- SONNET
- Wordsworth offering
- The New Colossus, for one
- Frost piece
- Shakespeare poem
- Shakespearean writing
- Shakespearean poem
- `abba abba cde cde` creation
- Petrarchan piece
- 14-line verse
- Octet + sestet
- Ozymandias, for one
- Type of poem cited in "Easter Parade"
- It may come in Italian or English form
- One may feature two ABBA verses
- 14-line poem
- Milton's "On His Blindness," for one
- Shakespeare specialty
- Type of poem mentioned in "Easter Parade"
- It concludes with a couplet
- Shelley's "Ozymandias," for one
- Composition that may be Petrarchan
- Little song, literally
- Shakespearean lines
- Poem of 14 lines
- Verse form
- Shakespearean work
- Literally, "little song"
- Browning output
- Shakespearean verse
- Browning's "How Do I Love Thee?" e.g.
- Donne's "Death Be Not Proud," e.g.
- Shelley's "Ozymandias," e.g.
- Written creation of Michelangelo
- One of a famous 154
- Emma Lazarus' "The New Colossus," e.g.
- Spenserian output
- Spenserian work
- Shakespeare opus
- Shakespearean poetic form
- Frost form
- Verse of 14 lines
- Thomas Wyatt work
- Three quatrains and a couplet
- Form of verse.
- Keats' "Bright Star."
- Petrarch's forte.
- Shakespeare's "To His Love."
- To His Love, for example.
- 14 heartfelt lines.
- Short poem.
- Poem.
- Rupert Brooke's "The Soldier."
- Bard product.
- Poetic form.
- Product of 13 Down.
- Fourteen heroic lines.
- Keats work.
- Literary work.
- Poetic work.
- Certain poem
- Wordsworth's forte
- Bright Star by Keats is one
- Wordsworth product
- Golden Treasury entry
- Petrarchan piece for Laura
- Golden Treasury item
- One of Mrs. Browning's poems
- Poem by Petrarch
- Shakespearean gem
- Bright Star by Keats, e.g.
- Petrarch piece
- Fourteen-line poem
- E. B. Browning work
- Petrarch specialty
- Shakespeare offering
- Wordsworth work
- Petrarchan poem
- Browning work
- Millay work
- Italian ___
- Browning piece
- One begins "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?"
- One of Shakespeare's begins "Shall I compare thee to a summer's day?"
- Donne piece
- See 2-Down
- One of 154 for Shakespeare
- O, never say that I was false of heart ..., e.g.
- One of 154 by Shakespeare
- Ozymandias, e.g.
- It might be 70 feet long
- One of Shakespeare's begins "My mistress' eyes are nothing like the sun"
- Death Be Not Proud, for one
- Petrarch product
- Poem with 14 lines
- Poem with 140 syllables
- Verve song about Shakespearean verse?
- Little song form
- Ozymandias is one
- A 14-line verse
- Elizabeth Barrett Browning work
- It has 14 lines
- Verse with 14 lines
- Shakespeare creation
- 14-liner
- Wyatt work
- Schematic poem
- Shakespeare work
- Shakespearean offering
- Output from the Bard
- Verse form with 14 lines
- Poem such as "Love Is Not All"
- Spenser creation
- Poem from Shakespeare
- Any of 154 by Shakespeare