Answer: ODE
ODE is a crossword puzzle answer that we have spotted 900 times.
Referring Clues:
- Purcell piece
- Lyric poem
- Keats piece
- Words of honor?
- Versified salute
- Keats's work on melancholy
- Flowery tribute
- Thomas Hood's "Autumn," e.g.
- Schoenberg's "___ to Napoleon"
- "Intimations of Immortality," e.g.
- Words of praise
- Literary tribute
- Auden's "To My Pupils," e.g.
- Pindar work
- "___ to a Nightingale"
- Praiseful poem
- "To Evening," e.g.
- "___ to the West Wind"
- Keats's "___ to Psyche"
- Wordsworth work
- Pindaric work
- Shih Ching composition
- Verse on a vase
- Gray piece
- Keats's "To Autumn," e.g.
- Keats creation
- Lofty lyric
- Poem of praise
- Shelley work
- Horatian work
- Epinicion
- Emerson writing
- Cowley composition
- Lyrical lines
- It's usually "on" or "to" something
- Work on a Grecian urn
- Tribute, of sorts
- "Bards of Passion and of Mirth," e.g.
- Copland's "Symphonic ___"
- Lines from Horace
- Work with lofty words
- Catullus composition
- Jonson work
- Poetic homage
- Dedicated work
- "___ to Billie Joe"
- Laudatory lines
- Old poem
- Handel's "___ for St. Cecilia's Day"
- Flowery verse
- Rhapsodic rhyme
- The 45th Psalm, e.g.
- Poem of homage
- Byron's "___ to Napoleon Buonaparte"
- "To Autumn," e.g.
- Keats's "Bards of Passion and of Mirth," e.g.
- Poetic paean
- Addison's "How are thy Servants blest? O Lord!"
- "How Sleep the Brave," for one
- "To a Skylark," for one
- Ben Jonson wrote one to himself
- "___ to Billy Joe"
- Millay's "___ to Silence"
- Horatian composition
- Calverley's "___ to Tobacco"
- Lines that elevate
- Shelley poem
- Keats work
- Keatsian tribute
- Poem on an urn
- "___ to Joy"
- "To the Poets," for one
- Dedicated lines
- John Logan's "To the Cuckoo," e.g.
- Tribute of a kind
- Lofty lines
- "___ on a Grecian Urn"
- Literary piece
- "O" may open it
- Horatian ___
- Dedicated lines?
- Poetic tribute
- Work of praise
- Work with feet
- Lines from Shelley
- Pope piece
- Words from Wordsworth
- Poem of Sappho
- Flowery words
- Lines of homage
- Wordsworth creation
- It may be written "on" something
- Gray matter?
- Keatsian work
- Lit class reading
- Emerson's "___ to Beauty"
- Metered praise
- Lines of praise
- Poem titled "To a ..."
- Alexander Pope's "Solitude," e.g.
- Wordsworth's "___ to Duty"
- "___ on Melancholy"
- One famously begins "O Wild West Wind, thou breath of Autumn's being"
- Poem of exaltation
- Dedicatory verse
- Allen Ginsberg's "Plutonian ___"
- Kingsley's "___ to the North-East Wind"
- A famous one begins "How sleep the brave ..."
- Literature class reading
- W. H. Auden wrote one to his pupils
- Uplifting poem
- Sapphic work
- Poem often titled "To a ..."
- Stanzaic salute
- Work by Gray or Spenser
- "Beauty is truth, truth beauty" genre
- Tribute with feet
- "___ to Billie Joe" (1967 #1 hit)
- Lines that lift up
- Praise-filled poem
- Emotion-filled poem
- Thomas Gray poem
- Exalting poem
- Coleridge's "Dejection: An ___"
- Lyric poem evoking emotion
- Beethoven's "___ to Joy"
- Horatian creation
- Bobbie Gentry sang one to Billie Joe
- Keats composition
- Tribute in verse
- Keats's "To Autumn," for one
- Shelley wrote one to the West Wind
- Poem with "To" in its title
- Exalting verse
- Tribute with meter
- Byron wrote one to Napoleon
- Rapturous rhyme
- "Intimations of Immortality," for one
- Lyrical tribute
- Verse of glorification
- "To a ..." poem
- Commendatory composition
- Canticle
- Hafiz work
- Work by Pindar
- Poem full of praise
- Pindar product
- "To a Skylark" or "To the Cuckoo"
- Versified glorification
- Work of exaltation
- Love sonnet
- Rhyming tribute
- Poem with "To" in the title, often
- Keats' "On Melancholy," e.g.
