- ERATO
- Muse of poetry
- Muse of mime
- Poetic Muse
- Poetry Muse
- Clio's sister
- One of the Muses
- Lyre-playing muse
- Lyric poetry muse
- Milton's muse
- One of nine
- One of nine Muses
- Sister muse of Clio
- Poets' Muse
- Muse of, I guess in contemporary terms, Penthouse letters, etc.
- Muse who holds a kithara
- Greek muse
- Muse of lyric poetry
- Keatsian muse
- Sister of Calliope
- Wordsworth's Muse
- 96 Down of poetry
- Sappho's Muse
- Daughter of Mnemosyne
- Greek poet's muse
- Lord Byron's Muse
- Love poetry Muse
- Muse often depicted holding a small kithara
- Muse often shown playing a lyre
- Muse that carries a kithara
- Muse with a myrtle wreath
- One of the Greek muses
- Poetry goddess
- Muse pictured carrying a small kithara
- Calliope's sister
- Lyre player of myth
- Muse with a kithara
- Muse for bards
- Calliope's kin
- Polyhymnia's kin
- Muse for some poets
- Sister of Polyhymnia
- Bard's muse
- Muse with a lyre
- Sibling of Clio
- Muse for love poets
- Love poet's muse
- Lyricist's Muse
- Muse for poets
- Lyric muse
- Sister of Euterpe
- One of the Nine
- Shelley's Muse
- Muse for Theocritus
- One of Mnemosyne's daughters
- Muse of poets
- Muse of love poetry
- Muse of Greek myth
- Sister of Clio
- Sister of Clio and Terpsichore
- A sister of Calliope
- Clio and Urania's sister
- Lyrist of myth
- Muse for Milton or Millay
- Terpsichore's sister
- Muse of love poems
- One of nine sisters
- Love poetry goddess
- Lyre-strumming muse
- Poet's inspiration
- Greek poetry muse
- Muse of love sonnets
- Muse of romantic verse
- Lovers' Muse
- Muse to poets
- Mime motivator, classically
- Muse of bards
- Goddess with a lyre
- Muse for Millay
- Pindar's patroness of poetry
- Passionate lyrist of myth
- Mime motivator, mythologically
- Inspiration for poets and musicians
- One of a mythical nine
- Sister of Clio and Calliope
- A sister of Clio
- Muse often depicted holding a lyre
- Inspiration for Emily Dickinson
- Sister of Melpomene
- Muse for Byron
- Troubadour's Muse
- A Muse
- Alphabetically, she comes between Clio and Euterpe
- Muse of erotic poetry
- Third of the nine Muses, alphabetically
- Cilo's sister
- Harp-carrying Muse
- Marvell's Muse
- Thalia's sister
- Muse for 1 Across, perhaps
- A daughter of Mnemosyne
- Muse for Keats
- Bard's inspiration
- Muse who inspires poets
- Muse of verse
- Sonneteer's muse
- Shakespeare's Muse
- Muse sometimes seen with a lyre
- Versifier's Muse
- Sister of Thalia
- Muse for Browning
- Ode writer's Muse
- Muse for Yeats
- Muse of Hughes
- Sister of Terpsichore
- Pindar's Muse
- Astronomy : Urania :: poetry : __
- Muse for Shelley
- Muse for a bard
- Verse writer's Muse
- Pope's muse
- Rhyme writer's Muse
- Keats' Muse
- Millay's muse
- Mythical myrtle-and-roses wreath wearer
- Odist's inspiration
- Lyre-toting Muse
- Terpsichore : dance :: __ : love poetry
- Odist's Muse
- Urania's sister
- Muse for 45 Down
- Sister of Urania
- Classical music label
- Poetic inspiration
- She's invoked in the "Aeneid"
- Mythical lyrist
- New Orleans street between Clio and Thalia
- Inspiration for Orpheus
- Mythical lyre player
- Virgil seeks her help in the "Aeneid"
- Inspirational half-sister of Helen
- Inspiration for a troubadour
- Clio relative
- Inspiration for a bard
- Versifier's inspiration
- Muse seen in the musical "Xanadu"
- Sister goddess of Calliope
- Muse of love.
- Her symbol is the lyre.
- Muse of amatory poetry.
- She plays a lyre.
- Muse.
- One of the Pierides.
- She plays the lyre.
- She dwells on Mt. Helicon.
- Relative of Calliope.
- Polyhymnia's sister.
- Book of Herodotus' "History."
- Euterpe's sister.
- Dweller on Helicon.
- Parnassus dweller.
- See 69 Across.
- Inspirer of 66 Across.
- Melpomene's sister.
- Parnassus name.
- Prototype of 40 Across.
- Helicon dweller.
- One of Calliope's sisters.
