Potential Titles: Far
Jun. 2nd, 2010 02:50 amAfar.
Far other wishes warm my heart - Hatim al-Tai "On Avarice" transl. by Joseph Dacre Carlyle
The far ecstasy of burning noons - Richard Aldington "To a Greek Marble"
And into golden aeons far away - Mary Aldis and Arthur Davison Ficke "Chloroform"
Her Cerberus grew far more heads than most - Mike Allen "Carrington's Ferry"
The farness you nurtured like a seed - Ahmad Almallah "Some Verse for the Depressed Rebel"
Planted far from their original orchards - Iman Alzaghari "We Inherited Trees | ورثنا أشجا"
A honey moonlight hovered far above - Mouna Ammar "In a Moroccan Riad"
The falcon soars both far and high - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry XVI: The Falcon" transl. by Sir John Bowring
Attain those far celestial citadels - Benjamin West Ball "Monody of the Countess of Nettlestede"
A far better way of gaining possession of a new reality - Mary Jo Bang "Madonna Overview"
Romance only takes us so far - Mary Jo Bang "The Novel in Three Chapters"
Far away the solemn belfries toll - Maurice Baring "Beethoven"
The first far bells commence - Djuna Barnes "Pastoral"
In waves of light upon the far, dim shades of night - J.R. Barrick "To Miss Light Underwood" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
Reap the far star-gold - Charles Baudelaire "The Venal Muse" transl. not credited
The sadness and sweetness of far evening bells - William Rose Benet "Lights Through the Mist"
Far from the sun's fierce rays - C. E. de la Poer Beresford "The Fisherman's Dream"
Far, far beyond what I can ever pay - Robert Blair "The Grave"
Narrowed the span between the near and the far - Nelson S. Bond "The Ballad of Venus Nell" [Planet Stories summer 1941 issue]
Far above the antics of such childlike games - Bruce Boston "Marble People"
The astronomer on the far side of the moon - Bruce Boston "Surreal Fortune"
Longer far has my heart to go - William Stanley Braithwaite "It's a Long Way"
That far terrain between Promise and Apology - Jericho Brown "Ganymede"
Spread ourselves thin and far - Molly McCully Brown and Susannah Nevison "Pre-Op Holding Room"
Far in the fierce sunshine - William Cullen Bryant "Summer Wind"
Given our so far narrow history - Scott Cairns "Adventures in New Testament Greek: Nous"
Meet what you have wandered far to find - Scott Cairns "Draw Near"
One far kind glance - Jeremiah John Callanan "The Outlaw of Loch Lene"
A world far remote from our daylight - Giosue Carducci "Snowed Under" transl. by Frank Sewall
Truth is far more deadly than our sword - Ralph Chaplin "The Vision Maker: To Eugene Victor Debs"
One far fierce hour and sweet - G.K. Chesterton "The Donkey"
Far less shall a friend be convicted unheard - "Christmas Carol, 1845" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCLXIII, v.LIX, Jan. 1846]
From one far unforgotten year - Arthur Hugh Clough "The Silver Wedding"
I came so far for beauty - Leonard Cohen "Came so Far for Beauty"
Far better than honor or gold - Jamie Harris Coleman "Dove of Peace"
Far in the golden West - Jamie Harris Coleman "A Thought of Nature"
As far as a satellite's eye could see - S. R. Compton "On the K-T Boundary"
With the far stars pale above them - Henry Rutgers Conger "The Purple Hills"
Thinking you lean too far - Hilda Conkling "Snow-Capped Mountain"
Stretching the world far beyond its modest capacity - Chibueze Crouch-Anyarogbu "host"
If they have gone too far to recall their stolen lives - Jennifer Crow "Mathematics"
Stranded far from their ships - Jim Daniels "Elegy for the Nasty Neighbor"
That has a ten-mile voice and shines as far - W.H. Davies "The White Cascade"
Who far at distance on the beach should wait - Luís de Camões "The Lusiad; or, The Discovery of India: Book I. Argument" transl. by William Julius Mickle
Take the far stars for fruit - Walter de la Mare "The Disguise"
Nor far nor near is comfort found - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Now in good sooth my joy is vanished clean]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
I'm afraid I won't go far enough - Diana Marie Delgado "And So Many Are Dear"
Far ends of tired days - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Life XLVIII"
How far the morning leaps - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature XLII: Problems"
As far from time as history - Emily Dickinson "Book 3: Time and Eternity XVII: Asleep"
Far over dreamy meadows - Eric Dickinson "The Garden"
Far beyond the limits of pursuit - Chris Dombrowski "Cooking Christmas Dinner with My Son, the Runner"
The lone executive who has wandered this far into summer - Rita Dove "Vacation"
Some far faint-gleaming hour of Hell - Edward Dowden "Eurydice"
Days and nights far out upon the sky's dark sea - Carol Ann Duffy "New Year"
Tends her far course to lands of mystery - Paul Laurence Dunbar "Ere Sleep Comes Down to Soothe the Weary Eyes" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
Phoenicean fabrics far surpass - William Hodgson Ellis "Consider the Lilies of the Field"
Far in the deeps of history - Ralph Waldo Emerson "The World-Soul"
resplendent fire raging far more distant - Logan February "I Woke You with Wagner,"
Beneath whose far projecting shade - Philip Freneau "The Indian Burying Ground"
forward is not so far away - Tarfia Faizullah "Surah"
The wash and whisper of far waters - Eleanor Farjeon "Pan-Worship"
Incredible hopes from far - Arthur Davison Ficke "Poetry"
Wresting us far from the shadow - George Blackstone Field "The Price of the Line"
Gold fish far above the black arches - John Gould Fletcher "Green Symphony"
The wind shall chase me far inland - John Gould Fletcher "Irradiations"
I remember well the far pipes calling - Robin Flower "The Pipes"
That lead to the far confluence of delights - Robin Flower "Say Not that Beauty"
But lifted far above mortality - Robin Flower "Say Not that Beauty"
Backward borne far in a bygone age - E. Fonton "A Vigil with St. Louis" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.1, Jan. 1864]
That last far dawn which is eternity - Maxwell E. Foster "Truth"
Overtaken too far from its nest - Robert Frost "Acceptance"
Too far in his footsteps stray - Robert Frost "A Dream Pang"
Come over the hills and far with me - Robert Frost "A Line-storm Song"
To sanctify what far ends He will - Robert Frost "A Prayer in Spring"
The far slope of an unknown hill - Zona Gale "There Are Within Us Lives We Never Live"
Singing of unknown shores and far - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Torch"
Forward far as Plato looked - Charlotte Perkins Gilman "Why Not?"
