| SWINBURNE | Algernon ?, English lyric poet whose works include 1882's Tristram of Lyonesse (9) |
| HOLDERLIN | Friedrich, German lyric poet whose works include Hyperion (9) |
| SHAY | Tristram of literature |
| ESSEN | Where many Germans are turning back from Lyonesse |
| BRACKNELL | Lady ---, aunt of Algernon Moncrieff in Oscar Wilde's The Importance Of Being Earnest (9) |
| ISRAELS | Jozef ?, painter of the Hague School whose works include 1882's A Peasant Family at the Table |
| OYECOMOVA | 1971 top 20 hit with no English lyrics |
| LABANIMAL | The title character of "Flowers for Algernon," e.g. |
| NOVELETTE | "Flowers for Algernon," e.g. |
| ROBERTBURNS | Scottish lyric poet whose best known poems include Auld Lang Syne and Tam o' Shanter |
| BURNS | Robert ___, Scottish lyric poet whose poems include Tam o' Shanter |
| SARATEASDALE | Pulitzer Prize-winning American lyric poet whose poems include There Will Come Soft Rains |
| SARA | Pulitzer Prize-winning American lyric poet whose poems include There Will Come Soft Rains |
| TEASDALE | Pulitzer Prize-winning American lyric poet whose poems include There Will Come Soft Rains |
| WEIR | Author of English lyrics of "O Canada" |
| MCKUEN | Rod ___, American poet, songwriter, composer and singer whose English lyrics for a Jacques Brel song gave Terry Jacks a worldwide hit in 1974 (Seasons in the Sun) |
| HEDDLE | ____ Nash, English lyric tenor, born in 1894 (6) |
| ARE | First word in the English lyrics of "Frere Jacques" |
| THOU | "___ Swell" (Rodgers-Hart standard with a smattering of Old English lyrics) |
| ABBA | Band whose female members learned their earliest English lyrics phonetically |