somethingdarker (
somethingdarker) wrote2011-07-05 04:18 am
Entry tags:
Potential Titles: Shout
Every simple square a shout of joy - Mike Allen "Mondrian's War"
A shout cried by a thousand sentinels - Charles Baudelaire "The Beacons" transl. not credited
Answered by a thousand shouts - Henry Kirby Benner "Ballads of the Campaign in Mexico no.III: Monterey"
The shout of triumph echo - Roger Casement "The Triumph of Hugh O'Neill"
The cuckoo's simple shout - Arthur Hugh Clough "An Evening Walk in Spring"
Who shouts like a storm - Hilda Conkling "Little Papoose"
Battle's loud-lunged shout - James H. Cousins "Legend of the Blemished King"
The jostling and shouting of merry flowers - E. E. Cummings "Amores (I)"
Shout and whistle in the street - John Davidson "Thirty Bob a Week"
And shouts for joy to nobody - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature VIII: The Bluebird"
And hears the cuckoo shout - Edward Dowden "Song and Silence"
Of victory shouting to the sun - Helen Parry Eden "The Ascent"
Their shouts weigh on wasteland and meadow - Enheduana "The Hymn to Inana" transl. by Sophus Helle
The poet's shout to fate - Arthur Davison Ficke "Ten Grotesques: VII. In a Bar Room"
A shout at hope - Tess Gallagher "Souvenir"
In sign of coming give a shout - Humphrey Gifford "For Soldiers"
Where the gulls shout out their hymns - Dana Gioia "Cold San Francisco"
Shouting for King October's outing - Louise Imogen Guiney "Knights of Weather"
Shouting and screaming in tongues - Darrel Alejandro Holnes "Black Parade"
While voices of millions are shouting aloud - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
The south wind shouts to the rivers - Robinson Jeffers "Salmon-Fishing"
Demanding every shout - Allison Joseph "Untethered"
Her shout a hole torn in the sky - Ilya Kaminsky "As Soldiers March, Alfonso Covers the Boy's Face with a Newspaper"
Shouted in our ears for free - Stuart Kestenbaum "Prayer in the Strip Mall, Bangor, Maine"
Shouting forth flame - D.H. Lawrence "Hibiscus and Salvia Flowers"
Shouts of acclaim from the multitude came - Henry S. Leigh "Chivalry for the Cradle No. 2--A Legend of Banbury-Cross"
Shouts of acclaim from the multitude - Henry S. Leigh "Chivalry for the Cradle No. 2.--A Legend of Banbury-Cross"
Shout into the ridges of the wind - Amy Lowell "The Taxi"
While the cuckoos in the fields did shout - Rose Macaulay "Trinity Sunday"
Putting a tune to the shout - John Masefield "A Consecration"
Where the wild old Atlantic is shouting - John Masefield "A Wanderer's Song"
Shout defiant to the whirlwinds - Theodore Maynard "The Boaster"
Shout beneath exultant skies - Theodore Maynard "Vocation"
A hundred shouting signs - Claude McKay "On Broadway"
The shouts of the wind in the shadow - Pablo Neruda "Epithalamium" transl. by Donald D. Walsh
With a shout of birds in the rain - Pablo Neruda "Ode with a Lament" translated by Donald D. Walsh
The shout facing the sea - Pablo Neruda "Twenty Love Poems XVII" translated by W.S. Merwin
The rebels that shout in your blood - E. Nesbit "The Will to Live"
Beauty can both shout and whisper - Mary Oliver "Leaves and Blossoms Along the Way"
And distance mocks your shout - Gregory Orr "River Inside the River"
Rebounds to shouts of liberty untamed - John Rollin Ridge aka Yellow Bird "An Indian's Grave"
With shouting and singing both - Alberto Ríos "Christmas on the Border, 1929"
A shout that would later become a song - Alberto Ríos "To Mars from Arizona"
The shout of those trumpets - Charles G.D. Roberts "The Summons"
become a mob in neon shouting - C.T. Salazar "River"
All David might shout to his harp - George Santayana "Fair Harvard"
And their jubilee-shout shall be softened - Sir Walter Scott "Song"
Keep up the shout of freedom - Wanda Short "On Straight to Freedom"
Shout to flush the brooding crows - Joyce Sidman "Heartless"
Whilst shouts of Huntsmen rend the Sky - "Stag Hunt" [W. Belch's British Sports, for the Amusement of Children]
Shouts to the hovering eagle - Alfred B. Street "Buttermilk Falls: Racket River"
The bold shout of the torrent - Alfred B. Street "Buttermilk Falls: Racket River"
Dew-drunken daffodils shouting the dawn - Muriel Stuart "The New Aspasia"
Crows shout down from the canopy - Alison Swan "The Old Days"
Lir's vast host of shouting water - "Tempest on the Sea" transl. by Robin Flower
Drowned in multitudinous shouts of rain - W.J. Turner "Death"
Which shouts its tomb-like silence - G.E. Woods "How to Skin Your Wolf"
I am shouted proof - Elinor Wylie "Sunset on the Spire"
A battle-shout from Marathon - Ione "Lay" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]
Give shout-outs in code - francine j. harris "would like to first thank god"
Navigation Links:
Go to S word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.