Sweeter far a thousand times - Glasynys "Blodeuwedd and Hywel" transl. by Edmund O. Jones
In the far backward reaches of time - Louise Gluck "Faithful and Virtuous Night"
That can be propelled into my far future - John Grey "The Computer vs. My Personal Evolution"
Far on the verge of the ocean it lay - Gerald Griffin "Hy-Brasail"
Martyrdom in the far Canada of a hospital room - Thom Gunn "Lament"
Slow shadow, sailing far on high - G.H. "The Blue Bird" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)
The desolate heart reverts to those far moments - G.H.H. "Night and Morning" (from The Knickerbocker, v. 23:3, March 1844)
When smiles came oftener far than tears - J.H. "The Churchyard by the Sea" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.8-v.I, 23 Feb. 1884]
A companion I met on the far side of morn - Katherine Hale "A Fabulous Day"
Who mourn downcast in earth's far corners - Judas Hallevy bar Samuel [Judah Halevi] "The Burden of Sion" transl. by Joseph Mainzer and adapted by Delta [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCLXVI, v.LIX, Apr. 1846]
Far into the skies of thought - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat XXVII"
Memories far high reaching as yon palled star - Paul Hamilton Hayne "Pre-Existence"
Far beyond the furthest sky - "Heaven" [The Good Resolution, ed. Daniel P. Kidder, meant for Methodist Episcopal Sunday schools, 1831]
Far in the cedar shade - Felicia Dorothea Hemans "The Graves of a Household"
Too quick and too far West - Faylita Hicks "Self-Care"
Turbulently sweet through far dissolving silences - Charles L. Hildreth "Mithra" [Lippincott's Magazine, Nov. 1885]
I am disappearing so far into the dark - Edward Hirsch "Widening Sky"
A voice kept far from feeling - Jane Hirshfield "Ledger"
Dreaming of a day less dim, dreaming of a time less far - Ralph Hodgson "The Bull"
With spells and ghouls more dread by far - Ralph Hodgson "The Song of Honour"
Those far shores that knew me not - Frank Horne "Letters Found Near a Suicide" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
In those far flung days of abandon - Frank Horne "Letters Found Near a Suicide" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
'Twill take your thoughts and sink them far - A.E. Housman "Last Poems I: The West"
And far with the brave I have ridden - A.E. Housman "Last Poems VI: Lancer"
The ravens feasted far about the open house of war - A.E. Housman "A Shropshire Lad XXVIII"
Far out of the wretched past - William D. Howells "While She Sang"
Choosing far stars to check near objects by - Robinson Jeffers "The Truce and the Peace"
I've come so very far from nothingness - Amanda Jernigan "Years, Months, and Days"
The far horizon's beckoning span - James Weldon Johnson "Fifty Years"
The face of the confession far from home - June Jordan "Problems of Translation: Problems of Language"
The noise of many waters far below - James Joyce "Chamber Music: XXXV"
The far star points of his pinned extremities - Mary Karr "Descending Theology: The Resurrection"
Far round the horizon's crystal air - John Keats "[I stood tip-toe upon a little hill]"
The record sibylline of far events - Helen Keller "The Song of the Stone Wall"
That far land where fall no blights - Fanny Kemble "A Retrospect"
Meet him on the far side of the willow - Mihee Kim "time travel"
Came to us infinitely far - Suji Kwock Kim "Fugue"
A shipwreck far on lonely seas - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
Far from the edge where the sea pours into the stars - Ted Kooser "A Map of the World"
Free and far from majesty - Kyd "Content" [The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.13, no.365, 11 April 1829]
Scattered so far beyond reach - Danusha Lameris "Nothing Wants to Suffer"
Like far turrets in a dream - Archibald Lampman "At the Ferry"
Borne on fairy breezes far - Andrew Lang "Dreams"
How far it carries reflection - Jason Lee "The Wash of Moments"
Far from the deep yearning of gravity wells - Yoon Ha Lee "When Soft the Water Fell"
Far and fast I've rush'd to meet thee - Lermontoff "Gifts of Térek" transl. by T.B. Shaw [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXXXVIII, v.LIV, Dec. 1843]
But far from childhood - Philip Levine "Flowering Midnight"
At the far end of destiny - J. Patrick Lewis "Christopher Columbus"
The fiery roots of forests brave and far - Vachel Lindsay "Alexander Campbell, III: A Rhymed Address to All Renegade Campbellites, Exhorting Them to Return"
Would not look so far - Amy Lowell "Fatigue"
An offering far beyond the wealth of kings - Rev. James Gilborne Lyons "A Welcome Sacrifice" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, no.428, 13 March 1852]
Heirs of all things near and far - George MacDonald "Christmas Day and Every Day"
As you travel far from crag and river - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "heather"
Above the far horizon's hem - Douglas Malloch "When the Geese Come North"
Far from Cinderella's dainty glass slippers - Cynthia Manick "A Taste of Blue"
Who far outran her days - George Martin "Laleet"
On her pinnacle far from hell - Herbert Woodward Martin "An English Street Vendor"
That lies outside and always far beyond - Harry Martinson "Aniara 6" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
All too far for any human mind to understand - Harry Martinson "Aniara 10" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Heard appeals and echoes from far skies - Harry Martinson "Aniara 88" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Far other worlds and other seas - Andrew Marvell "The Garden"
To bridge the farness of your breathing - Wes Matthews "Immortality"
When he's journeyed as far as he will - Annie Willis McCullough "The Journey" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]
Far years in vain I sought - James E. McGirt "Love"
Out in those far obscure hills - D'Arcy McNickle "Old Isidore"
With orbs that are so resolutely far - George Meredith "Meditation Under Stars"
Some far light in the zodiac - W.S. Merwin "The Chinese Mountain Fox"
How far apart the summers were of yore - Alice Meynell "Length of Days: to the Early Dead in Battle"
So far the eyes of eagle could not reach - Adam Mickiewicz "The Ackerman Steppe" transl. by Edna Worthley Underwood
Out as far as the eye can reach - Madeleine Sweeny Miller "Creation Morn"
Watching from the far side of this darkening valley - Wayne Miller "Mind-Body Problem"
In thought-spheres far above us - S. Weir Mitchell "The Marsh" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.20, Aug. 1877]
Far and near silence grows populous - Harriet Monroe "With a Copy of Shelley"
