| STARCHART | Map of night sky or horoscope (4,5) |
| STARRY | Twinkling (of night sky) |
| QUADRANT | Moon or horoscope division |
| LEO | Lion in jungle or horoscope (3) |
| METEORITE | See this crossing the sky or meet it broken on top of earth |
| YORKSHIRE | Rent subject to Sky -- or new division in England (9) |
| CELESTIAL | Relating to the sky or the heavens (9) |
| FIRMAMENT | The sky or the heavens (9) |
| CAERULEUM | Dark blue, like the sky, or Britons' war paint: omnes ... se Britanni vitro inficiunt, quod ____ efficit colorem, Caes. BG 5.14 |
| SERENE | From the Latin for "clear", a word used to mean fair, pure or unclouded, as of the sky or the air; calm, peaceful and tranquil; or, as part of a royal title, honoured (6) |
| HEAVEN | Name for the firmament or apparent abode of God, regarded as beyond the sky; or, by extension, a place or state of supreme bliss (6) |
| OPTICS | Word, from "seen" and perhaps "eye", for the science of light from the sun and the sky; or, pub measurers on inverted bottles of gin, rum or rye (6) |
| ALAN | Rickman of 'Eye in the Sky,' or Parsons who wrote 'Eye in the Sky' |
| GREY | Neutral shade of brain matter, an overcast sky or the proverbial pound of the older generation (4) |
| AETHER | Personification of the sky or upper air breathed by the Olympians. |
| BLUEST | Most Navy or Sky or Powder |
| WELKIN | Sky or region of clouds (6) |
| BLUE | Colour of the sky or the sea (4) |
| LOOP | A picot; an aerobatic manoeuvre in which an aircraft describes a circle in the sky; or, a 360-degree turn or inversion on a rollercoaster (4) |
| AZURE | From "lapis lazuli", a cerulean- or sapphire-like colour; heraldic blue; a clear sky; or, its cloudless hue (5) |