- Helicon lady.
- Menander's Muse
- Mythical figure
- Muse of lyrics
- A sister of Thalia
- Clio's poetic sister
- Lady with a lyre
- Muse for Sappho
- Sara Teasdale's muse
- Azan's mother
- Mother of Azan
- Puzzle maker's favorite Muse
- The lovely Muse
- A dweller on Parnassus
- A sister of Melpomene
- Consort of Arcas
- Inspiration for Pindar
- Muse for Marceau
- Muse or dryad
- An associate of Thalia
- One of the Danaides
- One of the dryads
- Sappho's inspirer
- She might inspire Marceau
- Inspiration for Sappho
- Love-poetry inspirer
- One of the Nereids
- Dryad, Muse or Nereid
- Muse for Masters
- One of Terpsichore's sisters
- Yeats's Muse
- A daughter of Nereus
- A dryad or Danaid
- Keats's Muse
- Kin of Calliope
- Muse of poesy
- One of nine on Parnassus
- A Muse or Dryad
- A Nereid
- A dryad
- Lyre holder
- Clio sidekick
- Muse for Marvell
- A daughter of Zeus
- Clio colleague
- Her symbol was a lyre
- Masefield's Muse
- Muse of bridal songs
- A child of Mnemosyne
- Muse for Milton
- Muse for Poe
- Thalia sib
- Anacreon's Muse
- One of a noted nine
- Puzzler's favorite Muse
- Ted Hughes's Muse
- Hugh Hefner's Muse?
- One of Zeus's daughters
- Sister of 31-Across
- Woman with a lyre
- Apollo attendant
- Poetry-reading Muse
- Calliope colleague
- Daughter of Zeus
- One of a mythical ennead
- Muse for D. H. Lawrence
- One of a mythological ennead
- Goddess often pictured with a crown of roses
- Inspiration for Yeats
- Muse for a lyricist
- Goddess pictured with a lyre and a crown of roses
- Lyre-carrying Muse
- Muse whose name means "passionate"
- One of the nine Muses
- Muse of mimicry
- Subject of Filippino Lippi's "Allegory of Music"
- Muse with a wreath of myrtle and roses
- Calliope relative
- Classical lyre holder
- Figure in Greek myth whose name means "desired"
- Classical sister
- Longtime classical music label
- Muse for Whitman
- Lyre holder of myth
- Lyre-holding Muse
- Mythological lyrist
- Mythological figure often depicted holding a kithara
- Classic label in classical music
- Clio : history :: ___ : lyric poetry
- Close relative of Clio
- One inspiring love of poetry?
- Orphic hymn charmer
- Poetic member of a Greek nonet
- Lyre player of mythology
- Muse for Lord Byron
- Muse whose name means "beloved"
- One of a mythological nonet
- Lyre-plucking Muse
- Muse featured in "Xanadu"
- Mythical figure often depicted holding a lyre
- Lyre holder in classical artwork
- Goddess whose name means "lovely"
- Lyre-playing great-granddaughter of 8-Down
- Sister of Thalia and Urania
- Mythological name that means "awakener of desire"
- Muse of poets and musicians
- Muse of hymns
- Member of a Greek nonet
- Urania's sibling
- Plath's Muse
- Muse often depicted playing a lyre
- Muse of lyric poetry, in Greek mythology
- Muse invoked in the Aeneid
- One with Clio, Thalia and Urania
- Muse of myth
- Relative of Euterpe, Polymnia and Thalia
- Terpsichore's kin
- One of Euterpe's sisters
- One of the Parnassus nine
- Clio's sister muse
- Sister of 42-Across
- Muse to Sappho
- Goddess of love poetry
- Greek Muse of lyric poetry
- Certain Greek muse
- Bard's inspiration, perhaps
- Muse holding a lyre
- Muse often depicted with a lyre
- Muse appropriate for this puzzle
- Muse with Clio, Thalia and Urania
- The lovely, to Hesiod
- Sister of 35-Across
- Muse of romantic poetry
- A-Muse-ing one
- Love muse
- Muse playing a lyre
- Erotic poetry muse
- Muse whose name is an anagram of "orate"
- Keats' favorite Muse
- Milton's inspiration
- Byron's muse
- One of the nine sisters
- Terpischore's sister
- Greek muse of poetry
- Poetry's muse
- Clio's colleague
- Sister of 63-Across
- She inspired Milton and Millay
- One of nine sisters of Greek myth
- Calliope's sister muse
- She inspires poets
- Muse of Greek mythology
- Kin of Clio
- Catullus's muse
- Lyrist Muse
- Dirty poem's inspiration
- Muse for Wordsworth
- Mime's Muse
- Ovid's muse
- Muse often portrayed playing a lyre
- Lyrical muse