Blent with echoes of far distant caves - George Logan Moore "Love's Watch" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.1-v.I, 5 Jan. 1884]
In a maze of bars invisible I wander far from the feast - William Moore "Dusk Song"
A worshipper of some far world - Robert Morris "The Student's Dream of Fame"
Far from the planet's shivering - Pablo Neruda "The Unburied Woman of Paita" transl. by Maria Jacketti
Far beyond the breakpoint - Caroline Harper New "The Sargassum Fish"
When she has travelled too far for me - Sarah Noble-Ives "The Merchant Ship"
Action on far away roads - Naomi Shihab Nye "Morning Song"
Far into the country of Sorrow - Arthur O'Shaughnessy "The Fountain of Tears"
From the dry bowl of the very far past - Mary Oliver "Mornings at Blackwater"
Shall bless the vineyards far below - Walter S. Percy "Vincit Omnia Jus"
Each far lake's dazzling glass - Fernando Pessoa "Epithalamium"
The panther far back in his woods - Robert Pollok "The African Maid"
Far in the midnight sky - Alexander Posey "My Hermitage"
Far behind the looking glass - Miriam Clark Potter "The Looking Glass"
Even so far from your trajectory - Sina Queyras "Years"
Far floods thy bridal brought - Theodore H. Rand "Annapolis Basin"
Echo far beyond the stars - Herbert Randall "New England"
When sometimes demons far outnumber angels - Muhemmetjan Rashidin "Long Live" transl. by Nicholas Kontovas and edited by Gulnisa Nazarova
Far from the protection of those she has called her own - Adrienne Rich "Yom Kippur 1984"
Till the mountains give back the far sounds - Henry Scott Riddell "The Grecian War Song"
Walked as far as the sky is blue - Jade Riordan "We Others"
As far as the mercy of the deer - Jade Riordan "We Others"
Far now from all the bannered ways - Edwin Arlington Robinson "The Dark Hills"
False and florid and far drawn - Edwin Arlington Robinson "Nimmo"
Beneath far fathom depths of waves - Rennell Rodd "Atalanta"
Far off from the mad world's ways - Rennell Rodd "By the South Sea"
Their brilliant light surpasses far - Joshua Ross "On a Lady's Eyes"
Better by far you should forget and smile - Christina Rossetti "Remember"
An echo of youth from its far sunny shore - I.A.S. "In the Rhine Woods: Cuckoo! Cuckoo!" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.24-v.I, 14 June 1884]
How far his endless love had grown - David St. John "Los Angeles, 1954"
Searches far sometimes into the red dust - Carl Sandburg "The Answer"
From limits far remote - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XLIV"
Thus far the miles are measured - William Shakespeare "Sonnet L"
Builded far from accident - William Shakespeare "Sonnet CXXIV"
Far beyond our North's mad riot - Francis Sherman "A Canadian Calendar: XII. March Wind"
To mimic that far voice - Dora Sigerson "Unknown Ideal"
Back resparkling far Orion's lovely blaze - B. Simmons "The Life of the Sea" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCII, v.LXV, Apr. 1849]
Across time stretching infinitely far - Kaya Skovdatter "What Beautiful Heavens These"
Far from hastening Time - C. Fox Smith "Bullington"
Far beyond our boastful sun - Analicia Sotelo "Eating the Moon in Cotulla, TX"
My day is spent too far toward night - Anne Spencer "Questing" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
A red eye at the telescope's far tapering - A.E. Stallings "Eurydice's Footnote"
The slow, sad murmur of far distant seas - James Stephens "The Shell"
Far below the crimson star - George Sterling "The Rack"
The orange far down in yellow - Wallace Stevens "The Green Plant"
Surpass by far the orbit of autumn lotuses - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 53: The Pangs and Politics of Love" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
Scatter far the darkness, doubts, and fears - G.P.T. "Sonnet [The moon is gliding on her clear blue way]" [The Knickerbocker v.10, no.4, October 1837]
a certain rooftop not far from collapse - Ojo Taiye "Elegiac: Unfinished Draft of Hauwa Liman's Humanitarian Work"
Disappears on the far side of a dying elm - Keith Taylor "Acolytes in the Bird-While"
I limped too close to night and too far - Keith Taylor "Marginalia for a Natural History"
Darken slowly with a far desire - Sara Teasdale "To E"
The skylarks are far behind - Edward Thomas "Good-Night"
Death flickered in an owl's far cry - W.J. Turner "Death"
Far too wild and wise - Louis Untermeyer "Spring on Broadway"
To heave their shadows far and high - Mark Van Doren "Midwife Cat"
Thunder, low and far, remembering nothing - Mark Van Doren "Travelling Storm"
Far away the avalanches wake - Henry van Dyke "Three Alpine Sonnets: 1. The Glacier"
Wander far and falter - Bertrand N. O. Walker "A Desert Memory"
Mind far from the world's dramas - Wang An-Shih "Accord All-Gather Comes Through Snow to Visit" transl. by David Hinton
Far from this loud world of confusion - Wang An-Shih "Off-Hand Poem" transl. by David Hinton
They're far beyond trapping or killing - Wang An-Shih "Spirit creatures" transl. by David Hinton
However far I go, I never leave distances - Wang An-Shih "Who's infusing" transl. by David Hinton
The room, far as fear - Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward "The Room's Width"
Far beyond her dying - Rosanna Warren "Fugue, Harpsichord"
While the roar of the far thunder deepens - "The Watchword" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.2, Feb. 1862]
Stranger far than stars or kings - Carolyn Wells "The Seven Ages of Childhood"
How far along the twisting river - Judy Patterson Wenzel "Canoe"
Dark trees reaching for far stars - Judy Patterson Wenzel "New Found Land"
Emissaries drawn from near and far - Bree Wernicke "A Tour of the Blue Palace"
Some romance from the far world - John Hall Wheelock "A Leave-Taking I"
And watch the far wings fly - Margaret Widdemer "The Factories"
To bless far landscapes anew with leaf and bud - Amos Wilder "Winter Night"
Dug down as far as mind can go - Constance Fenimore Woolson "Commonplace" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.11, no.23, Feb. 1873]
To reset eternity's clock to the far side of midnight - Charles Wright "Little Elegy for an Old Friend"
Far from the rose and the lily - W.B. Yeats "The White Birds"
Reading far past the last paragraph into the back blank page - Dean Young "Colophon"
To start the exodus from far and wide - Harry Martinson "Aniara 63" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Days that pour their splendor far and wide - Louise Chandler Moulton "Across Strange Waters" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.22, Sept. 1878]
Scatters her golden lustre far and wide - Philo "The Tribute"
Faraway.
