Potential Titles: South
Jul. 11th, 2011 09:48 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
Colour fluid as the South - Harold Acton "Old Woman"
Wandered through the forests of the south - Benjamin West Ball "Elfin Land"
South of hidden deserts - Louise Bogan "A Tale"
Tired winds from the south - Kay Boyle "Monody to the Sound of Zithers"
On the South road of the sea - Arthur Shearly Cripps "Essex"
Exits to the west and south - Adam Ford "A House Is Not a Home!"
The wingless flight of streetlights headed south - Conrad Hilberry "Midnight"
May escape the spell of the South - Langston Hughes "The South"
Like a rose of the south - James Weldon Johnson "Down by the Carib Sea"
South toward no one's harvest - Fred L. Joiner "Sikasso Snow"
A beaker full of the warm South - John Keats "Ode to a Nightingale"
All the blossom-breathing South - Joyce Kilmer "The Sorrows of King Midas"
Wild geese go south again - Liu Ch'e, Emperor Wu of the Han (157-87 B.C.E.) "Song of the Autumn Wind" transl. by Burton Watson
Needle spinning between North and South - Tyler Mills "ectopic"
Bring me a day from the South - Pablo Neruda "I Want to Return to the South (1941)" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Go back south with your umbrella - Pablo Neruda "Ode to Sadness" transl. by Margaret Sayers Peden
The coast of the burning south - Pablo Neruda "Song to the Red Army on its Arrival at the Gates of Prussia" translated by Donald D. Walsh
The cold stone of the South's night - Pablo Neruda "Winter in the South, on Horseback" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Sphinxes asleep in shadow in the South - Amado Nervo "To Leonora" transl. by Alice Stone Blackwell
The whole vocabulary of the South - Wallace Stevens "Prologues to What Is Possible"
Bell and drum on the south river bank - Su Tung-p'o "Following the Rhymes of Chiang Hsi-shu" transl. by Burton Watson
East and south are black with speeding storm - Mark Van Doren "Travelling Storm"
Awake and turn toward the south - "VI: Otro Chalcayotl, Canto de Tetlepan Quetzanitzin | Another Chalco-Song, a Poem of Tetlepan Quetzanitzin" transl. from Nahuatl by Daniel G. Brinton
Crimson poison petal of the South - Helen Hay Whitney "The Ruby"
Alarms of southbound geese blaring - Misha Collins "The Sound and the Ferry"
'neath a tender southern sky - Cora C. Bass "Dead on the Field of Battle"
Dark militia of the southern shore - James Elroy Flecker "Brumana"
The rich evening of a southern heaven - Felicia Hemans "The Abencerrage Canto I"
Where southern vines are dressed - Felicia Dorothea Hemans "The Graves of a Household"
When southern winds bluster - Mu Hua "Rhyme-Prose on the Sea" transl. by Burton Watson
a southern philter with a touch of botulism - upfromsumdirt (Ron Davis) "Abstrack Africana"
Invisible pollen blown on the wild southern gale - Edith Wharton "Nightingales in Provence"
Our myriads swarm in the southlands warm - William Francis Barnard "The Tongues of Toil"
Terror of the southland beech - Pablo Neruda "Chile's Seas" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Southward a rival's stealth - Emily Pauline Johnson "Canada"
Southward fled the arctic bird - Thomas D'Arcy M'Gee "Our Ladye of the Snow"
The last gray feather to southward goes - Lloyd Roberts "At the Year's End"
South Wind.
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Wandered through the forests of the south - Benjamin West Ball "Elfin Land"
South of hidden deserts - Louise Bogan "A Tale"
Tired winds from the south - Kay Boyle "Monody to the Sound of Zithers"
On the South road of the sea - Arthur Shearly Cripps "Essex"
Exits to the west and south - Adam Ford "A House Is Not a Home!"
The wingless flight of streetlights headed south - Conrad Hilberry "Midnight"
May escape the spell of the South - Langston Hughes "The South"
Like a rose of the south - James Weldon Johnson "Down by the Carib Sea"
South toward no one's harvest - Fred L. Joiner "Sikasso Snow"
A beaker full of the warm South - John Keats "Ode to a Nightingale"
All the blossom-breathing South - Joyce Kilmer "The Sorrows of King Midas"
Wild geese go south again - Liu Ch'e, Emperor Wu of the Han (157-87 B.C.E.) "Song of the Autumn Wind" transl. by Burton Watson
Needle spinning between North and South - Tyler Mills "ectopic"
Bring me a day from the South - Pablo Neruda "I Want to Return to the South (1941)" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Go back south with your umbrella - Pablo Neruda "Ode to Sadness" transl. by Margaret Sayers Peden
The coast of the burning south - Pablo Neruda "Song to the Red Army on its Arrival at the Gates of Prussia" translated by Donald D. Walsh
The cold stone of the South's night - Pablo Neruda "Winter in the South, on Horseback" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Sphinxes asleep in shadow in the South - Amado Nervo "To Leonora" transl. by Alice Stone Blackwell
The whole vocabulary of the South - Wallace Stevens "Prologues to What Is Possible"
Bell and drum on the south river bank - Su Tung-p'o "Following the Rhymes of Chiang Hsi-shu" transl. by Burton Watson
East and south are black with speeding storm - Mark Van Doren "Travelling Storm"
Awake and turn toward the south - "VI: Otro Chalcayotl, Canto de Tetlepan Quetzanitzin | Another Chalco-Song, a Poem of Tetlepan Quetzanitzin" transl. from Nahuatl by Daniel G. Brinton
Crimson poison petal of the South - Helen Hay Whitney "The Ruby"
Alarms of southbound geese blaring - Misha Collins "The Sound and the Ferry"
'neath a tender southern sky - Cora C. Bass "Dead on the Field of Battle"
Dark militia of the southern shore - James Elroy Flecker "Brumana"
The rich evening of a southern heaven - Felicia Hemans "The Abencerrage Canto I"
Where southern vines are dressed - Felicia Dorothea Hemans "The Graves of a Household"
When southern winds bluster - Mu Hua "Rhyme-Prose on the Sea" transl. by Burton Watson
a southern philter with a touch of botulism - upfromsumdirt (Ron Davis) "Abstrack Africana"
Invisible pollen blown on the wild southern gale - Edith Wharton "Nightingales in Provence"
Our myriads swarm in the southlands warm - William Francis Barnard "The Tongues of Toil"
Terror of the southland beech - Pablo Neruda "Chile's Seas" transl. by Jack Schmitt
Southward a rival's stealth - Emily Pauline Johnson "Canada"
Southward fled the arctic bird - Thomas D'Arcy M'Gee "Our Ladye of the Snow"
The last gray feather to southward goes - Lloyd Roberts "At the Year's End"
South Wind.
Navigation Links:
Go to S word index.
Go to Potential Titles: Directional and Relative Position Words [category].
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.