somethingdarker: (Default)
[personal profile] somethingdarker
Address.

Aisle.

Alcove.

Altar.

Anteroom:
Dusted the anteroom with alibi gray - Mary Jo Bang "Lydia's Suite: One without Has Two or Three Within"

Arch.

Architect/Architecture.

Archway:
Each step circled into tight archways - Mouna Ammar "In a Moroccan Riad"

Archways lined with faded saints - Eugene Lee-Hamilton "A Pageant of Siena"

Attic.

Auditorium:
Filling the auditoriums with empty skulls - Tim Seibles "Vendetta, May 2006"

Balcony.

Ballroom:
Extending into a glittering muted ballroom - Daisy Aldan "The Bay"

Left a chortling hyena in her ballroom clothes - Mike Allen "Carrington's Ferry"

In the vast ballroom of the universe - Russ Bickerstaff "Why Norm Jones Never Feels Like He Gets Anything Done in a Day"

Balustrade:
Brushes the blossoms against the balustrade - Li Bai "Songs to the Peonies Sung to the Air: 'Peaceful Brightness'" transl. by Florence Wheelock Ayscough

Descend over the flaking balustrades - Grace Nichols "Nuptial on Brighton Beach"

The balustrade's tipped ladder tracking infinity - Cynthia Zarin "Orbit"

Banister:
The meek hand on a banister - Mary Jo Bang "Oh, Dear, What Can the Matter Be"

Basement.

Bath/Bathe.

Bathroom:
Chiron in broken bathroom light - Beasa A. Dukes "After Watching 'Moonlight'"

Water slouching through a bathroom ceiling - Kay Gabriel "Like, Comma, Like"

leaving sigils in lipstick on the bathroom mirrors - Amanda Gafford "Tigerlily"

Bathtub.

Battlement.

Bedroom:
Become manifest in abandoned bedrooms or kitchens - Bruce Boston "Ghost People"

A goose arrives at his bedroom window - Dorothy Chan "Triple Sonnet for My Father's Pet Goose, Pigeon Wars, and Daddy Issues"

Baboon rattling the bedroom door - Cynthia Zarin "Orbit"

Belfry:
Far away the solemn belfries toll - Maurice Baring "Beethoven"

The swallow's eggs are laid along the belfry walls - Lord de Tabley "The Churchyard on the Sands"

The hushed belfry of the heart - William H.C. Hosmer "My Study"

That my ribs might make a belfry - Cynthia Zarin "Metaphysicks XI: Cathexis"

Berth:
Shaking you free from your perilous berth - Amy Redpath Roddick "A Scientific Puzzle"

Blackboard.

Bleachers:
Brachiosauruses by the bleachers - Haley Bossé "When the Time Comes to Split the Gym"

Blueprint.

Boiler Room:
Boiler rooms hum with the tooth and nail - Paul Cameron Brown "The Poetry Pond"

Bolt.

Breakfast Nook;
Mistress of the breakfast nook - Jennifer Key "Rich People in Paintings,"

Buttress:
A dim fear passed through buttress, and roof, and beam - Edward Thring "Borth Lyrics: II. The Summons"

Buttressed with unnumbered tiers of ruddy rock - Henry van Dyke "The Grand Canyon: Daybreak"

Cabinet.

Cafeteria:
Set up exhibits in the cafeteria - Alison Hawthorne Deming "Science"

Carrel:
Scholarly spiders relax in their carrels - Ted Kooser "Home Storage Barns"

Casement:
The casements hold essential day above each sill - Léonie Adams "Early Waking"

The marigold unbarred her casement bright - Louise Imogen Guiney "The White Sail"

Waking breezes round the casement pipe - Elizabeth Drew Stoddard "Closed"

Ceiling.

Cellar.

Chamber.

Chandelier.

Chimney.

Cistern:
Into the deeper cistern of his soul - Julia Alvarez "Regreso"

Drowsy heart stirs from the cistern - Catherine Bowman "Heart"

Voices singing out of empty cisterns and exhausted wells - T.S. Eliot "The Waste Land V: What the Thunder Said"

Closet.

Colonnade:
Girt by a colonnade of crysolite - Rufus Dawes "Marriage" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.5, Nov. 1841]

Column.