- Lines, in this puzzle's theme
- Lyrical verse
- Form of flowery flattery
- Work by Horace
- "To a Mouse" or "To a Skylark"
- Dedicated poem
- Pindar poem
- Tribute piece
- Homage of a sort
- Praiseful piece
- Praiseful work
- Poem with a dedicatee
- "To a Mouse," for one
- Appreciative verse
- Inspired poem
- "___ to a Nightingale" (John Keats poem)
- Tribute of sorts
- Emotional work
- Form popular among the Romantics
- Shelley's "___ to the West Wind"
- Shelley's "___ to Naples"
- Keats's "___ on Indolence"
- Salute in stanzas
- Admirer's poem
- "___ to My Family" (1995 hit by the Cranberries)
- Bardic work
- Horace work
- "___ to Billie Joe" (1967 #1 hit for Bobbie Gentry)
- Derzhavin piece
- Greek chorus part
- Sappho specialty
- Keats wrote one to Psyche
- Olympionic, e.g.
- Commemorative poem
- Evocative verse
- Canzone's cousin
- Pindar piece
- James Thomson's "Rule, Britannia" is one
- "To a ..." work
- Poem from Pindar
- Work with stanzas
- It has a strophe and an antistrophe
- Lyric praise
- Poetic ego-booster?
- Exaltation in verse
- Versified tribute
- Metrical homage
- Certain tribute
- Keats's "___ on a Grecian Urn"
- Milton work
- Neruda wrote one on the table
- Tribute with stanzas
- "___ to Newfoundland" (provincial anthem)
- Horatian oration
- Homage in verse
- Burns writing
- "___ to My Car" (Adam Sandler song)
- Stanzaic work
- Lines of honor
- Salute using feet?
- "___ to Deodorant" (Coldplay song)
- Piece of praise
- Flowery expression of admiration
- Emotional verse
- Pindar opus
- Gray's "The Bard," e.g.
- "__ to Billy Joe"
- "__ on a Grecian Urn"
- It's from a Greek word meaning "song"
- Coleridge's "France: An __"
- Handel wrote one "for the Birthday of Queen Anne"
- Poem of tribute
- Keats's "__ to Psyche"
- Marvell work
- Keats's urn tribute, e.g.
- Lines from Keats
- Metered tribute
- "__ to Joy"
- Lofty tribute
- Work with reverence
- Dedicatory poem
- Beethoven's "__ to Joy"
- Pindaric speciality
- Admiring work
- Pope work
- Exalted work
- Verse of praise
- ''To a . . .'' work
- Written tribute
- Poem ''to'' something
- Metrical tribute
- Emerson genre
- Lofty poem
- Lyric words
- Poetic piece
- Neruda work
- Type of poem
- ''To Autumn,'' for one
- Poetic work
- Gray lines
- Kind words
- Horatian lines
- Enthusiastic verse
- Verse praise
- Rhapsodic poem
- Horatian __
- Neruda opus
- Written praise
- Byron selection
- ''Grecian Urn'' lines
- Verse ''to'' something
- Work of Wordsworth
- Dedicated verse
- ''To a . . .'' verse
- One of Keats' feats
- Plaint for Billie Joe
- Horace work, e.g.
- Pindaric poem
- ''To a Skylark,'' for one
- Pindaric ___
- Ceremonious poem
- Poetic praise
- "___ to Joy" (Schiller work)
- Poetry class reading, perhaps
- Praiseful verse
- Poetic form
- ''___ on a Grecian Urn''
- ''To a Sky-Lark,'' e.g.
