| BAKEDINAPIE | "Sing a song of sixpence, a pocketful of rye; Four and twenty blackbirds ..." (5,2,1,3) |
| RYE | "Sing a song of sixpence, a pocket full of ___ ..." |
| OFRYE | "Sing a song of sixpence, a pocket full __ ___". (2,3) |
| CYANIDE | In Agatha Christie's A Pocketful of Rye, what poison killed Mrs Fortescue? (7) |
| LOAF | It's more than a pocketful of rye |
| GRAN | Relation of wholewheat bread without a majority of rye (4) |
| EERY | Weird evening starts with a blend of rye (4) |
| LYDD | Kent town east of Rye (4) |
| ANDA | '___ pocketful of rye' |
| DAINTY | Kind of dish set before the king in the rhyme Sing A Song Of Sixpence |
| PARLOUR | Location of the queen in the nursery rhyme Sing a Song of Sixpence (7) |
| BREADANDHONEY | What the queen was eating in the nursery rhyme Sing a Song of Sixpence (5,3,5) |
| SIXPENCE | Four and twenty blackbirds were baked in a pie in the nursery rhyme, Sing A Song Of ... |
| PIE | Dainty dish in "Sing a Song of Sixpence" |
| TESTER | A tizzy or sixpence; a quizzer or examiner; a canopy over a four-poster bed; or, a miniature pot of paint, a sample or a scent, for one to try (6) |
| SPRAT | An old word for a sixpence; a small herring-like brisling; or, with "weather", the dark days of November and December, said to be favourable for catching such a fish (5) |
| BARBARY | In 4.3, Othello dispatches Desdemona to her room. Desdemona says she will sing a song of "willow," which she explains the origins of thus: "My mother had a maid call'd ___... And she died singing it." |
| CAPRA | Director of "A Pocketful of Miracles" |
| POSY | One of a pocketful of flowers |
| SAHL | Comedian with the album "Sing a Song of Watergate ... Apocryphal of Lie!" |