Corner.

Cornerstone:
From the foundations to the last edge of the cornerstone - William Ernest Henley "Rhymes and Rhythms"

Jesus leaned on the cornerstone - Brandon O'Brian "Population Changes"

The cornerstone in Truth is laid - Henry van Dyke "For the Friends at Hurstmont"

Corridor.

Counter/Countertop.

Crenelation:
Flamboyant crenelations of glory - John Gould Fletcher "Green Symphony"

Foliage, crenelated, dark at the root - Janet Kauffman "Upended By Error"

Cubicle:
Away from this year's cubicle to night class - Carlie Hoffman "After Morlot Avenue"

Cupboard.

Cupola:
In spheres and cupolas it moved through empty spaces - Harry Martinson "Aniara 4" transl. by Stephen Klass and Leif Sjöberg

Deadbolt:
Eyes lock in deadbolt time - dg nanouk okpik "Twilight Pain"

Den.

Dome.

Door.

Doorbell:
Ringing the doorbell for one more party for two - Alfred Kreymborg "Those Everlasting Blues"

Doorknob.

Doorsill:
The doorsill where two worlds touch - Rumi "Quatrains" transl. by Coleman Barks

Doorstep.

Doorway.

Drain.

Drawbridge:
Let portcullis and drawbridge fall - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Above the darkening drawbridge - Clarence Victor Stahl "The Sinking of the Titanic"

Drywall:
Pain coiled in the drywall - Kiki Petrosino "Farm Book"

Dungeon.

Eaves/Eavesdrop.

Elevator:
A broken elevator trying to contain its freefall - Alise Alousi "Skip"

take elevators and stairs to more deserted spaces - Katrine Øgaard Jensen "Playing Myst with a Ghost One Week in Spring"

An elevator hauled by golden chains - Marge Simon "Sightings: Algis Budrys"

Entrance.

Escalator:
The escalator, rolling ever down - Mike Allen "Ascending"

Watch the escalator's endless crawl - Patrick Phillips "Galleria Ode"

Take the palace escalator heavenward - Jackie Wang "Life is a Place Where it's Forbidden to Live"

Faucet:
Orchids are gushing out from the faucets - Kaveh Akbar "Orchids Are Sprouting from the Floorboards"

The kitchen with its ticking faucet - Wendy Chen "Fastened V"

Don't take faucets for fountainheads - Dorothea Tanning "All Hallow's Eve"

Fence.

Fireplace:
Kneels before an empty fireplace - Ansel Elkins "Someone Forgot to Whisper Your Death to the Bees"

The pocketed dark behind fireplace brick - Pamela Gross "The Hive"

Floor.

Floorboards:
Orchids are sprouting from the floorboards - Kaveh Akbar "Orchids Are Sprouting from the Floorboards"

The nose-down fly on my floorboards - Ari Banias "Tribute"

Beneath the floorboards of my thought - Michael McGriff "Inversion"

Between the floorboards seedlings rise - Lynette Mejía "Abandon"

Foundation.

Fountain.

Furnace.

Gable:
Wind across the gable roofs singing sad - Miriam Clark Potter "Lady Mother"

Gallery.

Garret:
A glee among the garrets - Emily Dickinson "Book 3: Time and Eternity V: Ending"

With nooks and garrets and stairs - Sandy Florian "House"

Littered with memories like ancient garrets - Lola Ridge "Manhattan Lights"

In a garret where cobwebs hang thick - "The Young Author's Dream" [The Continental Monthly, v.5 no.4, April 1864]

Gate.

Grate.

Greenroom:
Toward the greenroom of John Wilkes Booth - Paul Gregory Nauert "Leaping Through the Centuries"

Gutter.

Hall.

Hallway.

Hearth.

Hearthstone.

Hinge.

Hospital Room:
Martyrdom in the far Canada of a hospital room - Thom Gunn "Lament"

Keyhole.

Kitchen.

Laboratory:
In this most awful secret laboratory - Mary Aldis and Arthur Davison Ficke "Chloroform"

A Dr. Frankenstein in the lab with herself - Elizabeth Knapp "Self-Portrait as Cindy Sherman's Instagram Account"

Caught in a laboratory without a science - Adrienne Rich "Letters to a Young Poet"

Larder:
Feeding the partisans from frugal larders - Adrienne Rich "Char"

Latch.

Laundry Room:
The brew in the alchemist's laundry room - Rober Frazier "Primer to Impractical Magic"

Lecture Hall:
Folklore filling the desolate lecture halls - Joshua Bennett "Summer Job"

Library.

Lift Shaft:
In a lift shaft on the other side of the night - Emily Berry "Ghosts (Homage to Burial)"

Lightning Rod:
My spine a lightning rod for shudders - Tylor James "I Grew Up in a Haunted House"

Lightning-rods for plumes - Henry Coggswell Knight "Lunar Stanzas"

Linoleum:
Linoleum's absurd and personal mystique - Boris Dralyuk "Notation"

Lintel:
The lintel black with absence and size - Kevin Killian "The Door into Darkness"

And a lintel of honeysuckle - "King and Hermit" transl. by Kuno Meyer

The lucid moment and the shadow across the lintel - Arthur Stringer "The Question"

Living Room:
The terror reaches its red claws into back ward and living room - Patricia Goedicke "The Reading Club"

If you see me praying in the living room - Yalie Saweda Kamara "Mother's Rules"

Prowling the living room for the lightning - Brenda Shaughnessy "Me in Paradise"

Loading Bay:
A baggage of stars thudded on the loading bay - Stephen Oliver "An Actual Encounter With The Sun On My Balcony At France Street"

Lobby:
Popcorn and figs in the lobby - John M. Ford "Troy: the Movie"

A lobby of the skyscraper museum - David Henderson "Blues Franchise"

Lock.

Lounge:
Lounges in an abstract of boxwood and holly - Sonya Taaffe "Idle Thoughts While Watching a Faun"

Lych-Gate:
Where the lych-gate casts its cool dark shadow - G.S. "Butterflies" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, 30 March 1878]

Marquee:
Across the marquees of legions of subway cars - David Henderson "Blues Franchise"

Mezzanine:
Used to chainsmoke on the mezzanine - Patrick Phillips "Galleria Ode"

Minaret:
The minarets of an organic metropolis - Bruce Boston & Robert Frazier "A Compass for the Mutant Rain Forest"

Torches on each minaret's height - Felicia Hemans "The Abencerrage Canto III"

Hanging thick round empty tower and broken minaret - Claude McKay "Desolate" [Caroling Dusk: An Anthology of Verse by Negro Poets, ed. by Countee Cullen, 1927]

Rose like minarets of dream - George Sterling "Then and Now"

Morgue:
I lay in the morgue of darkness, hyper-alone - Taylor Byas "I begin the day thinking"

Ascended into heaven's oxygen-deprived morgue - Tory Dent "The Moon and the Yew Tree"

Nave:
In naves of a deconsecrated church - Brandon Som "Resistors"

And from the nave build haunted heaven - Wallace Stevens "A High-Toned Old Christian Woman"

Niche:
A seaside saint in her clifftop niches - Robert MacFarlane and Jackie Morris "thrift"

The leafy scrolls and fretted niches - A.A.P. "The Carver's Lesson" (in The Cornhill Magazine v.1 no.5)

A Fairy Temple with one niche empty - Po-Chu-i "Taoism and Buddhism" (translated by Arthur Waley)

Nook.

Nurse/Nursery.

Office.

Palisade:
Ten poles before their palisades - G.K. Chesterton "The Ballad of the White Horse: Book V. Ethandune: The First Stroke"

Palisade wrenched gold of Nineveh - Hart Crane "Recitative"

The troops o'er slanting palisades escape - Euripedes "Rhesus" transl. by Michael Wodhull

Stretching above the silent palisade - Marguerite Radclyffe-Hall "Silent Places"

Pane/Windowpane.

Pantry:
The pantry full of lilies - Laura Kasischke "Kitchen Song"

Of raids on the pantry and hen-coop - Lucy Larcom "The Cat's Questions" [Fun and Frolic. No date. Edited by E.T. Roe.]