- Horatian form
- ''___ to Evening''
- Love poem
- ''___ on Indolence''
- Poem of glorification
- ''___ on Melancholy'' (Keats)
- English I reading
- Poem of devotion
- ''___ to Psyche''
- ''Intimations of Immortality,'' e.g.
- Shelley lyric
- Poem originally intended to be sung
- ''___ on Indolence'' (Keats)
- A Thomas Gray work
- Emerson's ''___ to Beauty''
- Work of Sappho
- "To a Skylark," e.g.
- "___ to Joy" (Schiller poem)
- Yeats offering
- Billie Joe's song
- Writing on an urn
- "___ to the Cuckoo"
- Schoenberg's "___ to Napoleon Buonaparte"
- "Intimations of Immortality," for example
- Laudatory verse
- Praiseful composition
- Certain Pindaric poem
- Lines of homage, collectively
- Parnassian tribute
- Laudatory lines, collectively
- Urn tribute
- "___ for Ted" (Plath)
- Pindar specialty
- Work of Pindar
- "France: An ___"
- "___ on Melancholy" (Keats)
- Exalted verse
- Certain Wordsworth work
- "___ to Psyche" (Keats)
- "--- to Joy"
- Plaint for "Billie Joe"
- Pablo Neruda work
- Verse of appreciation
- "To Spring," e.g.
- Exaltation poem
- Lofty verse
- Shelley selection
- Poem intended to be sung
- Verse on a vase?
- 36-Across work
- Coleridge wrote one to dejection
- One was to a lark
- Grecian urn piece
- "___ to Joy" (Schiller)
- Writing on a Grecian urn
- Pushkin wrote one to liberty
- Poem type
- High-flown verse
- Work of Alexander Pope
- Praising poem
- Laudatory poem
- Schoenberg: "___ to Napoleon Buonaparte"
- Lyrical work
- Lyric verse
- Lyricist's offering
- "To a ..." work
- Path: suffix
- Tribute that usually rhymes
- Addison's "___ to Creation"
- Something Ben Jonson wrote to himself
- Keats wrote one to autumn
- Dedicated composition
- Emotional dedication
- Tribute that often rhymes
- Versified rhapsody
- Celebratory verse
- Poem written to be sung
- Selection from Keats's canon
- Wordsworth's "Intimations of Immortality," e.g.
- "To Autumn" or "To Spring"
- Rhyming encomium
- Praise in verse
- Work on an urn
- Ending for Capri
- Schiller's "An die Freude," e.g.
- Shelley tribute
- Poetic pacan
- "To a Sky-Lark," e.g.
- "___ to Psyche"
- "___ to Evening"
- "___ on Indolence" (Keats)
- Work by Keats
- "___ on Indolence"
- Coleridge's "France: An ___"
- Tribute to a skylark
- Keats specialty
- It may be dedicated
- Aeolian poem
- Pindar's pride
- Keats wrote one on an urn
- Keats effort
- Celebrating work
- Poem "to" something
- "To Autumn," for one
- "Grecian Urn" lines
- Verse "to" something
- "To a ..." verse
- Ceremonious verse
- Elevated lines
- Inspired lines
- Complimentary poem
- Poem with a strophe
- Strophe's place
- Poetry class reading
- Praiseful poem
- Poem
- Creation of Keats
- Words on an urn, perhaps
- Kind words of a sort
- "To Autumn" is one
- Urn composition, perhaps
- Tribute in rhyme
- A famous one begins "Thou still unravish'd bride of quietness"
- Lofty work
- Sung poem
- Sung poem
- Pindar forte
- William Browne's "Awake, faire Muse," e.g.
- Dedicated work
- Pindar creation
- Positive poem
- Poem about a person, often
- Poetic dedication
- Expression of praise
- Salute with feet?
- An addition?
