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A meteor glanced along the cloud - Robert Bloomfield "May-Day With the Muses: The Drunken Father"

A resonant meteor of the North - Bliss Carman "The White Gull"

The world curtained by meteors, volcanoes, or nuclear blast - S. R. Compton "On the K-T Boundary"

Gray rocky meteors of memory flare - Jan Cronos "She Remains"

painting of the dark with meteors - E. E. Cummings "Amores (IV)"

meteors streaming from playful immortal hands - E. E. Cummings "Amores (IV)"

Which shines a meteor through life's gloom - Lucretia Maria Davidson "The Smile of Innocence"

The meteor of birds departing - Emily Dickinson "Book 2: Nature XIII: The Oriole"

What happens when meteors collide? - Rebecca Kai Dotlich "Room of Curiousity"

Voice of meteor lost in day - Ralph Waldo Emerson "May-Day"

The meteors of her native sky - William Falconer "The Shipwreck: Canto I"

That meteor-soul divine - Arthur Davison Ficke "Swinburne, an Elegy"

A meteor through the changing sky - S. Virginia French "The 'Still Small Voice'"

Delusion in its meteor fire - Felicia Hemans "The Last Banquet of Antony and Cleopatra"

A crooked meteor slicing what's left of the sky - fei hernandez "Singing Funeral"

Who rides on that meteor of fire - James MacPherson "Fragments of Ancient Poetry: III"

A heave from the halfcourt moving like a meteor - Tomás Q. Morín "Bird"

The meteor was a dove of amethyst - Pablo Neruda "The Book of Questions: XXI" transl. by William O'Daly

A sword in a scabbard of meteors - Pablo Neruda "From Air to Air" transl. by Nathaniel Tarn

The meteor of your laughter - Pablo Neruda "Midday L" transl. by Stephen Tapscott

The vineyards of meteors - Pablo Neruda "Minerals" transl. by Jack Schmitt

the peripheral inkling of a meteor - Jacqueline Osherow "Inspiration Point, Bryce Canyon, Utah"

On a meteor compelled by earth - Sina Queyras "The Couriers"

Meteors through the midnight skies - G.A. Raybold "The Joys of Former Years Have Fled"

And perish like the meteor's blaze - G.A. Raybold "The Joys of Former Years Have Fled"

When burst that meteor on the night - T. Buchanan Read "A Christmas Hymn" [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.15, no.85, Jan. 1875]

A meteor thrown athwart some sky - John Rollin Ridge aka Yellow Bird "Song [I saw her once--her eye's deep light]"

Meteors whirling on their poles - Christina Rossetti "A Coast-Nightmare"

A meteor of hope in the darkness - Frederick George Scott "Calvary"

Wild as a marsh-borne meteor's glance - Sir Walter Scott "The Dance of Death"

Some great meteor, kindred to the sun - Francis Sherman "The Deserted City: The House of Wisdom"

The origin point of a meteor - Arthur Sze "The Radiant's"

To order its wild lightning storm of meteor dreams - Virginia Vaughan "Thought" [The Continental Monthly v.5 no.5, May 1864]

Dancing in the meteor's hall of power - "Where Avalanches Wail"

A meteor of the burning heart - William Butler Yeats "The Indian to his Love"

Their meteor go-cart running on a firecracker - Cynthia Zarin "Orbit"

The dune bowling down meteors - Cynthia Zarin "Orbit"


The meteor-bearer of our parting breath - Fitz-Greene Halleck "Twilight"


To alert me to approaching meteorites and mad dogs - Duane Ackerson " Proof of Existence"

Out-flares dynamite and meteorite - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "egret"

Glistening in the continuous rain of meteorites - May Swenson "After the Flight of Ranger 17"


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