Potential Titles: Glide
Jul. 6th, 2010 12:23 amThe 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]
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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.