A far-blown breath of snows - Albion Fellows Bacon "Lost"
A sparkle the far-coming splendour might fling - B. Simmons "To a Caged Skylark, Regent's Circus, Piccadilly" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXCV, v.LXIV, Sept. 1848]
Far-echoed through the galleries of time - J.S.B. "Farewell to the Rhine: Lines Written at Bonn" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXXVII, v.LXXI, Mar. 1852]
The far-famed Hospice crowns the heights - "The Brave Dog of St. Bernard" Chatterbox: Stories of Natural History. 1880]
Far-fetched and dear-bought - Algernon Swinburne "A Singing Lesson"
Far-flown in black occlusion - Clark Ashton Smith "The Hashish-Eater; or, The Apocalypse of Evil"
A breath of far-flung prophecy - Geoffrey Dearmer "Spring in the Trenches"
Resume its far-flung harvests - Alfred Noyes "The Hill-Flowers"
Far-flung islands lost to worldly years - Duane W. Rimel "Dreams of Yith" [Fantasy Fan v.1, no.11, July 1934]
Far-flung blossoms of desire - Emile Verhaeren "The Sunlit Hours XII" transl. by Charles Royier Murphy
Far-off.
Answering to limitless immeasurably far-outlying Hades - Harry Martinson "Aniara 10" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
The javelin of the far-ravening levin - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"
To climb undaunted in far-reaching curves - Geoffrey Dearmer "Gommecourt"
From sun far-set or moon unrisen - Edward Dowden "By the Window"
Call the far-sighted foxes - Karen Volkman "A Light Says Why"
Wardens of the far-sought gold - George Sterling "The Homing of Drake"
At rest or afloat on life's far-sounding river - "The Song of Metrodorus" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCLXI, v.LXXV, March 1854]
Tempests of solar melody, vibrant and far-winged - Herman George Scheffauer "The Masque of the Elements"
Practice losing farther, losing faster - Elizabeth Bishop "One Art"
The emerald hunger stretches farther still - Bruce Boston & Robert Frazier "A Compass for the Mutant Rain Forest"
To the farther hem of sea - Ida Coolbrith "California"
Compass, quadrant and sextant contrive no farther tides - Hart Crane "At Melville's Tomb"
From the land of the farther suns - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"
No farther than my window permits - Zona Gale "Enchantment"
Carry farther in death - Tess Gallagher "Wake"
Has journeyed farther than the swallow - "The Good Goddess of Poverty [A Prose Ballad, translated from the French]" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.3, Sept. 1863]
Myself a ghost from a farther sea - Bret Harte "A Newport Romance"
Each step farther into my own silhouette - Saeed Jones "Last Portrait as Boy"
Farther apart than bird and fish - Lu Yun "For Ku Yen-hsien, a Poem for Him to Give to His Wife" transl. by Burton Watson
Outcasts at the farther end of the sky - Po Chu'i "Song of the Lute" transl. by Burton Watson
Not farther than my thoughts - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XLVII"
While at war in my mind, I went farther - Paul Tran "Eros"
Who daily farther from the east must travel - William Wordsworth "Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood"
In the farthest valley of the eye - James Baldwin "Staggerlee wonders"
Probed to the farthest deeps - James H. Cousins "Legend of the Blemished King"
From farthest dreamland's shores - Delta "The Tombless Man: A Dream" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXLIX, v.LVI, Nov. 1844]
Intend to seek the roadway's farthest end - Mona Gould "Lunch Hour"
To the farthest fringe of pine - Archibald Lampman "Sunset"
Enlarged unto earth's farthest rim - Emma Lazarus "The New Year"
Sapphires blue and wise with farthest twilight - Josephine Preston Peabody "The Feaster"
Standing on the hill-top, he can light the farthest star - Miriam Clark Potter "The Star-Lighter"
Up to the farthest hilltops - Fritz Schnack "Evening Gift" transl. by William Saphier
To the farthest bound off song - J.B. Trend "During Music: Fantasy and Fugue"
This far-spread conflagration of the fields of snow - Amos Wilder "Winter Night"
Far-travelled herald of some distant storm - Henry Kendall "At Her Window"
Further/Furthest.
