Poem that begins "Ah, broken is the golden bowl!" | 59 |
Poem that begins "The skies they were ashen and sober" | 64 |
Poem that begins "You may talk o' gin and beer" | 61 |
Poem that ends "I am the captain of my soul" | 54 |
Poem that ends "This ghoul-haunted woodland of Weir" | 62 |
Poem that opens "Once upon a midnight dreary ..." | 59 |
Poem used in Beethoven's "Choral Symphony" | 56 |
Poem whose first, third and seventh lines are identical | 55 |
Poem with the line "Poems are made by fools like me" | 62 |
Poem with the line "Who intimately lives with rain" | 61 |
Poet John who translated Dante's "Divine Comedy" | 62 |
Poet John who won a Pulitzer Prize for "77 Dream Songs" | 65 |
Poet John who wrote "Lives of X," an autobiography in verse | 69 |
Poet Nash who rhymed "Bronx" with "thonx" | 61 |
Poet portrayed by Vincent Price in "Son of Sinbad" | 60 |
Poet Rich who wrote "Diving Into the Wreck" | 53 |
Poet who made radio broadcasts in support of Mussolini | 54 |
Poet who originated the phrase "harmony in discord" | 61 |
Poet who won a 1967 Pulitzer for "Live or Die" | 56 |
Poet who won a Pulitzer for "John Brown's Body" | 61 |
Poet who won a Pulitzer for "The Dust Which Is God" | 61 |
Poet who wrote "A thing of beauty is a joy for ever" | 62 |
Poet who wrote "Do I dare / Disturb the universe?" | 60 |
Poet who wrote "Don't send a poet to London" | 58 |
Poet who wrote "Hope springs eternal in the human breast" | 67 |
Poet who wrote "If called by a panther, don't anther" | 67 |
Poet who wrote "If you want to be loved, be lovable" | 62 |
Poet who wrote "Immature poets imitate; mature poets steal" | 69 |
Poet who wrote "Old Possum's Book of Practical Cats" | 66 |
Poet who wrote "Pinkle Purr" and "Binker" | 61 |
Poet who wrote "She walks in beauty, like the night" | 62 |
Poet who wrote "They also serve who only stand and wait" | 66 |
Poet who wrote "Things fall apart; the center cannot hold" | 68 |
Poet who wrote of "Sultan after Sultan with his Pomp" | 63 |
Poet who wrote of the wasp, "I distrust his waspitality" | 66 |
Poet whose work was read in "Four Weddings and a Funeral" | 67 |
Poet whose works were set to music by Schumann, Strauss and Brahms | 66 |
Poet with the longtime NPR program "A Word in Your Ear" | 65 |
Poet's creation, like "have" and "shave" | 64 |
Poet's ending with "what" or "how" | 58 |
Poetic preposition most puzzlemakers are tired of writing clues for | 67 |
Poetry's ''rare and radiant maiden'' | 56 |
Point "Rosemary's Baby" star in the right direction? | 66 |
Point farthest from the moon in a satellite's orbit | 55 |
Point in a planet's orbit that's closest to the sun | 59 |
Point of discussion at Otis Spunkmeyer headquarters? | 52 |
Point of Grant Wood's "American Gothic"? | 54 |
Point total for a "B" tile in Icelandic Scrabble | 58 |
Point value in Scrabble of every letter in this puzzle | 54 |
Point ___ (southernmost point in continental Europe) | 52 |
Pointer Sisters wanted a man with a "Slow" one | 56 |
Points a telescope in the direction of the second-largest planet? | 65 |
Poison source in Christie's "A Pocket Full of Rye" | 64 |
Poisoned husband in "Mourning Becomes Electra" | 56 |
Poisoned item in "Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs" | 60 |
Poitier's "In the Heat of the Night" role | 55 |
Pokémon move that fails if the attacker is not asleep | 56 |
Poker player Jamie one move away from winning a chess game? | 59 |
Poker player's "Let's see what you've got" | 64 |
Poker player's "Too rich for my blood" | 52 |
Poker variety ... and what the four longest across answers do? | 62 |
Poker variety in which the best hand is called a wheel | 54 |
Polar penguin named for a French explorer's wife | 52 |
Police "Blue ___ beached by a spring tide's ebb" | 62 |
Police "Of a ___ on the shore, of a dark Scottish lake" | 65 |
Police dept.'s "Be on the lookout!" alert | 55 |
Police operation seizing former loverÂ’s lurid photos (7) | 60 |
Policy protecting against loss of electromotive force? | 54 |
Polish general Kosciuszko, hero of the American Revolution | 58 |
Polish Nobelist's Latin-titled novel that inspired a 1951 film | 66 |
Polish worker grabs large, deceitful poker player (7) | 53 |
Polish-born author who wrote in English, his third language | 59 |
Polish-born musician who was awarded a Presidential Medal of Freedom | 68 |
Polite request to an assistant on a home improvement project? | 61 |
Political activist James known for undercover videos | 52 |
Political commentator with an Internet "Report" | 57 |
Political group whose name means "enthusiasm" | 55 |
Political grp. with a "Say It, Sister" blog | 53 |
Political label derived from an Irish word for "outlaw" | 65 |
Political state whose symbol often appears in Wite-Out | 54 |
Political talk show host who recenty built a replica Oval Office | 64 |
Politician blamed by some for Gore's defeat in 2000 | 55 |
Politician Dominique Strauss-___ in 2011 scandal news | 53 |
Politician Grasso who was one of Time's Women of the Year in 1975 | 69 |
Politician Lewis who lost the presidency to Zachary Taylor | 58 |
Politician Sam who was a Georgia senator for 24 years | 53 |
Politician who championed Scandinavian social welfare | 53 |
Politician who coined the term "death panels" | 55 |
Politician who launched "Citizens for McCain" | 55 |
Politician who said "Only dead fish go with the flow" | 63 |
Politician who wrote "The Audacity of Hope" | 53 |
Politician who wrote the book "Leadership" | 52 |
Politico with the memoir "Courage and Consequence" | 60 |
Polka heard frequently on "The Benny Hill Show" | 57 |
Pompous sorts ... and what can be seen in this puzzle's circles? | 68 |
Ponytailed pal of Lucy Van Pelt, in "Peanuts" | 55 |
Pool legend portrayed by Jackie Gleason in "The Hustler" | 66 |
Poor prep technique earned the apprentice the nickname __ | 57 |
Pop duo on a 1991 postage stamp in their native Sweden | 54 |
Pop duo with the 2003 hit "All the Things She Said" | 61 |