- Neruda's "___ to Conger Chowder"
- Rhapsodic verse
- 10 Across creation
- Poem for the praiseworthy
- Tribute
- Verse form
- Its title might start with "To"
- Often-flowery verse
- Poem of high praise
- Idolater's writing
- '___ on a Grecian Urn'
- Keats poem
- Poet's product
- Exalted poem
- Horace creation
- Fanciful poem
- Verse of exaltation
- Pindaric piece
- Rhyming honor
- Keatsian piece
- Worshipper's writing
- Rhyming praise
- Praise, in verse
- Versifier's praise
- Praise from 59-Across
- Praise in rhyme
- Idol's writing
- Keatsian verse
- Keatsian opus
- Honor in verse
- Admirer's recitation
- Tribute of a sort
- Rhyming accolade
- Idolater's recitation
- Praiseful rendition
- Keatsian poem
- '___ to Joy'
- Commemorative verse
- Pindar's opus
- Praiseful recitation
- Commemorative recitation
- Roast recitation
- Praise from a poetaster
- Keats opus
- Venerator's verse
- 18-Across opus
- It may be written to someone
- Adorer's writeup
- Sonnet, sometimes
- Lyric work
- Keats feat
- Lyrical poem
- Poem variety
- Pindar verse
- Idol's poem
- Pindaric effort
- Poem to a nightingale, e.g.
- Idolater's poem
- Lyric tribute
- Poem of laud
- Elevated poetic piece
- Inspired poetry
- Gentry epic "___ to Billie Joe"
- Writing on an urn?
- Paean
- Salute with stanzas
- Commemorative writing
- Pablo Neruda poem
- Pope's "___ on Solitude"
- Poetic expression of admiration
- Uplifting piece
- Bobbie Gentry's first hit was one
- Shelley output
- Keats wrote one to melancholy
- Keats verse
- Sonnet kin
- Keats or Shelley work
- Kind of poem
- Celebratory work
- Literary salute
- Keats's "___ on Melancholy"
- Kipling's "The Power of the Dog," e.g.
- Many a paean
- Poem whose title might start "To a ..."
- "___ to Billie Joe" (Bobbie Gentry hit)
- Shelley creation
- Exaltation in rhyme
- Browning or Keats creation
- Keats wrote one on melancholy
- Keats dedicated one to a nightingale
- Poetic lines of homage
- Elevated lines?
- Lesbian ___
- Jonson's work
- Shelley's "To a Skylark," e.g.
- "Alexander's Feast," e.g.
- Ovid opus
- Pablo Neruda verse form
- Pindar offering
- Shelley offering
- Breathless dedication
- Grand poem
- Tribute that rhymes
- Ben Jonson wrote one "to Himself"
- Keats wrote one to a nightingale
- Brad Paisley's "___ de Toilet (The Toilet Song)"
- Keats' urn tribute, e.g.
- Poem meant to be sung
- Shelley opus
- "To a" poem
- Inauguration recitation, maybe
- Psalms cousin
- "___ to Apollo"
- One was written to Billie Joe
- Commemorative for Billie Joe
- Suffix with electr-
- Piece to peace, for example
- Anthology entry, maybe
- Wordsworth genre
- Commemorative work
- Poem of celebration
- Praising piece
- Glowing piece?
- Keats' "___ on Melancholy"
- Poetic rhapsody
- Commemorative piece
- Poetry 101 reading
- Word often followed by "to a"
- Praise, but not prose
- Honorific poem
- Celebratory poem
- Gushing poem
- Praseful poem
- Keat's treat
- Words on an urn
- Dedication in verse
- Flowery flattery form
- Flowery composition
- Certain poem
- William Collins's "___ to Evening"
- Tribute, of a sort
- Glorifying lines
- Dedicatory opus
- Kid of poetic work
- Glorifying work
- Shelly specialty
- Wordsworth's words, perhaps
- Rapturous piece
- Shelley specialty
- Keats' "___ to a Nightingale"
- Ronsard creation
- Lyrical homage
- Poem that uplifts
- Holst's "___ to Death"
- Poet's dedication
- Verse type
- Wordsworth's "___: Intimations of Immortality"
- Laudatory work
- Piece from Pindar
- Laudatory writing
- Billie Joe is the subject of one
- Reverent poem
- Fancy poem of tribute
- Offering from Keats
- Panegyrical lines
- Lyrical piece
- Old, flowery poem
- Neruda's "___ to Wine"
- Poem that extols
- Shelley writing
- Words written in praise
- " ___ on a Grecian Urn"
- Dedicated lines of poetry
- Verse tribute
- Work by Gray or Shelley
- Poem with complex stanza forms
- What Keats wrote on an urn?
- Flowery poem
- Highbrow poem
- English 101 example
- Poem form
- Lyrical poem of tribute
- Type of 73-Across
- "___ to"
- Flowing poem
- Uplifting feet?
- Poetic words of praise
- Coleridge creation
- Keats' "___ to Psyche"
- Keats' "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness" begins one
- Middle of a yodel?
- Pindarc effort
- Often lofty poem
- Skylark poem
- Parabasis
- Lyrical poem form
- Bacchylides creation
- Poem that honors
- Pindaric composition
- "___ to liberty" by Shelley
- Thomas Gray's "The Bard," e.g.
- Shelley's "To a Skylark," for one
- Coleridge wrote one on dejection
- Appreciative poem
- Poem "to" somebody or something
- Glorifying verse
- Keats' "To Autumn," e.g.
- Stasimon, e.g.
- Lines of dedication
- Hymn relative
- Auden genre
- Part of the classic Chinese work "Shih Ching"
- Poem originally performed with music
- Rapturous work
- Thomas Gray's "___ on the Spring"
- "To Crosswords" could be one
- Form of flattering poetry
- Flowery lyrical poem
- "To a ...." work
- Neruda wrote one to salt
- Keats poem, e.g.
- English I reading, sometimes
- Lord Byron offering
- 89 Down's tribute
- Schiller's "___ to Joy"
- Shelley's "___ to Liberty"
- Keats offering
- Uplifting verse
- Praise that's not prose
- Bobbie Gentry's "___ to Billie Joe"
- Some lines of Milton
- Praise that's usually not prose
- Written tribute, of sorts
- Text source for the end of Beethoven's Ninth
- One with uplifting feet
- Sappho dedicated one to Aphrodite
- Lyric composition
- End of a feat?
- Bit of poetry
- "How Sleep the Brave," e.g.
- "Coronation ___" (Elgar composition)
- Work of Horace
- Reverential work
- Keats composed one on indolence
- Celebritory poem
- Lyric poem with complex stanza forms
- Shelley's "To the Moon," e.g.
- Laudatory piece
- Verse that may be "on" something
- It was often accompanied by a lyre in ancient Greece
- One begins "Thou still unravish'd bride of quietness"
- Coleridge piece
- Work that shows love
- Expression of enthusiastic emotion
- Neruda wrote one to wine
- Poem that's often "on" or "to" something
- Neruda's "___ to Common Things"
- Flattery in verse
- Versifier's tribute
- What might be written to a famous person
- Dedicated piece
- Poem "on" or "to" something
- Salute lines
- Work of admiration
- Sonnet's cousin
- 60's-70's record label
- Keats' "___ on Indolence"
- Bardic tribute
- Dedicated
- Words of homage
- Work of tribute
- Keats forte
- Wordy tribute
- Pablo Neruda composition
- Neruda's "___ to My Socks"
- Word often preceding "to a"
- "On ..." or "To a ..." work
- Pastoral relative
- Lord Tennyson's "The Eagle," e.g.
- Flowery lines
- It's an honor
- Words of tribute
- Some words from an admirer
- Rapturous verse
- Its first part is called a strophe
- Its title often includes "On"
- Often flowery words
- "On ..." work
- Loving verse?
- Opposite of a poetry slam?
- Verse dedicated to someone
- Piece of admiration
- Romantic poem
- "Beauty is truth, truth beauty" is part of one
- Wordsworth's "To the Cuckoo," e.g.