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Far other wishes warm my heart - Hatim al-Tai "On Avarice" transl. by Joseph Dacre Carlyle
The far ecstasy of burning noons - Richard Aldington "To a Greek Marble"
And into golden aeons far away - Mary Aldis and Arthur Davison Ficke "Chloroform"
Her Cerberus grew far more heads than most - Mike Allen "Carrington's Ferry"
The farness you nurtured like a seed - Ahmad Almallah "Some Verse for the Depressed Rebel"
Planted far from their original orchards - Iman Alzaghari "We Inherited Trees | ورثنا أشجا"
A honey moonlight hovered far above - Mouna Ammar "In a Moroccan Riad"
The falcon soars both far and high - "Anthology of Jugoslav Poetry XVI: The Falcon" transl. by Sir John Bowring
Attain those far celestial citadels - Benjamin West Ball "Monody of the Countess of Nettlestede"
A far better way of gaining possession of a new reality - Mary Jo Bang "Madonna Overview"
Romance only takes us so far - Mary Jo Bang "The Novel in Three Chapters"
Far away the solemn belfries toll - Maurice Baring "Beethoven"
The first far bells commence - Djuna Barnes "Pastoral"
In waves of light upon the far, dim shades of night - J.R. Barrick "To Miss Light Underwood" [Graham's Magazine v.XL no.4, April 1852]
Reap the far star-gold - Charles Baudelaire "The Venal Muse" transl. not credited
The sadness and sweetness of far evening bells - William Rose Benet "Lights Through the Mist"
Far from the sun's fierce rays - C. E. de la Poer Beresford "The Fisherman's Dream"
Far, far beyond what I can ever pay - Robert Blair "The Grave"
Narrowed the span between the near and the far - Nelson S. Bond "The Ballad of Venus Nell" [Planet Stories summer 1941 issue]
Far above the antics of such childlike games - Bruce Boston "Marble People"
The astronomer on the far side of the moon - Bruce Boston "Surreal Fortune"
Longer far has my heart to go - William Stanley Braithwaite "It's a Long Way"
That far terrain between Promise and Apology - Jericho Brown "Ganymede"
Spread ourselves thin and far - Molly McCully Brown and Susannah Nevison "Pre-Op Holding Room"
Far in the fierce sunshine - William Cullen Bryant "Summer Wind"
Given our so far narrow history - Scott Cairns "Adventures in New Testament Greek: Nous"
Meet what you have wandered far to find - Scott Cairns "Draw Near"
One far kind glance - Jeremiah John Callanan "The Outlaw of Loch Lene"
A world far remote from our daylight - Giosue Carducci "Snowed Under" transl. by Frank Sewall
Truth is far more deadly than our sword - Ralph Chaplin "The Vision Maker: To Eugene Victor Debs"
One far fierce hour and sweet - G.K. Chesterton "The Donkey"
Far less shall a friend be convicted unheard - "Christmas Carol, 1845" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCLXIII, v.LIX, Jan. 1846]
From one far unforgotten year - Arthur Hugh Clough "The Silver Wedding"
I came so far for beauty - Leonard Cohen "Came so Far for Beauty"
Far better than honor or gold - Jamie Harris Coleman "Dove of Peace"
Far in the golden West - Jamie Harris Coleman "A Thought of Nature"
As far as a satellite's eye could see - S. R. Compton "On the K-T Boundary"
With the far stars pale above them - Henry Rutgers Conger "The Purple Hills"
Thinking you lean too far - Hilda Conkling "Snow-Capped Mountain"
Stretching the world far beyond its modest capacity - Chibueze Crouch-Anyarogbu "host"
If they have gone too far to recall their stolen lives - Jennifer Crow "Mathematics"
Stranded far from their ships - Jim Daniels "Elegy for the Nasty Neighbor"
That has a ten-mile voice and shines as far - W.H. Davies "The White Cascade"
Who far at distance on the beach should wait - Luís de Camões "The Lusiad; or, The Discovery of India: Book I. Argument" transl. by William Julius Mickle
Take the far stars for fruit - Walter de la Mare "The Disguise"
Nor far nor near is comfort found - Christine de Pisan "Ballad [Now in good sooth my joy is vanished clean]" (transl. by Laurence Binyon and Eric Robert Dalrymple Maclagan)
I'm afraid I won't go far enough - Diana Marie Delgado "And So Many Are Dear"
Far ends of tired days - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Life XLVIII"
How far the morning leaps - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature XLII: Problems"
As far from time as history - Emily Dickinson "Book 3: Time and Eternity XVII: Asleep"
Far over dreamy meadows - Eric Dickinson "The Garden"
Far beyond the limits of pursuit - Chris Dombrowski "Cooking Christmas Dinner with My Son, the Runner"
The lone executive who has wandered this far into summer - Rita Dove "Vacation"
Some far faint-gleaming hour of Hell - Edward Dowden "Eurydice"
Days and nights far out upon the sky's dark sea - Carol Ann Duffy "New Year"
Tends her far course to lands of mystery - Paul Laurence Dunbar "Ere Sleep Comes Down to Soothe the Weary Eyes" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
Phoenicean fabrics far surpass - William Hodgson Ellis "Consider the Lilies of the Field"
Far in the deeps of history - Ralph Waldo Emerson "The World-Soul"
resplendent fire raging far more distant - Logan February "I Woke You with Wagner,"
Beneath whose far projecting shade - Philip Freneau "The Indian Burying Ground"
forward is not so far away - Tarfia Faizullah "Surah"
The wash and whisper of far waters - Eleanor Farjeon "Pan-Worship"
Incredible hopes from far - Arthur Davison Ficke "Poetry"
Wresting us far from the shadow - George Blackstone Field "The Price of the Line"
Gold fish far above the black arches - John Gould Fletcher "Green Symphony"
The wind shall chase me far inland - John Gould Fletcher "Irradiations"
I remember well the far pipes calling - Robin Flower "The Pipes"
That lead to the far confluence of delights - Robin Flower "Say Not that Beauty"
But lifted far above mortality - Robin Flower "Say Not that Beauty"
Backward borne far in a bygone age - E. Fonton "A Vigil with St. Louis" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.1, Jan. 1864]
That last far dawn which is eternity - Maxwell E. Foster "Truth"
Overtaken too far from its nest - Robert Frost "Acceptance"
Too far in his footsteps stray - Robert Frost "A Dream Pang"
Come over the hills and far with me - Robert Frost "A Line-storm Song"
To sanctify what far ends He will - Robert Frost "A Prayer in Spring"
The far slope of an unknown hill - Zona Gale "There Are Within Us Lives We Never Live"
Singing of unknown shores and far - Wilfrid Wilson Gibson "The Torch"
Forward far as Plato looked - Charlotte Perkins Gilman "Why Not?"
