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The timeless light banished time and sorrow - M.E. Atteridge "To a Child" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 5th series, no.5-v.I, 2 Feb. 1884]

whose night strong arms had banished - Elizabeth Bartlett "swallows return"

Those long nights in which slumber is banished - Charles Baudelaire "Posthumous Remorse" transl. by Keith Waldrop

Heap wood upon the fire to banish shadow - John Berryman "The Possessed"

From this familiar shore now banished - Friederich Bodenstedt "Farewell | Aus dem Nachlasse Mirza-Schaffys" transl. by Auber Forestier [Lippincott's Magazine of Popular Literature and Science, v.XVII, no.100, April. 1876]

Banished, elsewhere, without a shred - Cyrus Cassells "The World That the Shooter Left Us"

And banished be all sadness - "The Cruiskeen Lawn" transl. by George Sigerson

Fervent with the banished wonders of undiscovered hells - Maggie Damken "Undiscovered Hells"

Forgetting my pitiless banishment - Walter de la Mare "Mrs. Grundy"

All longing in safe banishment - Walter de la Mare "The Remonstrance"

Children of some banish'd brotherhood - Irving Sidney Dix "Fairies of the Frost"

Some lost spirit banished from the sky - Irving Sidney Dix "An Idyll of the Hills part 1: January"

And banish honour from the mind - John Gay "Fable VI: Miser and Plutus" [edited, updated, & adapted by John Benson Rose]

High over to banishment - Ivor Gurney "Day-Boys and Choristers"

Banished all memories of me - Mrs. Harriet S. Handy "Stanzas for Music"

Just that one memory I thought banished - Arthur Sherburne Hardy "Songs of Two"

With night we banish sorrow - Thomas Heywood "Good-Morrow"

To understand a banished secret - Lionel Johnson "Renegade"

List of things to banish - Mia King "Abracadabra"

Summon aid to help with banishing - Mia King "Abracadabra"

As beams of morning banish visions of the night - J.I.L. "The Old Home" [Chambers' Journal of Popular Literature, Science, and Art, 4th series, no.746, 13 April 1878]

Long banished into silence and no time - Philip Levine "Winter Words"

And banish the thoughts of day - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow "The Day Is Done"

Who rules the shades in banishment - James Russell Lowell "Endymion"

The fever of the banished - Simone Muench "Wolf Centos"

Banished to the ivy tree - "Once"

To your cold realms I banish you - Miriam Clark Potter "Princess Fire"

From your great presence ne'er be banish'd - J.S. "A Roman Idyl" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXLI, v.LV, Mar. 1844]

Glimpses of a banished Heaven - Charles Seabridge "Connected Poems I"

Banished to the night and the wilderness - Tobias Seamon "Halos"

The exile mourning, to banishment returning - B. Simmons "To Swallows on the Eve of Departure" [Blackwood's Edinburgh Magazine, no.CCCXLIV, v.LV, June 1844]

The bitter wind has banished the silent nightingale - Richard Henry Stoddard "A Winter Scene"

Name the tragedy the banishment - Elizabeth Torres "The Voyage"

From our pathway forlorn can we banish the dove - H.T. Tuckerman "[You call us inconstant]" [Graham's Magazine v.XXI no.3, Sept. 1842]

Come to banish wracking pain - Farnsworth Wright writing as Francis Hard "After Two Nights of the Ear-ache" [Weird Tales, Oct. 1937]


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