somethingdarker: (Default)
[personal profile] somethingdarker
The blue cat of night glides in the grass - Daisy Aldan "Under the Marble Arches"

Where gentle minnows glide - William Anderson "Landscape Lyrics No.II--Morning Further Advanced"

And gentlest ray of stars glide down - Rev. Rufus Henry Bacon "Woman's Heart:--A Sonnet. For Julia" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXV no.3, Sept. 1849]

Glides the shadow round the dial - Benjamin West Ball "Disenchantment"

Glide down vertical waves of light - Elizabeth Bartlett "The Sleepwalkers"

Cold gliding in the thorny brake - Charles Baudelaire "The Ghost" transl. not credited

And terrors glide between - Charles Baudelaire "Sunset" transl. not credited

Gliding remote on the verge of the sky - James Beattie "The Hermit"

Lulled by the lapse of gliding floods - Sir William Blackstone "The Lawyer's Farewell to His Muse"

The long train of ages glide away - William Cullen Bryant "Thanatopsis"

Gliding over sheets of light-glazed silver - Cyrus Cassells & Brian Turner "Corsair"

Gliding among themselves oblivious to strife - Nicholas Christopher "Lake Como"

Let grace in each gliding thread be hid - Barry Cornwall "The Weaver's Song" [Penny Magazine of the Society for the Diffusion of Useful Knowledge, issue 17, July 7, 1832]

The hours of the sun swift glide - Walter Crane "A Floral Fantasy in an Old English Garden"

Gliding on the hissing bloodstained waters - Armen Davoudian "The Yellow Swan"

The last taxi cab on earth glides past - Michael Dickman "Broadway"

The easy glide of our past tense - Matt Donovan "Green Means Literally a Thousand Things or More"

Dreams glide by on noiseless plumes - Edward Dowden "La Revelation par le Desert"

While gliding Spectres scream'd - "An Elegy Written Among the Ruins of an Abbey"

To its covert glides the silent bird - José María Heredia "The Hurricane" transl. by William Cullen Bryant

Till even Sorry gently glide away - Kate Hillard "Love's Sepulchre" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.17, no.99, Mar. 1876]

And gliding rebuffed the big wind - Gerard Manley Hopkins "The Windhover"

One dread leaf glides back & forth - David Hornibrook "Insomnia"

Where Lethe glides against the sand - Lionel Johnson "A Cornish Night"
 
Gentle flames will glide - Ebenezer Jones "When the World is Burning"

Glided across a black and apathetic river - Donald Justice "The Artist Orpheus"

The unwelcome shark gliding beneath our lee - A.A. Macnichol "The Sea-Rover" [The Knickerbocker v.10 no.3 Sept. 1837]

Makes golden moments swiftly glide - Arthur Macy "At Marliave's"

Beside us glides the charnel shark - Don Marquis "With the Submarines"

A fall opening to swoop and glide - Anne Haven McDonnell "Owl"

Faint smoke that glides from candles lighting death - Kostes Palamas "The Dead" transl. by Aristides E. Phoutrides

Which gliding time is apt to introduce - Philo "The Tribute"

Glides down my drowsy indolence - T. Buchanan Read "Drifting"

Glide athwart the sunshine and the shade - Thomas Buchanan Read "The Light of Our Home" [Graham's Magazine v.XXXIII no.3, Sept. 1848]

The gliding silence of the vulture - Lola Ridge "Firehead part VIII: The Bondman 1: Mid-Afternoon"

In the dim phantom boat that glided past - Rainer Maria Rilke "Lament" transl. by Jessie Lemont

Glide next to a forgotten caboose - Joseph Rios "For Henry's Bar"

Glide down the music's swell - Rennell Rodd "In Chartres Cathedral"

And subtle serpents gliding in her hair - Christina Rossetti "The World"

We who glide along the surface - Joyce Sidman "Starting Now"

Glided over the salt-stained water - Wallace Stevens "Prologues to What Is Possible"

Letting life's twilight sands glide thro' the glass - Arthur Stringer "Sappho in Leucadia"

Cranes glide in to mist-silvered shallows - Tu Fu "Facing Night" transl. by David Hinton

Wind and waver, glide and glance - Emile Verhaeren "The Sunlit Hours XIV" transl. by Charles Royier Murphy

As they glide off up to Lethe - Jo Walton "Hades and Persephone"

The stream of life glides on to that Eternal Sea - Charles Wilton "The Voice of Nature" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXXIII, Jan. 1851, v.LXIX]

Some stray fairy glide and pose upon a London stage - Theodore Wratislaw "To Salomé at St. James's" [The Yellow Book v.III, Oct. 1894]


Navigation Links:
Go to G word index.
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.
(will be screened)
(will be screened)
(will be screened)
If you don't have an account you can create one now.
HTML doesn't work in the subject.
More info about formatting

Profile

somethingdarker: (Default)
somethingdarker

March 2026

S M T W T F S
12345 67
891011121314
15161718192021
22232425262728
29 30 31    

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated May. 5th, 2026 09:30 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios