| MEDICO | A trefoil such as lucerne - from myself and little Richard (6) |
| ITUP | Connection between Razorlight, Orange Juice and Little Richard (3-2-2) |
| RIP | Connection between Razorlight, Orange Juice and Little Richard (3-2-2) |
| MEMO | Note from myself to Maureen. (4) |
| FINDO | I split from myself in Dorset |
| CLOVER | A trefoil (6) |
| FLORET | Small flower, one picked from cultivated trefoil (6) |
| CLUB | Playing card whose symbol is a trefoil |
| ALFALFA | Plant used as cattle fodder, also known as lucerne (7) |
| TOMTHUMB | "Pollex"-sized hero of English folklore whose tininess inspired the names of various small plants and vegetables, including a birdsfoot trefoil, a butterhead lettuce, a dwarf snapdragon and a nasturti |
| CLUBS | Suit in a pack of cards denoted by a black trefoil; or, objects used in the game with a name once supposed to mean "gentlemen only, ladies forbidden" (5) |
| REDCLOVER | Called "honey-stalks" by Shakespeare, a wild flower with trefoil leaves and pinkish-purple blooms, abundant in hay meadows (3,6) |
| BACON | Cured gammon-, ham- or pancetta-like flitch, known to the French as lard and imagined as the reddish tips of the egg yolk-yellow flowers of the birdsfoot trefoil (5) |
| EGGS | - - - - and bacon, trefoil producing oranoe and vellow metals (4) |
| THUMB | Tom -; folklore character; a type of bit for a horse; or, another name for bird's-foot trefoil (5) |
| BIRDSFOOT | The wild pea Lotus corniculatus is also known as eggs and bacon or ___ trefoil (5, 4) |
| DAISY | Ox-eye ___ ; associated with moon goddess Artemis, wild flower of summer meadows and verges, often growing with bird's-foot trefoil and clover (5) |
| FUMITORY | From the Latin meaning "smoke of the earth", arable plant with seeds eaten by the turtle dove with those of the scarlet pimpernel, clover, birdsfoot trefoil and chickweed (8) |
| FOOT | The wildflower Lotus corniculatus is better known as bird's ___ trefoil (4) |
| LIFT | Pull up and remove rose from trefoils (4) |