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The strange tales of Ocean it tries to confess - "Asleep" [The Continental Monthly v.6 no.3, Sept. 1864]

The pale-faced marble tells the softened tale - Astley H. Baldwin "The Well-Known Spot" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.733, 12 Jan. 1878]

Whispers the tale of waning years - Margaret Fairless Barber "All Souls' Day in a German Town"

Tried tales and trusted sorceries - Clive Bell "The Last Infirmity"

Their tales dulled by moonless night - Leah Bobet "Full Fathom Five"

A tale of broken hearts to vary that of slaughter - Robert Chambers "To Scotland" [Spirit of Chambers' Journal, 1834, Project Gutenberg]

The truth of this tale to endorse - Crosscut, 16th Battalion, AIF "How I Won the V.C." [The Anzac Book: Written and Illustrated in Gallipoli by the Men of Anzac, 1916]

Tales told in dim Eden - Walter de la Mare "All That's Past"

That heard the tale of dews - Emily Dickinson "Book 1: Nature XII: Psalm of the Day"

With an overflowing hoard of the tales of fairy times - "Fairy's Album: I. This is Fairy's Album"

And this is the end of a tale that is true - "Fairy's Album: II. The Old Woman Who Lived in a Shoe"

The falsest of fair tales - James Elroy Flecker "Brumana"

Tell me no tale how Romans built - James Elroy Flecker "Hyali"

Who see so little they tell no tales - Robert Frost "Pan with Us"

Tell a tale of changeless sorrow - Linda Gardiner "Long Ago" [Chamber's Journal of Popular Literature, Science and Art, 5th series, no.52--v.I, 27 Dec. 1884]

And weave a tale of mystery to the last - Julia Goddard "The Deserted Garden" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.718, 29 Sept. 1877]

Let the whiskey tell the tale - Rigoberto Gonzalez "Mortui Vivos Docent"

A tale of severed ties to break the bleeding heart - Eliza Paul Gurney "Heaven and Earth"

A harrowing tale of dear departed hours - Eliza Paul Gurney "[Hush, hush! my thoughts are resting]"

Fragrance of a thousand tales - Ivor Gurney "Passionate Earth"

A matrix of tales that are one - Marilyn Hacker "Ghazal (Ya Lateef!)"

Same old Hard Luck tales to tell - Oliver Herford "The Smoker's Year Book: November"

The sumless tale of sorrow is all unrolled in vain - A.E. Housman "Last Poems XXXIV"

Who a mad tale bequeaths to us - James Joyce "Chamber Music: XXVI"

The tale of all my blissful hours - Joyce Kilmer "Tribute"

The rigorous tale of coin for coin and box for bale - Sidney Lanier "The Symphony" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, June 1875, v.XV]

Tremulous with pathos of a half-told tale - Lucy Larcom "The City Lights"

November breathes no flattering tales - Lucy Larcom "November"

Tales of the waste and the wild - Emily Lawless "From the Burren VI: Is It Love? Is It Hate?"

A tale of Prester John - Vachel Lindsay "The Golden Whales of California"

The fragments of a floating tale - George MacDonald "Within and Without"

Tell your golden tale - Jeannette Marks "Ravello"

The crossroad asks what I bring to the tale - Lo Kwa Mei-en "Pinocchia, you must not stop for a friend"

Used to cast old tales and illusions - W.S. Merwin "The Chinese Mountain Fox"

A tale of wounded bones - Pablo Neruda "Disaction" translated by Donald D. Walsh

A thousand tales of near escapes - Stephen Phillips "Orestes"

A river of tales fenced in by the dead's texts - Yousif M. Qasmiyeh "Is it distance or is it a far god?"

Golden tales of endless treasure - Francis Quarles "The World's Fallacies"

A tale of sin, of suffering, and sorrow - Rebecca "The Heiress" (The Knickerbocker v.10:1, July 1837)

Still our pulses kept the tale - Ernest Rhys "The Night Ride"

Venturing together on a tale of love - Samuel Rogers "Ginevra"

Tell our tales of plasma waves - Ann K. Schwader "Void Music"

Tell the tale of tears - Clinton Scollard "The Little Creek Coonana"

Deaf to the tale of our victories won - Sir Walter Scott "Song"

The curiosity of ghosts relating boneyard tales - Tobias Seamon "Near Life Experience"

With tales of spears and distant victories - Tobias Seamon "We Asked"

Pour forth as bitter-keen a tale - B. Simmonds "The Life of the Sea" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCII, v.LXV, Apr. 1849]

The fruit we early won from tales - B. Simmons "Philhellenic Drinking-Song" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXXXIII, v.LIV, July 1843]

The tale of Yesterday retold - John B. Tabb "Dawn" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.26, Nov. 1889]

Keep the tales of what we cannot forget - Lehua M. Taitano "Imaginary Photo Album or, When We Die, Our Polaroids Speak to Our Living Descendants"

Free to invent whatever tales you need - Keith Taylor "All the Time You Want"

And its hate be the tale of time long sped - "Ten to One on It" [The Continental Monthly v.I - April, 1862 - no.IV]

Tales of glory and decay - Wang Seng-Ta "To Match the Prince of Lang-yeh's Poem in the Old Style" transl. by Burton Watson

Tales that haunt the Brocken and whisper down the Rhine - John Greenleaf Whittier (uncredited) "Cobbler Keezar's Vision" [The Atlantic Monthly v.07 no.40, Feb. 1861]

The tales the sparrows told - John Greenleaf Whittier "Snow-Bound"

A tale of visionary hours - William Wordsworth "To the Cuckoo"


Fairy Tale.


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