap - Arthur Stringer "Before Renewal"
Freely concede the game - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 6: Krishna Growing Up" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
And water running freely past the remnants - Keith Taylor "Mapping the River"
A freely flowing scarlet kite - Amy Ludwig VanDerwater "Colorful Actor"
From goblets freely poured - Arthur Weir "L'Ordre de Bon Temps"
Condemned to freely glow - Matthew Zapruder "Canada"
That in dreams I may wander freer - G.G. Foster "Song of Sleep" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]
Freer yet its currents swell - Edmund Clarence Stedman "Summer Rain"
Free-born bird with echo babbling after - Gretta "Lily Leslie" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXV no.3, Sept. 1849]
A broken elevator trying to contain its freefall - Alise Alousi "Skip"
Your free-range genesis - Lynn Powell "Needing the Baroque"
The last freestanding rebellion - Faylita Hicks "The Fantastic Life of My Guardian Angels"
The waves prefer their cold free-will - Lermontof "[One wave upon another leaps]" transl. by John Pollen [probably Mikhail Lermontov]
Guilt, that rent-free tenant - Rasha Abdulhadi "Pocketful of Warding Stones"
Wind-free in meadows - Louis Golding "To A.L.O."
The yoke-freed oxen low - Emma Lazarus "In Exile"
Navigation Links:
Go to F word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.