Answer: POETS
POETS is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 144 times.
- Masters and Jonson, e.g.
- Homer and others
- Burns and Allen, e.g.
- People concerned with feet
- Masters and Jonson
- "The only poor fellows in the world whom anyone will flatter": Pope
- ___ Corner, part of Westminster Abbey
- They're "born, not made," according to an old saying
- Certain people buried in Westminster Abbey
- Meter readers?
- Meter makers
- People who deal with stress successfully?
- Keats and Horace, for two
- Pound and others
- Keats and Yeats, for two
- Sonneteers, say
- Pound and Poe
- Erato is their Muse
- Yeats and Keats
- Poe and more
- Sandburg and Silverstein
- Keats and Yeats
- Limerick authors, say
- Couplet composers
- Browning and Burns
- Meter experts?
- Burns and Byron
- 5-Down and others
- Well-versed ones?
- Artists in a Robin Williams film title
- This puzzle's theme
- Pulitzer candidates
- Verse writers
- Rhyme writers
- Byron and Burns
- Byron and Keats
- They're well-versed
- They're ''born, not made''
- Well-versed folks?
- Lovelace and Frost, for two
- Writers of sonnets
- Ruth Lilly Prize winners
- Angelou and Cummings, e.g.
- Donne and Bradstreet
- Meter masters?
- Both Brownings
- "Dead ___ Society"
- Bards
- Ode writers
- They're "born, not made"
- Dealers in meters and feet
- Foot men?
- Frost and Burns
- Frost and Burns
- Frost and Burns
- Frost and Burns
- Frost and Burns
- Frost and Burns?
- Frost and Burns
- Frost and Burns
- Frost and others
- Performers at some readings
- 'Dead ___ Society'
- Burns and Frost
- Burns and Browning
- Browning and Blake
- Some open mic performers
- Sonneteers, for instance
- Browning and more
- Versifiers
- Keats and Shelley
- Greeting card writers
- Poe and Pound, e.g.
- Gilbert and Teasdale
- Whitman and Whittier
- Sonnet writers, say
- Some laureates
- Rhyming writers
- Meter pros
- Poe and Pope
- Millay and Milton
- Longfellow and Burns
- ___ Corner (Westminster Abbey locale)
- Ones with muses
- Erato's group
- Dickinson and Browning, e.g.
- Wordsworth and Whitman
- Odists and sonneteers
- Masters of rhyme
- Coffeehouse entertainers
- Lear and Nash
- Byron and Browning
- See 35-Down
- Sexton and Plath, e.g.
- 14-Across creators
- Producers of 35-Across
- Open-mic readers
- People thinking on their feet?
- Limerick writers, e.g.
- Kilmer and Keats
- Keats and colleagues
- Users of rhyme schemes
- Shelley's "unacknowledged legislators of the world"
- Verse creators
- Ode authors
- Verse pros
- Larkin and Plath, e.g.
- Meter masters
- Ones concerned with stress
- "Dead ___ Society": 1989 film
- Lovelace's colleagues
- Well-versed people?
- Masterful rhymers
- Writers of haiku
- Wilbur and Kunitz
- Masters of meters
- Reciters at slams
- Literary figures
- Writers of verse
- ___ Corner, section of Westminster Abbey
- Authors of verse
- People writing verses
- Fitting nickname for athletes at Whittier College
- Masters of allusion
- They work with feet and meters
- Browning and Byron
- Some write limericks
- Authors of verses
- Elizabeth Acevedo and David Dabydeen, for two
- Meter creators
- Foot specialists?
- Sina Queyras and Mary Lambert, for two
- Audre Lorde and Lord Byron, e.g.
- Sappho and Mirabai
- Writers at slams
- They form lines for their work
- The Brownings, e.g.
- Writers of odes
- Experts who deal with stress?
- Rappers, in a sense
- Writers like Joy Harjo, Tracy K. Smith, etc.
- They work in meters
- Johnson and Jonson
- Masters of allusion?