Sweeter far a thousand times - Glasynys "Blodeuwedd and Hywel" transl. by Edmund O. Jones
In the far backward reaches of time - Louise Gluck "Faithful and Virtuous Night"
That can be propelled into my far future - John Grey "The Computer vs. My Personal Evolution"
Far on the verge of the ocean it lay - Gerald Griffin "Hy-Brasail"
Martyrdom in the far Canada of a hospital room - Thom Gunn "Lament"
Slow shadow, sailing far on high - G.H. "The Blue Bird" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)
The desolate heart reverts to those far moments - G.H.H. "Night and Morning" (from The Knickerbocker, v. 23:3, March 1844)
When smiles came oftener far than tears - J.H. "The Churchyard by the Sea" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.8-v.I, 23 Feb. 1884]
A companion I met on the far side of morn - Katherine Hale "A Fabulous Day"
Who mourn downcast in earth's far corners - Judas Hallevy bar Samuel [Judah Halevi] "The Burden of Sion" transl. by Joseph Mainzer and adapted by Delta [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCLXVI, v.LIX, Apr. 1846]
Far into the skies of thought - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat XXVII"
Memories far high reaching as yon palled star - Paul Hamilton Hayne "Pre-Existence"
Far beyond the furthest sky - "Heaven" [The Good Resolution, ed. Daniel P. Kidder, meant for Methodist Episcopal Sunday schools, 1831]
Far in the cedar shade - Felicia Dorothea Hemans "The Graves of a Household"
Too quick and too far West - Faylita Hicks "Self-Care"
Turbulently sweet through far dissolving silences - Charles L. Hildreth "Mithra" [Lippincott's Magazine, Nov. 1885]
I am disappearing so far into the dark - Edward Hirsch "Widening Sky"
A voice kept far from feeling - Jane Hirshfield "Ledger"
Dreaming of a day less dim, dreaming of a time less far - Ralph Hodgson "The Bull"
With spells and ghouls more dread by far - Ralph Hodgson "The Song of Honour"
Those far shores that knew me not - Frank Horne "Letters Found Near a Suicide" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
In those far flung days of abandon - Frank Horne "Letters Found Near a Suicide" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
'Twill take your thoughts and sink them far - A.E. Housman "Last Poems I: The West"
And far with the brave I have ridden - A.E. Housman "Last Poems VI: Lancer"
The ravens feasted far about the open house of war - A.E. Housman "A Shropshire Lad XXVIII"
Far out of the wretched past - William D. Howells "While She Sang"
Choosing far stars to check near objects by - Robinson Jeffers "The Truce and the Peace"
I've come so very far from nothingness - Amanda Jernigan "Years, Months, and Days"
The far horizon's beckoning span - James Weldon Johnson "Fifty Years"
The face of the confession far from home - June Jordan "Problems of Translation: Problems of Language"
The noise of many waters far below - James Joyce "Chamber Music: XXXV"
The far star points of his pinned extremities - Mary Karr "Descending Theology: The Resurrection"
Far round the horizon's crystal air - John Keats "[I stood tip-toe upon a little hill]"
The record sibylline of far events - Helen Keller "The Song of the Stone Wall"
That far land where fall no blights - Fanny Kemble "A Retrospect"
Meet him on the far side of the willow - Mihee Kim "time travel"
Came to us infinitely far - Suji Kwock Kim "Fugue"
A shipwreck far on lonely seas - C.H.B. Kitchin "Opening Scene from 'Amphitryon'"
Far from the edge where the sea pours into the stars - Ted Kooser "A Map of the World"
Free and far from majesty - Kyd "Content" [The Mirror of Literature, Amusement, and Instruction v.13, no.365, 11 April 1829]
Scattered so far beyond reach - Danusha Lameris "Nothing Wants to Suffer"
Like far turrets in a dream - Archibald Lampman "At the Ferry"
Borne on fairy breezes far - Andrew Lang "Dreams"
How far it carries reflection - Jason Lee "The Wash of Moments"
Far from the deep yearning of gravity wells - Yoon Ha Lee "When Soft the Water Fell"
Far and fast I've rush'd to meet thee - Lermontoff "Gifts of Térek" transl. by T.B. Shaw [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXXXVIII, v.LIV, Dec. 1843]
But far from childhood - Philip Levine "Flowering Midnight"
At the far end of destiny - J. Patrick Lewis "Christopher Columbus"
The fiery roots of forests brave and far - Vachel Lindsay "Alexander Campbell, III: A Rhymed Address to All Renegade Campbellites, Exhorting Them to Return"
Would not look so far - Amy Lowell "Fatigue"
An offering far beyond the wealth of kings - Rev. James Gilborne Lyons "A Welcome Sacrifice" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, no.428, 13 March 1852]
Heirs of all things near and far - George MacDonald "Christmas Day and Every Day"
As you travel far from crag and river - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "heather"
Above the far horizon's hem - Douglas Malloch "When the Geese Come North"
Far from Cinderella's dainty glass slippers - Cynthia Manick "A Taste of Blue"
Who far outran her days - George Martin "Laleet"
On her pinnacle far from hell - Herbert Woodward Martin "An English Street Vendor"
That lies outside and always far beyond - Harry Martinson "Aniara 6" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
All too far for any human mind to understand - Harry Martinson "Aniara 10" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Heard appeals and echoes from far skies - Harry Martinson "Aniara 88" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Far other worlds and other seas - Andrew Marvell "The Garden"
To bridge the farness of your breathing - Wes Matthews "Immortality"
When he's journeyed as far as he will - Annie Willis McCullough "The Journey" [A Jolly Jingle Book (ed. by Laura Chandler). 1913]
Far years in vain I sought - James E. McGirt "Love"
Out in those far obscure hills - D'Arcy McNickle "Old Isidore"
With orbs that are so resolutely far - George Meredith "Meditation Under Stars"
Some far light in the zodiac - W.S. Merwin "The Chinese Mountain Fox"
How far apart the summers were of yore - Alice Meynell "Length of Days: to the Early Dead in Battle"
So far the eyes of eagle could not reach - Adam Mickiewicz "The Ackerman Steppe" transl. by Edna Worthley Underwood
Out as far as the eye can reach - Madeleine Sweeny Miller "Creation Morn"
Watching from the far side of this darkening valley - Wayne Miller "Mind-Body Problem"
In thought-spheres far above us - S. Weir Mitchell "The Marsh" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.20, Aug. 1877]
Far and near silence grows populous - Harriet Monroe "With a Copy of Shelley"
