| AMATORIA | Amorous, like the ars that got Ovid into trouble |
| ROMANTIC | Amorous like Caligula: an uncontrollable jerk! (8) |
| ANAGRAMS | The ars magna of crossword setters? (8) |
| OVID | Roman poet whose works include the Ars Amatoria (4) |
| HORACE | Roman ode writer who penned the Ars Poetica |
| DEMONS | Supernatural beings named in the Ars Goetia |
| MAGNANIMI | High-spirited, like Ovid's bridle-biting horse, Ars Amatoria 1.20 |
| ONEBC | When Ovid wrote his "Ars Amatoria," approximately |
| ADVISOR | Counsel of Ovid (ars horrendus) (7) |
| MGM | "Ars Gratia Artis" is the motto of which film company? (1,1,1) |
| CORAMPOPULO | In view of the people, Horace Ars Poetica 185 |
| VULNERA | Injuries: quae dedit et dabit Diana populo, Ovid Ars Amatoria 1.262 |
| DICENDI | Ars ____: the art of speaking (gen. gerund) |
| ERRANT | "Young love is ____, but it needs to get around" (Ovid, Ars Amatoria) |
| COA | From Cos, often of silk clothing, vide eg Ovid Ars Am. 2.298 |
| LUSOR | Player, gambler: ne perdiderit, non cessat perdere ____, Ovid, Ars Am. 1.451 |
| RESPICIT | Looks back: nati ____ alas Daedalus, Ovid Ars Amatoria 2.73f |
| PIA | Dutiful epithet eg, Penelope in Ovid, Ars Amatoria 1.3.35 |
| STUPOR | Dullness, stupidity, vide eg Ovid, Ars Am. 2.361: quis ____ hic, Menelae, fuit? |
| GRAIS | A Muse gave wit "to the Greeks", cf. Hor. Ars Poetica 323f. |