Potential Titles: Heed
Aug. 3rd, 2010 04:33 amWhere seasonless imagination heeds no commands - Lou Barrett "Kore"
Aware there is winter to heed - Gwendolyn Brooks "A Sunset of the City"
Heeding each momentary beacon - Chris Dombrowski "Direction"
Heed the wail from the silence - George Blackstone Field "My Sentinels"
No heed takes of the dial's stealth - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat X"
As a Stone Cat should heed a Pebble cast - Oliver Herford "The Rubáiyát of a Persian Kitten"
Does not heed the angry lightning's wound - Joyce Kilmer "Mount Houvenkopf"
Never heeds the violets or lilies - Joyce Kilmer "Said the Rose"
Though others heed not my sigh - Alastair MacDonald "On a Pet Dove Killed by a Dog" transl. by Alexander Stewart [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.706, 7 July 1877]
And laughs that they heeded his will - E.G. Mallery "The Invitation"
Heed not what the owls may say - George Martin "The Hawk and the Sparrow"
Must never heed the fascinating note - Claude McKay "The Barrier"
Who heeds their warning voice - H.P. McKnight "Dreams"
A lesson worth the heed of all - Susan Pinkerton "Autumn Leaves" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, no.306, 10 Nov. 1849]
Heed not bitter sobs or silent weeping - G.S. "Butterflies" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, 30 March 1878]
Heed approaching winter's want - Mrs. L.H. Sigourney "Butterfly in a School Room"
Does not heed our ecstacies - Genevieve Taggard "With Child"
For what can neither ask nor heed - Edward Thomas "There Was a Time"
And the storm has not heeded - Jones Very "The Winter Bird"
Homely sympathy that heeds the common life - William Wordsworth "To a Daisy"
Refusing the heed of a metronome - Jenny Xie "Distance Sickness"
Heedless.
Unheeded/Unheeding.
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Aware there is winter to heed - Gwendolyn Brooks "A Sunset of the City"
Heeding each momentary beacon - Chris Dombrowski "Direction"
Heed the wail from the silence - George Blackstone Field "My Sentinels"
No heed takes of the dial's stealth - Sadakichi Hartmann "My Rubaiyat X"
As a Stone Cat should heed a Pebble cast - Oliver Herford "The Rubáiyát of a Persian Kitten"
Does not heed the angry lightning's wound - Joyce Kilmer "Mount Houvenkopf"
Never heeds the violets or lilies - Joyce Kilmer "Said the Rose"
Though others heed not my sigh - Alastair MacDonald "On a Pet Dove Killed by a Dog" transl. by Alexander Stewart [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.706, 7 July 1877]
And laughs that they heeded his will - E.G. Mallery "The Invitation"
Heed not what the owls may say - George Martin "The Hawk and the Sparrow"
Must never heed the fascinating note - Claude McKay "The Barrier"
Who heeds their warning voice - H.P. McKnight "Dreams"
A lesson worth the heed of all - Susan Pinkerton "Autumn Leaves" [Chambers' Edinburgh Journal, no.306, 10 Nov. 1849]
Heed not bitter sobs or silent weeping - G.S. "Butterflies" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, 30 March 1878]
Heed approaching winter's want - Mrs. L.H. Sigourney "Butterfly in a School Room"
Does not heed our ecstacies - Genevieve Taggard "With Child"
For what can neither ask nor heed - Edward Thomas "There Was a Time"
And the storm has not heeded - Jones Very "The Winter Bird"
Homely sympathy that heeds the common life - William Wordsworth "To a Daisy"
Refusing the heed of a metronome - Jenny Xie "Distance Sickness"
Heedless.
Unheeded/Unheeding.
Navigation Links:
Go to H word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.