| Verse times |
| Poetic words |
| Bards' dusks |
| Poet's words |
| Poetic dusks |
| Poetic times |
| Poetic nights |
| Bards' sunsets |
| Nights of yore |
| Poetic periods |
| Dusks, to Donne |
| Poetic sundowns |
| Times, in poems |
| Dusks, in poetry |
| Poetic gloamings |
| Morns' opposites |
| Nights, to poets |
| Poetic twilights |
| Opposite of morns |
| Scottish sundowns |
| Evenings, in poesy |
| Gloaming followers |
| Nights, poetically |
| Shelley's sundowns |
| Chaucer's twilights |
| Dark times, briefly |
| Poets' dark periods |
| Twilights, to bards |
| Poetic times of day |
| Dark times for Blake |
| Nightfalls, in verse |
| Nightfalls, to Byron |
| Nighttimes, in verse |
| Sundowns, to Shelley |
| Dark times, to poets |
| Bard's twilight times |
| Dusky times, in verse |
| Nighttimes, in poetry |
| Twilights, poetically |
| Nighttimes, poetically |
| Sunset times, in poesy |
| Sunset times, to bards |
| Dark times, poetically |
| Sundown times, to Keats |
| Dark times in literature |
| Early nights, in sonnets |
| Gloaming times, in poetry |
| Times after sunsets, to poets |
| Time periods from dusk to Donne |