Blent with echoes of far distant caves - George Logan Moore "Love's Watch" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.1-v.I, 5 Jan. 1884]
In a maze of bars invisible I wander far from the feast - William Moore "Dusk Song"
A worshipper of some far world - Robert Morris "The Student's Dream of Fame"
Far from the planet's shivering - Pablo Neruda "The Unburied Woman of Paita" transl. by Maria Jacketti
Far beyond the breakpoint - Caroline Harper New "The Sargassum Fish"
When she has travelled too far for me - Sarah Noble-Ives "The Merchant Ship"
Action on far away roads - Naomi Shihab Nye "Morning Song"
Far into the country of Sorrow - Arthur O'Shaughnessy "The Fountain of Tears"
From the dry bowl of the very far past - Mary Oliver "Mornings at Blackwater"
Shall bless the vineyards far below - Walter S. Percy "Vincit Omnia Jus"
Each far lake's dazzling glass - Fernando Pessoa "Epithalamium"
The panther far back in his woods - Robert Pollok "The African Maid"
Far in the midnight sky - Alexander Posey "My Hermitage"
Far behind the looking glass - Miriam Clark Potter "The Looking Glass"
Even so far from your trajectory - Sina Queyras "Years"
Far floods thy bridal brought - Theodore H. Rand "Annapolis Basin"
Echo far beyond the stars - Herbert Randall "New England"
When sometimes demons far outnumber angels - Muhemmetjan Rashidin "Long Live" transl. by Nicholas Kontovas and edited by Gulnisa Nazarova
Far from the protection of those she has called her own - Adrienne Rich "Yom Kippur 1984"
Till the mountains give back the far sounds - Henry Scott Riddell "The Grecian War Song"
Walked as far as the sky is blue - Jade Riordan "We Others"
As far as the mercy of the deer - Jade Riordan "We Others"
Far now from all the bannered ways - Edwin Arlington Robinson "The Dark Hills"
False and florid and far drawn - Edwin Arlington Robinson "Nimmo"
Beneath far fathom depths of waves - Rennell Rodd "Atalanta"
Far off from the mad world's ways - Rennell Rodd "By the South Sea"
Their brilliant light surpasses far - Joshua Ross "On a Lady's Eyes"
Better by far you should forget and smile - Christina Rossetti "Remember"
An echo of youth from its far sunny shore - I.A.S. "In the Rhine Woods: Cuckoo! Cuckoo!" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.24-v.I, 14 June 1884]
How far his endless love had grown - David St. John "Los Angeles, 1954"
Searches far sometimes into the red dust - Carl Sandburg "The Answer"
From limits far remote - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XLIV"
Thus far the miles are measured - William Shakespeare "Sonnet L"
Builded far from accident - William Shakespeare "Sonnet CXXIV"
Far beyond our North's mad riot - Francis Sherman "A Canadian Calendar: XII. March Wind"
To mimic that far voice - Dora Sigerson "Unknown Ideal"
Back resparkling far Orion's lovely blaze - B. Simmons "The Life of the Sea" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCII, v.LXV, Apr. 1849]
Across time stretching infinitely far - Kaya Skovdatter "What Beautiful Heavens These"
Far from hastening Time - C. Fox Smith "Bullington"
Far beyond our boastful sun - Analicia Sotelo "Eating the Moon in Cotulla, TX"
My day is spent too far toward night - Anne Spencer "Questing" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]
A red eye at the telescope's far tapering - A.E. Stallings "Eurydice's Footnote"
The slow, sad murmur of far distant seas - James Stephens "The Shell"
Far below the crimson star - George Sterling "The Rack"
The orange far down in yellow - Wallace Stevens "The Green Plant"
Surpass by far the orbit of autumn lotuses - Surdas "Sur's Ocean 53: The Pangs and Politics of Love" transl. by John Stratton Hawley
Scatter far the darkness, doubts, and fears - G.P.T. "Sonnet [The moon is gliding on her clear blue way]" [The Knickerbocker v.10, no.4, October 1837]
a certain rooftop not far from collapse - Ojo Taiye "Elegiac: Unfinished Draft of Hauwa Liman's Humanitarian Work"
Disappears on the far side of a dying elm - Keith Taylor "Acolytes in the Bird-While"
I limped too close to night and too far - Keith Taylor "Marginalia for a Natural History"
Darken slowly with a far desire - Sara Teasdale "To E"
The skylarks are far behind - Edward Thomas "Good-Night"
Death flickered in an owl's far cry - W.J. Turner "Death"
Far too wild and wise - Louis Untermeyer "Spring on Broadway"
To heave their shadows far and high - Mark Van Doren "Midwife Cat"
Thunder, low and far, remembering nothing - Mark Van Doren "Travelling Storm"
Far away the avalanches wake - Henry van Dyke "Three Alpine Sonnets: 1. The Glacier"
Wander far and falter - Bertrand N. O. Walker "A Desert Memory"
Mind far from the world's dramas - Wang An-Shih "Accord All-Gather Comes Through Snow to Visit" transl. by David Hinton
Far from this loud world of confusion - Wang An-Shih "Off-Hand Poem" transl. by David Hinton
They're far beyond trapping or killing - Wang An-Shih "Spirit creatures" transl. by David Hinton
However far I go, I never leave distances - Wang An-Shih "Who's infusing" transl. by David Hinton
The room, far as fear - Elizabeth Stuart Phelps Ward "The Room's Width"
Far beyond her dying - Rosanna Warren "Fugue, Harpsichord"
While the roar of the far thunder deepens - "The Watchword" [The Continental Monthly v.1 no.2, Feb. 1862]
Stranger far than stars or kings - Carolyn Wells "The Seven Ages of Childhood"
How far along the twisting river - Judy Patterson Wenzel "Canoe"
Dark trees reaching for far stars - Judy Patterson Wenzel "New Found Land"
Emissaries drawn from near and far - Bree Wernicke "A Tour of the Blue Palace"
Some romance from the far world - John Hall Wheelock "A Leave-Taking I"
And watch the far wings fly - Margaret Widdemer "The Factories"
To bless far landscapes anew with leaf and bud - Amos Wilder "Winter Night"
Dug down as far as mind can go - Constance Fenimore Woolson "Commonplace" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.11, no.23, Feb. 1873]
To reset eternity's clock to the far side of midnight - Charles Wright "Little Elegy for an Old Friend"
Far from the rose and the lily - W.B. Yeats "The White Birds"
Reading far past the last paragraph into the back blank page - Dean Young "Colophon"
To start the exodus from far and wide - Harry Martinson "Aniara 63" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
Days that pour their splendor far and wide - Louise Chandler Moulton "Across Strange Waters" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.22, Sept. 1878]
Scatters her golden lustre far and wide - Philo "The Tribute"
Faraway.