A shout cried by a thousand sentinels - Charles Baudelaire "The Beacons" transl. not credited
Answered by a thousand shouts - Henry Kirby Benner "Ballads of the Campaign in Mexico no.III: Monterey"
The shout of triumph echo - Roger Casement "The Triumph of Hugh O'Neill"
The cuckoo's simple shout - Arthur Hugh Clough "An Evening Walk in Spring"
Who shouts like a storm - Hilda Conkling "Little Papoose"
Battle's loud-lunged shout - James H. Cousins "Legend of the Blemished King"
The jostling and shouting of merry flowers - E. E. Cummings "Amores (I)"
Shout and whistle in the street - John Davidson "Thirty Bob a Week"
And shouts for joy to nobody - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature VIII: The Bluebird"
And hears the cuckoo shout - Edward Dowden "Song and Silence"
Of victory shouting to the sun - Helen Parry Eden "The Ascent"
Their shouts weigh on wasteland and meadow - Enheduana "The Hymn to Inana" transl. by Sophus Helle
The poet's shout to fate - Arthur Davison Ficke "Ten Grotesques: VII. In a Bar Room"
A shout at hope - Tess Gallagher "Souvenir"
In sign of coming give a shout - Humphrey Gifford "For Soldiers"
Where the gulls shout out their hymns - Dana Gioia "Cold San Francisco"
Shouting for King October's outing - Louise Imogen Guiney "Knights of Weather"
Shouting and screaming in tongues - Darrel Alejandro Holnes "Black Parade"
While voices of millions are shouting aloud - William H.C. Hosmer "Erin Waking" [Graham's Magazine v.XXII no.12, Dec. 1848]
The south wind shouts to the rivers - Robinson Jeffers "Salmon-Fishing"
Demanding every shout - Allison Joseph "Untethered"
Her shout a hole torn in the sky - Ilya Kaminsky "As Soldiers March, Alfonso Covers the Boy's Face with a Newspaper"
Shouted in our ears for free - Stuart Kestenbaum "Prayer in the Strip Mall, Bangor, Maine"
Shouting forth flame - D.H. Lawrence "Hibiscus and Salvia Flowers"
Shouts of acclaim from the multitude came - Henry S. Leigh "Chivalry for the Cradle No. 2--A Legend of Banbury-Cross"
Shouts of acclaim from the multitude - Henry S. Leigh "Chivalry for the Cradle No. 2.--A Legend of Banbury-Cross"
Shout into the ridges of the wind - Amy Lowell "The Taxi"
While the cuckoos in the fields did shout - Rose Macaulay "Trinity Sunday"
Putting a tune to the shout - John Masefield "A Consecration"
Where the wild old Atlantic is shouting - John Masefield "A Wanderer's Song"
Shout defiant to the whirlwinds - Theodore Maynard "The Boaster"
Shout beneath exultant skies - Theodore Maynard "Vocation"
A hundred shouting signs - Claude McKay "On Broadway"
The shouts of the wind in the shadow - Pablo Neruda "Epithalamium" transl. by Donald D. Walsh
With a shout of birds in the rain - Pablo Neruda "Ode with a Lament" translated by Donald D. Walsh
The shout facing the sea - Pablo Neruda "Twenty Love Poems XVII" translated by W.S. Merwin
The rebels that shout in your blood - E. Nesbit "The Will to Live"
Beauty can both shout and whisper - Mary Oliver "Leaves and Blossoms Along the Way"
And distance mocks your shout - Gregory Orr "River Inside the River"
Rebounds to shouts of liberty untamed - John Rollin Ridge aka Yellow Bird "An Indian's Grave"
With shouting and singing both - Alberto Ríos "Christmas on the Border, 1929"
A shout that would later become a song - Alberto Ríos "To Mars from Arizona"
The shout of those trumpets - Charles G.D. Roberts "The Summons"
become a mob in neon shouting - C.T. Salazar "River"
All David might shout to his harp - George Santayana "Fair Harvard"
And their jubilee-shout shall be softened - Sir Walter Scott "Song"
Keep up the shout of freedom - Wanda Short "On Straight to Freedom"
Shout to flush the brooding crows - Joyce Sidman "Heartless"
Whilst shouts of Huntsmen rend the Sky - "Stag Hunt" [W. Belch's British Sports, for the Amusement of Children]
Shouts to the hovering eagle - Alfred B. Street "Buttermilk Falls: Racket River"
The bold shout of the torrent - Alfred B. Street "Buttermilk Falls: Racket River"
Dew-drunken daffodils shouting the dawn - Muriel Stuart "The New Aspasia"
Crows shout down from the canopy - Alison Swan "The Old Days"
Lir's vast host of shouting water - "Tempest on the Sea" transl. by Robin Flower
Drowned in multitudinous shouts of rain - W.J. Turner "Death"
Which shouts its tomb-like silence - G.E. Woods "How to Skin Your Wolf"
I am shouted proof - Elinor Wylie "Sunset on the Spire"
A battle-shout from Marathon - Ione "Lay" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]
Give shout-outs in code - francine j. harris "would like to first thank god"
Navigation Links:
Go to S word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.