| RIBALD | Bawdy drunken laird entertaining bishop (6) |
| ADMIRAL | Officer Mike a drunken laird grabs |
| STARRY | Thus Vincent's night visit, entertaining bishop (6) |
| NOBBLE | Get at titled person entertaining bishop (6) |
| ALBERT | Attentive when entertaining Bishop and Prince |
| DUBBED | Named theologian entertaining bishops in posh quarter |
| LANDED | Came ashore like a laird (6) |
| ANNEXE | Laird removed from Alexandrine wing (6) |
| MISERY | Intense unhappiness of avaricious laird at first ignored (6) |
| SQUIRM | Wriggle uncomfortably when laird changes finale (6) |
| RADIAL | Tyre used by a laird, perhaps (6) |
| BRIDAL | British laird ran from a wedding (6) |
| BONNET | Be it blue, for Easter, heraldically velvety, tied under the chin, Tudor or worn by a girl, lady, laird or maid, it's a beret, cap, hat or tam, named for the cloth from which it was first made (6) |
| ARCHIE | Laird of Glenbogle in Monarch of the Glen (------ MacDonald) |
| PIPERS | Laird's musicians |
| REBEL | Dissenter's dance entertaining bishop (5) |
| TABLA | Drums making rhythmical pattern entertaining bishop |
| CHAMBERMAID | A hotel worker, I am charmed about entertaining bishop |
| TREBLES | Elders perhaps entertaining bishop with fifty singers (7) |
| ADMIRABLE | Praiseworthy naval officer, entertaining bishop, European (9) |