Intimate tenant of pantries - Hailey Leithauser "Jiminy"

Line their pantry shelves with the antioxidant beads - Crystal Sidell "The Truth About Doppelgangers"

Parapet.

Parlor:
Phantom tendrils through parlor air - Timothy Donnelly "Globus Hystericus"

Science, art, and parlor games - Dorothy Parker "Neither Bloody Nor Bowed"

Orchards alive in the parlor - Kiki Petrosino "Monticello House Tour"

The ice cream parlor Osiris - Philip Schultz "Luxury: One"

Passage/Passenger.

Penthouse:
The ethereal execs in the celestial penthouse - Mike Allen and Ian Watson "Seventh Coming"

Peristyle:
A peristyle of pines sings requiem - Helen Keller "The Song of the Stone Wall"

Pillar.

Plaster.

Porch.

Portal.

Portcullis:
Let portcullis and drawbridge fall - Brinhild "The Rime of Sir Lionne" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.32-v.I, 9 Aug. 1884]

Down the thundering portcullis fell - Delta "The Dark Waggon [sic]" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCCXI, v.LXVII, Jan. 1850]

Portico:
Empty porticoes that led to nowhere - Deborah L. Davitt "Drowning in this Sunken City"

The portico hung o'er a flight of alabaster - Rufus Dawes "Marriage" [Graham's Magazine v.XIX no.5, Nov. 1841]

A splendid dome with royal porticos and blazoned roofs - Euripedes "Helen" transl. by Michael Wodhull

Twine in the kingdom's portico - Ted Mathys "Key to the Kingdom"

Densities of opal within sleep's portico - Cecilia Meireles "The Dead Horse" transl. by James Merrill

Pulpit:
From their pulpits sealed with dust - Francis Beaumont "On the Tombs in Westminster Abbey"

Rafter.

Rampart.

Roof.

Room.

Sacristy:
Into the sacristies of treason - Pablo Neruda "Madrid (1936)" translated by Richard Schaaf

Scullery:
Lined with the forgotten ashes of scullery maids - Sandra Kasturi "Carnaval Perpetuel"

Shelf.

Shower.

Shutter.

Sill.

Smokestack.

Spire.

Stage.

Stair.

Staircase.

Stairway.

Stairwell.

Steeple.

Step.

Stoop.

Storefront:
Storefront merchants hawking our wares - Jennifer G. Lai "In My Mind's Coral, Mother Still Calls Us from Inside"

Spray paint odes for boarded up storefronts - Barbara Jane Reyes "Downtown Oakland Poem"

Studio:
In that studio full of my own silence - Wayne Miller "Theological"

Study.

Thatch:
Sparrows fighting on the thatch - John Clare "Summer Evening"

But she only thatched it with straw - "The Fox and the Geese"

behind our walls of thatch and moss and tin - upfromsumdirt (Ron Davis) "The Death of Olympia after Edouard Manet's Olympia, oil on canvas"

Theater.

Thermostat:
Our thermostat dreams - Joy Harjo "Grace"

Threshold.

Trellis.

Tunnel.

Turret.

Vane/Weathervane.

Vault.

Veranda:
A fierce macaw on the verandah - Edward Dowden "In the Garden"

Through the veranda's black iron bars - Tarfia Faizullah "The Interviewer Acknowledges Grief"

Vestibule.

Vestry:
washing their marbles in the vestry - Évelyne Trouillot "A Rain of Stars" [excerpts] transl. by Danielle Legros Georges

Wainscot:
Even the mouse in the wainscot - Julia C.R. Dorr "The Chimney Swallow"

Wall.

Waiting Room:
Waiting room made out of marzipan - Ana Bozicevic "Paris Pride Parade"

The universal ballad of the waiting room - Gregory Pardlo "Epistemology of the Phone Booth"

Wallpaper.

Weathervane: See Vane/Weathervane.

Well.

Widow's Walk:
Watched from widow's walks worn thin - Fran Wilde "The Ghost Tide Chantey: Iron"

Window.

Windowpane.

Windowsill/Sill.

Wire.

Workshop.


Navigation Links:
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

October 2022

S M T W T F S
      1
2345678
9101112131415
16 171819202122
23242526272829
3031     

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jan. 7th, 2026 09:42 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios