Answer: DREAR

AnswerCrossword Clue
DREARDismal, to Keats
DREAR"The House of Dies ..." (Virginia Hamilton Edgar-winning mystery)
DREARGloomy, to Goldsmith
DREARMelancholy, to Milton
DREARDismal, to Dylan
DREARMelancholy, to Keats
DREARCheerless, to Keats
DREARPoetically grim
DREARDismal, to poets
DREARDismal, to Donne
DREARDismal, in poetry
DREARMelancholy, to poets
DREARGloomy
DREARBleak, in poems
DREARSorrowful, poetically
DREARDrab, in poems
DREARSad
DREARDoleful, to poets
DREARDoleful
DREARGloomy, to a poet
dreargloom / dreary, also DREARE, DRERE
dreardreary
DREAR"November's sky is chill and ...": Sir Walter Scott
DREAR"... Winter fills the naked skies": Shelley
DREARLike the November sky, to Scott
DREAR"... down the vast edges ... ...": Arnold
DREARPoetically gloomy
DREARGloom
DREARDismal, to a bard
DREARCheerless
DREARGloomy, to the Bard
DREARCheerless, to the bard
DREARGloomy, to the bard
DREARGloomy, to a bard
DREAR"How pallid, chill and ...!": Keats
DREARDull, in poetry
DREARGloomy, literarily
DREARGloomy, in verse
DREARBleak, in verse
DREARGloomy, to poets