- Glorifying homage
- Type of written tribute
- Sappho creation
- Lionizing lines
- Poetic salute
- Homage in meter
- Wordsworth wrote one on immortality
- Tribute that may be urned?
- Complimentary composition
- One might be written to an idol
- Glorifying tribute
- Neruda wrote one about the sea
- Reverent verse
- Some words from Wordsworth
- Many a Wordsworth work
- Payment of tribute?
- Work from Keats or Shelley
- Neruda wrote one to common things
- Tribute poem
- Tributary lines
- Horatian poem
- Neruda wrote one to a large tuna
- Admiration in verse
- Work for a hero
- "___ to My Right Knee": Rita Dove poem
- What you might write to someone you like
- One was written on an urn
- Some Wordsworth words
- Poem that praises
- Verse from an admirer
- Physics ending meaning "way"
- Love lines?
- Verse of tribute
- Work of reverence
- Honorary poem
- Many a Neruda work
- Sophocles' "___ to Man"
- Commemorative lines
- Product of admiration
- Pablo Neruda's "___ to Sadness"
- Thomas Gray wrote one on Eton College
- Poem from an admirer
- Charles Kingsley's "___ to the North-East Wind"
- Burns wrote one on a louse
- Poem that might be "to" or "on"
- Love poem?
- Poem with a devotee
- Poet's tribute
- Something that might accompany a dedication
- Neruda wrote one to "things"
- Words of honor
- "___ to the Hexagon" (Chen Chen poem)
- Lines of admiration
- High words
- Labor of love?
- "___ to the Loom" (Monica Sok poem)
- "___ to Gold Teeth" (Danez Smith poem)
- Keats's tribute to an urn, e.g.
- Writing from Pablo Neruda
- Rapturous writing
- Poem such as "To Autumn"
- Sappho's "___ to Aphrodite"
- Tribute in stanzas
- Poem type with a Pindaric form
- Rhyme of praise
- "___ to the Women on Long Island" (Olivia Gatwood poem)
- Gray's "The Progress of Poesy," e.g.
- A famous one by Percy Bysshe Shelley begins "Hail to thee, blithe spirit!"
- Verse of admiration
- Lines of credit?
- Reverential poem
- Piece of poetic praise
- Pablo Neruda's "___ to Wine"
- Verse sometimes sung
- Neruda verse
- Emotional poem
- Poem paying homage
- "___ to My Socks," Pablo Neruda poem
- Lines from an admirer
- Wordsworth wrote one to duty
- Certain 8-Down poem
- 46-Down work
- Flattering poem
- Dedicatory lines
- "___ to My Family" (song by the Cranberries)
- "___ on a Grecian Urn" (Keats poem)
- "___ to the Female Reproductive System" (Sharon Olds poem)
- Work requiring dedication?
- Wordsworth poem
- Many a poem by Sharon Olds
- The Gwendolyn Brooks poem "Paul Robeson," for example
- "homage to my hips," e.g.
- "___ to Thought" (Sharon Olds poem)
- "___ to a Superhero," Weird Al's parody of "Piano Man"
- It may be addressed to someone
- One could be titled "To a Tee"
- Glorifying poem
- Linguistic tribute
- "___ to Sequoyah" (Alexander Posey poem)
- "___ to Prince" (Hanif Abdurraqib poem)
- Onetime record label with a poetic name
- Wordsworth wrote one about a cuckoo
- Bobbie Gentry wrote one to Billie Joe
- "Crown: An ___ to the Fresh Cut"
- Horace's "Hymn to Mercury," for one
- Tribute that may rhyme
- Admiring poem
- "___ to Our Ocean" (Amanda Gorman poem)
- Glowing lines
- Sharon Olds's "___ to Dirt"
- Many a Sharon Olds poem
- Lyrical dedication
- "___ to the Head Nod" (Elizabeth Acevedo poem)
- Amanda Gorman's "___ to Our Ocean"
- "___ to my blackness" (Shockley poem)
- Clifton's "homage to my hips," e.g.
- Poet Amanda Gorman's "___ to Our Ocean"
- Literary homage
- Phillis Wheatley wrote one "to Neptune"
- "Borderline (An ___ to Self Care)" (Solange song)
- Pablo Neruda wrote one "to a large tuna in the market"
- "___ of Girls' Things": poem by Sharon Olds
- Written honor
- It traditionally starts with a strophe
- Verse that exalts its subject
- "___ to Joy": segment of Beethoven's Ninth Symphony
- "___ to My Father's Boots" (Cornelius Eady essay)
- Elizabeth Acevedo's "___ to the Head Nod"
- "___ to 9th & O NW" (Clint Smith poem)
- "___ to a Superhero" (Weird Al Yankovic parody of "Piano Man")
- Poem written "on" or "to" something
- "___ to a Nightingale" (Keats poem)
- Paean in verse
- Neruda's "___ to Salt"
- Ceremonious lyric poem
- "___ to my Right Knee" (Rita Dove poem)
- Flattering verse
- "Dejection" is a famous one
- First word of the European Union anthem's title
- Work of appreciation
- Poem with a dedication
- "___ to My Shoes" (Francisco X. Alarcon poem)
- Flattering lines
- Rita Dove's "___ to My Right Knee"
- "___ to Autocorrect" (Martha Silano poem)
- "An ___ to Bats" (Gertrude Sturdle poem)
- Uplifting offering
- Poem of adoration
- Lucille Clifton's "Homage to My Hips," for one
- Dedicated address?
- Ogden Nash's "Kind of an ___ to Duty"
- Lorca work
- Each poem in the book "Black Roses"
- Work on something you like?
- Each poem in the book "Black Oak"
- "___ to a Koala Bear" (Paul McCartney song)
- "___ to Herb Kent" (Jamila Woods poem)
- "___ to Dirt": Sharon Olds poem
- O'Shaughnessy poem that begins, "We are the music makers, / And we are the dreamers of dreams"
- "___ to the Tampon" (Sharon Olds poem)
- "___ to Kool-Aid" (Marcus Jackson poem)
- "___ to a Yellow Onion" (C. Dale Young poem)
- "___ to Ethiopia" (Paul Laurence Dunbar poem)
- Amit Majmudar's "___ to a Drone"
- "___ to Suburbia" (Eavan Boland poem)
- Work whose name comes from the Greek for "sing"
- Work on something you love?
- A famous one begins "Season of mists and mellow fruitfulness"
- One might be Horatian
- "___ to My Family": 1994 hit for The Cranberries
- Lucille Clifton's "homage to my hips," e.g.
- Dedicated lyric poem
- Poem in tribute
- "___ to a Grasshopper" (Pedro Pietri poem)
- Loving words
- Respectful poem
- "___ to Browsing the Web" (Marcus Wicker poem)
- "___ to the Loop-de-Loop" (Clint Smith poem)
- Venerating verse
- "To" words
- To work?
- "An ___ We Owe" (Amanda Gorman poem)
- "___ to the Selfie" (Megan Falley poem)
- Amanda Gorman's "An ___ We Owe"
- "___ to Goby" (Juliana Spahr poem)
- Written homage
- Pablo Neruda wrote one to a large tuna in the market
Last Seen In:
- New York Times - December 20, 2024
- USA Today - December 17, 2024
- USA Today - December 02, 2024
- LA Times - November 10, 2024
- New York Times - November 07, 2024
- New York Times - October 31, 2024
- USA Today - October 14, 2024
- LA Times - October 11, 2024
- New York Times - October 09, 2024
- USA Today - October 02, 2024
- LA Times - September 25, 2024
- LA Times - September 21, 2024
- LA Times - September 11, 2024
- USA Today - September 09, 2024
- LA Times - September 07, 2024
- New York Times - September 05, 2024
- USA Today - August 26, 2024
- New York Times - August 26, 2024
- New York Times - August 14, 2024
- LA Times - August 08, 2024
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