Potential Titles: Stoop
Jul. 15th, 2011 09:58 pmDrawing the sunlight from the stooping clouds - Thomas Bailey Aldrich "The Metempsychosis"
Stooped down into the starlight - Stopford A. Brooke "Song (From 'Six Days')"
Endless Mercy stoops to save - John Clare "Address to Plenty: In Winter"
Stoop to shade the scented cups of flowers - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]
Stoops to gather the golden flower of day - Olive Custance "The Storm"
Stoops to an easy clover - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Life III"
And with inquiries stoop down - Edward Doyle "To a Child Reading"
Grey pillars bear the stooping sky - Aldous Huxley "Scenes of the Mind"
How the heavens stoop and gloom - Fanny Kemble "Sonnet [Art thou already weary of the way?]"
Yet think not that my spirit stoops - George P. Morris "I Never Have Been False to Thee" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.5, Nov. 1841]
Stooped in the hard ash - Pablo Neruda "Hunger in the South" transl. by Jack Schmitt
The bird of Juno stooping - Alexander Pope "Lines by a Person of Quality"
Time stoops to no man's lure - Algernon Charles Swinburne "At the End of All Desire"
Until the stooping midnight covers - D.E.A. Wallace "Life and I"
When the sullen sky stoops with its weight of terror - "Watchword" [The Continental Monthly, v.1, no.2, February 1862]
Winged things may stoop to any door - A.D.T. Whitney "Attic Salt"
Full of the dark-stooping night - Edward Shanks "A Night-Piece"
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Stooped down into the starlight - Stopford A. Brooke "Song (From 'Six Days')"
Endless Mercy stoops to save - John Clare "Address to Plenty: In Winter"
Stoop to shade the scented cups of flowers - Martha Walker Cook "Clouds. Respectfully Dedicated to Professor Guyot" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.3, March 1864]
Stoops to gather the golden flower of day - Olive Custance "The Storm"
Stoops to an easy clover - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Life III"
And with inquiries stoop down - Edward Doyle "To a Child Reading"
Grey pillars bear the stooping sky - Aldous Huxley "Scenes of the Mind"
How the heavens stoop and gloom - Fanny Kemble "Sonnet [Art thou already weary of the way?]"
Yet think not that my spirit stoops - George P. Morris "I Never Have Been False to Thee" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.5, Nov. 1841]
Stooped in the hard ash - Pablo Neruda "Hunger in the South" transl. by Jack Schmitt
The bird of Juno stooping - Alexander Pope "Lines by a Person of Quality"
Time stoops to no man's lure - Algernon Charles Swinburne "At the End of All Desire"
Until the stooping midnight covers - D.E.A. Wallace "Life and I"
When the sullen sky stoops with its weight of terror - "Watchword" [The Continental Monthly, v.1, no.2, February 1862]
Winged things may stoop to any door - A.D.T. Whitney "Attic Salt"
Full of the dark-stooping night - Edward Shanks "A Night-Piece"
Navigation Links:
Go to S word index.
Go to Potential Titles: Buildings - Parts and Specific Rooms [category].
Go to author indices.
Go to word indices.
Go to category indices.