A far-blown breath of snows - Albion Fellows Bacon "Lost"
A sparkle the far-coming splendour might fling - B. Simmons "To a Caged Skylark, Regent's Circus, Piccadilly" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXCV, v.LXIV, Sept. 1848]
Far-echoed through the galleries of time - J.S.B. "Farewell to the Rhine: Lines Written at Bonn" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXXVII, v.LXXI, Mar. 1852]
The far-famed Hospice crowns the heights - "The Brave Dog of St. Bernard" Chatterbox: Stories of Natural History. 1880]
Far-fetched and dear-bought - Algernon Swinburne "A Singing Lesson"
Far-flown in black occlusion - Clark Ashton Smith "The Hashish-Eater; or, The Apocalypse of Evil"
A breath of far-flung prophecy - Geoffrey Dearmer "Spring in the Trenches"
Resume its far-flung harvests - Alfred Noyes "The Hill-Flowers"
Far-flung islands lost to worldly years - Duane W. Rimel "Dreams of Yith" [Fantasy Fan v.1, no.11, July 1934]
Far-flung blossoms of desire - Emile Verhaeren "The Sunlit Hours XII" transl. by Charles Royier Murphy
Far-off.
Answering to limitless immeasurably far-outlying Hades - Harry Martinson "Aniara 10" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg
The javelin of the far-ravening levin - Francis Brett Young "Thamar (To Thamar Karsavina)"
To climb undaunted in far-reaching curves - Geoffrey Dearmer "Gommecourt"
From sun far-set or moon unrisen - Edward Dowden "By the Window"
Call the far-sighted foxes - Karen Volkman "A Light Says Why"
Wardens of the far-sought gold - George Sterling "The Homing of Drake"
At rest or afloat on life's far-sounding river - "The Song of Metrodorus" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCLXI, v.LXXV, March 1854]
Tempests of solar melody, vibrant and far-winged - Herman George Scheffauer "The Masque of the Elements"
Practice losing farther, losing faster - Elizabeth Bishop "One Art"
The emerald hunger stretches farther still - Bruce Boston & Robert Frazier "A Compass for the Mutant Rain Forest"
To the farther hem of sea - Ida Coolbrith "California"
Compass, quadrant and sextant contrive no farther tides - Hart Crane "At Melville's Tomb"
From the land of the farther suns - Stephen Crane "The Black Riders"
No farther than my window permits - Zona Gale "Enchantment"
Carry farther in death - Tess Gallagher "Wake"
Has journeyed farther than the swallow - "The Good Goddess of Poverty [A Prose Ballad, translated from the French]" [The Continental Monthly v.4 no.3, Sept. 1863]
Myself a ghost from a farther sea - Bret Harte "A Newport Romance"
Each step farther into my own silhouette - Saeed Jones "Last Portrait as Boy"
Farther apart than bird and fish - Lu Yun "For Ku Yen-hsien, a Poem for Him to Give to His Wife" transl. by Burton Watson
Outcasts at the farther end of the sky - Po Chu'i "Song of the Lute" transl. by Burton Watson
Not farther than my thoughts - William Shakespeare "Sonnet XLVII"
While at war in my mind, I went farther - Paul Tran "Eros"
Who daily farther from the east must travel - William Wordsworth "Ode on Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood"
In the farthest valley of the eye - James Baldwin "Staggerlee wonders"
Probed to the farthest deeps - James H. Cousins "Legend of the Blemished King"
From farthest dreamland's shores - Delta "The Tombless Man: A Dream" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXLIX, v.LVI, Nov. 1844]
Intend to seek the roadway's farthest end - Mona Gould "Lunch Hour"
To the farthest fringe of pine - Archibald Lampman "Sunset"
Enlarged unto earth's farthest rim - Emma Lazarus "The New Year"
Sapphires blue and wise with farthest twilight - Josephine Preston Peabody "The Feaster"
Standing on the hill-top, he can light the farthest star - Miriam Clark Potter "The Star-Lighter"
Up to the farthest hilltops - Fritz Schnack "Evening Gift" transl. by William Saphier
To the farthest bound off song - J.B. Trend "During Music: Fantasy and Fugue"
This far-spread conflagration of the fields of snow - Amos Wilder "Winter Night"
Far-travelled herald of some distant storm - Henry Kendall "At Her Window"
Further/Furthest.
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