| EMANATE | Come out to the Englishman wih tea, perhaps (7) |
| ROSES | "Jean, Jean, ... are red; All of the leaves have gone green; And the clouds are so low; You can touch them and so; Come out to the meadow, Jean" |
| EMERGENCY | Come out to the northern city outskirts in a crisis |
| EREMITE | Before the Englishman turned recluse (7) |
| TRAINEE | Apprentice finding means of transport wih ease, say (7) |
| UPAHILL | Hugh Grant film, The Englishman Who Went ... But Came Down a Mountain (2,1,4) |
| MUFFINS | Greek letter to party in Sweden arrives with afternoon tea perhaps (7) |
| EXISSE | To be outside the eleven? To have come out (to bat?) |
| INSIPID | One new sample of tea perhaps needs identification ___ flavourless (7) |
| OVEREAT | Stuff finished before tea perhaps (7) |
| ONADATE | Taking someone to dinner, