RIDDLES

 

What has roots as nobody sees,

Is taller than trees,

Up, up it goes,

And yet never grows?

#Answer: mountain

 

Thirty white horses on a red hill,

First they champ,

Then they stamp,

Then they stand still.

#Answer: teeth

 

Voiceless it cries,

Wingless it flutters,

Toothless bites,

Mouthless mutters.

#Answer: wind

 

An eye in a blue face

Saw an eye in a green face.

"That eye is like to this eye"

Said the first eye,

"But in low place,

Not in high place."

#Answer: daisy in field of grass, big eye is sun (stupid one.)

 

It cannot be seen, cannot be felt,

Cannot be heard, cannot be smelt.

It lies behind stars and under hills,

And empty holes it fills.

It comes first and follows after,

Ends life, kills laughter.

#Answer: darkness

 

A box without hinges, key, or lid,

Yet golden treasure inside is hid.

#Answer: egg

 

Alive without breath,

As cold as death;

Never thirsty, ever drinking,

All in mail never clinking.

#Answer: fish

 

This thing all things devours:

Birds, beast,trees, flowers;

Gnaws iron, bites steel;

Grinds hard stones to meal;

Slays king, ruins town,

And beats high mountain down.

#Answer: time

 

You feel it, but never see it and never will.

#Answer: heart

 

You must keep it after giving it.

#Answer: your word

 

As light as a feather, but you can't hold it for ten minutes.

#Answer: your breath

 

Has a mouth but does not speak, has a bed but never sleeps.

#Answer: river

 

Runs smoother than any rhyme, loves to fall but cannot climb!

#Answer: water

 

You break it even if you name it!

#Answer: silence

 

It passes before the sun and makes no shadow.

#Answer: air?

 

You feed it, it lives, you give it something to drink, it dies.

#Answer: fire

 

A red drum which sounds

Without being touched,

And grows silent,

When it is touched.

#Answer: heart

 

Two horses, swiftest travelling,

Harnessed in a pair, and

Grazing ever in places

Distant from them.

#Answer: eyes

 

A harvest sown and reaped on the same day

In an unplowed field,

Which increases without growing,

Remains whole though it is eaten

Within and without,

Is useless and yet

The staple of nations.

#Answer: war

 

If you break me

I do not stop working,

If you touch me

I may be snared,

If you lose me

Nothing will matter.

#Answer: hope

 

All about, but cannot be seen,

Can be captured, cannot be held

No throat, but can be heard.

#Answer: wind

 

I go around in circles,

But always straight ahead

Never complain,

No matter where I am led.

#Answer: wheel

 

Lighter than what

I am made of,

More of me is hidden

Than is seen.

#Answer: ice

 

If a man carried my burden,

He would break his back.

I am not rich,

But leave silver in my track.

#Answer: snail

 

My life can be measured in hours,

I serve by being devoured.

Thin, I am quick

Fat, I am slow

Wind is my foe.

#Answer: candle

 

Weight in my belly,

Trees on my back,

Nails in my ribs,

Feet I do lack.

#Answer: boat, but I accepted cave as an answer

 

You can see nothing else

When you look in my face

I will look you in the eye

And I will never lie.

#Answer: mirror

 

I am always hungry,

I must always be fed,

The finger I lick

Will soon turn red.

#Answer: fire

 

Three lives have I.

Gentle enough to soothe the skin,

Light enough to caress the sky

Hard enough to crack rocks.

#Answer: water

 

Glittering points

That downward thrust,

Sparkling spears

That never rust.

#Answer: iceicles, teeth or stalactites?

 

Each morning I appear

To lie at your feet,

All day I follow

No matter how fast you run,

Yet I nearly perish

In the midday sun.

#Answer: shadow

 

Keys without locks

Yet I unlock the soul.

#Answer: piano, harpsichord

 

Something wholly unreal, yet seems real to I

Think my friend, tell me where does it lie?

#Answer: in the mind

 

I am so simple,

That I can only point

Yet I guide men

All over the world.

#Answer: compass.

 

A beggar's brother went out to sea and drowned.

But the man who drowned had no brother.

What was the relationship between the man who drowned and the beggar?

#Answer: the beggars was his sister

 

Man of old, it is told

Would search until he tired,

Not for gold, ne'er be sold,

But what sought he was fire.

Man today, thou mayst say,

Has quite another aim,

In places deep, he did seek,

To find me for his gain!

#Answer: knowledge? oil? diamonds?

 

For our ambrosia we were blessed,

by Jupiter, with a sting of death.

Though our might, to some is jest,

we have quelled the dragon's breath.

#Answer: Bees

 

Colored as a maiden tweaked,

time was naught when I began;

through the garden I was sneaked,

I alone am the fall of man.

#Answer: An Apple

 

Early ages the iron boot tread,

with Europe at her command.

Through time power slipped and fled,

'til the creation of new holy land.

#Answer: Italy (Rome)

 

One thin, one bold,

one sick, one cold.

The earth we span,

to prey upon man.

#Answer: The Four Horsemen of Apocolypse

 

One where none should be,

or maybe where two should be,

seeking out purity,

in the kings trees.

#Answer: A Unicorn

 

He who makes it does not keep it.

He who takes it does not know it.

He who knows it does not want it.

He who gathers it must destroy it.

#Answer: Counterfiet Money

 

One tooth to bite,

he's the forests foe.

One tooth to fight,

as all Norse know.

#Answer: An Axe

 

This creature, part man and part tree,

hates the termite as much as the flea.

His tracks do not match,

and his limbs may detach,

but he's not a strange creature to see.

#Answer: A Man With A Wooden Leg

 

The part of the bird

that is not in the sky,

which can swim in the ocean

and always stay dry.

#Answer: A Shadow

 

Dead and bound,

what once was free.

What made no sound,

now sings with glee.

#Answer: A Wooden, Stringed Instrument

 

The root tops the trunk

on this backward thing,

that grows in the winter

and dies in the spring.

#Answer: An Icicle

 

Touching one, yet holding two,

it is a one link chain

binding those who keep words true,

'til death rent it in twain.

#Answer: A Wedding Ring

 

A house of wood in a hidden place

Built without nails or glue

High above the earthen ground

It holds pale gems of blue.

#Answer: A nest

 

Inside a great blue castle

Lives a shy young maid

She blushes in the morning

And comes not out at night.

#Answer: The sun

 

I have legs but walk not

A strong back but work not

Two good arms but reach not

A seat but sit and tarry not

#Answer: A chair

 

I can be touched

But I hurt those who touch me

I move swiftly through a dry forest

But die in a mountain stream

Where I pass I leave a black shroud.

#Answer: Fire

 

He who makes it needs it not

He who buys it wants it not

He who uses it feels it not

#Answer: A coffin

 

In marble halls as white as milk,

LIned with a skin as soft as silk,

Within a fountain crystal-clear,

A golden apple doth appear.

No doors there are to this stronghold,

Yet thieves break in and steal the gold.

#Answer: An egg

 

'Twas in heaven pronounced, and 'twas muttered in hell,

An echo caught faintly the sound as it fell;

On the confines of earth 'twas permitted to rest,

And the depths of the ocean its presence confessed;

'Twill be found in the sphere when 'tis riven asunder,

Be seen in the lightning and heard in the thunder.

'Twas allotted to man with his earliest breath,

Attends him at birth, and awaits him in death,

Presides o'er his happiness, honor, and health,

Is the prop of his house, and the end of his wealth.

In the heaps of the miser 'tis hoarded with care,

But is sure to be lost on the prodigal heir.

It begins every hope, every wish it must bound,

With the husbandman toils, and with monarchs is crowned.

Without it the soldier, the seamn may roam,

But woe to the wretch who expels it from home!

In the whispers of conscience its voice will be found,

Nor e'en in the whirlwind of passion be drowned.

'Twill not soften the heart; but though deaf be the ear,

It will make it acutely and instantly hear.

Yet in shade let it rest, like a delicate flower,

Ah... breathe on it softly, - it dies in an hour.

#Answer: The letter 'H'

 

The beginning of eternity,

The end of time and space,

The beginning of every end,

The end of every place.

#Answer: The letter 'E'

 

Robbers came to our house

And we were all in.

The house leaped out at the windows

And we were all taken in.

#Answer: Fish in a net

 

Though I dance at a ball, I am nothing at all.

#Answer: A shadow

 

As I was going to St. Ives,

I met a man who had seven wives.

Each wife had seven sacks,

Each sack had seven cats,

Each cat had seven kits.

Kits, cats, sacks and wives,

How many were going to St. Ives?

#Answer: One

 

Look into my face and I'm everybody;

Scratch my back and I'm nobody.

#Answer: A mirror

 

Goes over all the hills and hollows,

Bites hard, but never swallows.

#Answer: Frost

 

I walked and walked and at last I got it;

I didn't want it, so I stopped and looked for it;

When I found it, I threw it away.

#Answer: A thorn

 

Lives in winter, dies in summer,

Grows with its root upwards.

#Answer: An icicle

 

A man rode to town on Friday.

He stayed there all night,

and came back on the same Friday.

How can this be?

#Answer: His horse is named "Friday"

 

Fatherless and Motherless, born without sin

Roared when it came into the world,

And never spoke again.

#Answer: Thunder

 

When you look into my face,

I shall never lie;

Instead be but a window into your soul,

whether there light or shadows hide;

As in me many see their deaths

where others see their lives;

In this deny me many try,

but they simply twist their knives;

For though prejudiced to some I may seem,

THE LIE IS THEIR OWN LIVES.

#Answer: A mirror

 

I am the part of the bird

that is not in the sky,

Who can drown in the ocean

and yet remain dry.

A last vestige of man

that refuses to die.

In mourning I am tossed

at your feet to lie;

I begin my job early,

devouring your ankles and thighs.

I work my way up,

eating your legs to your waist.

And though around midday away I am chased,

I return quickly,

To savor the arm of my taste.

As evening falls I enter your lungs,

Spiraling down

past your mouth and your tongue.

I feast on your body, your soul, and your mind,

but as darkness falls you shall find

That away I will go, a relief for some;

At least until tomorrow morning comes.

#Answer: Your shadow

 

As destructive as life,

As healing as death;

An institutioner of strife,

Just as prone to bless.

It is all that is good,

Yet with an evil trend;

As it was the beginning of things,

It can also be the end.

#Answer: Fire, but Love also seems to work (though it was not the intended answer)

 

As beautiful as the setting sun,

As delicate as the morning dew;

An angel's dusting from the stars

that can turn the Earth into

A frosted moon.

#Answer: Snow

 

Creatures of power, creatures of grace,

Creatures of beauty, creatures of strength.

As for their lives,

they set everything's pace,

For all things must come to live

under their emerald embrace. . .

Either in their life, or in their death.

#Answer: Trees

 

Stronger than steel,

And older than time;

They are more patient than death

and shall stand even when the stars have ceased to shine.

Their strength is embedded

in roots buried deep

Where the sands and frosts of ages

can never hope to touch or reach.

#Answer: Mountains

 

Inside me the adventurous find

Quests and treasures of every kind.

Trolls, goblins, orcs, and more, await

Within my closed walls for

All those that wish to visit me.

Your hands are the key

To secrets untold,

And your mind will unlock the door.

#Answer: A book

 

I run through hills;

I veer around mountains.

I leap over rivers

and crawl through the forests.

Step out your door to find me.

#Answer: The road

 

A golden treasure that never stays;

The coin whose face gives wealth to all.

Strands, nuggets, and dust of gold

are all bought with its shining grace. . .

And all are more precious than any gleaming metal.

#Answer: The sun

 

It comes only before,

It comes only after,

Rises only in darkness,

But rises only in light.

It is always the same,

But is yet always different.

#Answer: The moon

 

It holds most knowledge that has ever been said;

But is not the brain, is not the head.

To feathers and their masters, 'tis both bane and boon. . .

One empty, and one full.

#Answer: Paper

 

I cut through evil

like a double edged sword,

And chaos flees at my approach.

Balance I single-handedly upraise,

Through battles fought with heart and mind,

Instead of with my gaze.

#Answer: Justice

 

#Answer: If you have more riddles, send them to [email protected]

 

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