% replaces any number of letters (la% - lake, lamp)_ replaces one letter (ca_ - car, cat)

Other crossword clues for answer "MORN"

MORN
September ___
Awakening time, for most
September __ (Chabas painting)
Daybreak, to Keats
The dawn
Dawn
Poet's time
Poetic time before lunch
Early hours
Starting time?
Forenoon
Dew time for Donne
Rising time, poetically
The grey-eyed ___ smiles on the frowning night: Shakespeare
Eve's counterpart
Rising period?
Youth like summer _____, age like winter weather (Shakespeare)
Sad-sounding time?
Every Night and Every _____ (William Blake work)
Christians, awake, salute the happy _____ (Christmas hymn)
Eve's opposite
Break of day
September ___ (Neil Diamond hit)
Beginning of day
Eve opposite
Daybreak, in verse
Early time
Pre-noon, in poems
Sonneteer's sunup
Poetic time of day
Time before noon, in poems
Early in the day, to a poet
Literary time of day
Time of day, to Tennyson
Poetic time
Dawn, to Donne
Poet's dawn
Pre-noon time, in poems
Poetic period
Dawn, poetically
The Son of __ in weary Night's decline: Blake
... where the sun / Came peeping in at __: Thomas Hood
A.M. time
Early time for bards
Poet's daybreak
No sleep till __: Byron
Sunup, to a 43 Across
Time after sunrise, poetically
The summer __ is bright and fresh: Bryant
Dawn time, poetically
Poetic daybreak
Daybreak, poetically
Poet's time of day
Poetic day starter
Grey-eyed thing in "Romeo and Juliet"
Poetic dawn
Byron's time of day
Pre-noon period, in poems
Small hours
Part of the day ere noon
O May, Thy ___ (Robert Burns song)
Part of the day.
Omar says it brings a thousand roses.
Time of day.
Cockcrow.
Daybreak: Poet.
Time following the dayspring.
Sunrise.
Dawn: Poet.
Aurora's time.
Time of day: Poet.
Daybreak
September time
Time of day, to a bard
On a St. Patrick's ___ . . .
And day's at the ___: Browning
Sweet is the breath of ___ . . . : Milton
A.M.
Poetic A.M.
When Phoebus rises
. . . incense-breathing ___: T. Gray
When Phoebus arises
Poetical A.M.
Rise, happy ___ . . . : Tennyson
September ___, Chabas painting
Opposite of e'en
Daybreak, to Donne
Poet's A.M.
Sunrise, to Shelley
Evening's opposite
Early part of the day
Even's opposite
In "Hamlet," it's "in russet mantle clad"
Prenoon period, in poetry
Time starting at dawn
When roosters crow
Even's counterpart
Neil Diamond's "September ___"
A.M. hours, in poetry
Time to rise, in poetry
Time starting at dawn, to poets
Start of the day, in poetry
Barbara Dickson "Bonny at ___"
Neil Diamond "September ___"
Eve's inverse
Dawn, to poets
Donne's daybreak
AM hours
Before noon, poetically
Not eve
The dawn, to Keats
The dawn, to Milton
September ___ (Diamond)
Early hours, poetically
Eve's follower
Eve follower
Even opposite
Eve's counterpart, poetically
Daybreak, in poetry
Time twixt sunup and noon
Not eve for sure
The wee hours, to the Bard
E'en's opposite
Daylight, poetically
Sunrise poetically
Early time for poets
Daybreak, to poets
Early hours, to bards
Poet's early hours
Wandering at ___ (Whitman poem)
Early period
Sunrise time, in poetry
A brighter ___ awaits the human day: Shelley
Hours ere noon
Romeo said the lark was its herald
Daybreak, to Dickinson
Dawn, to Dryden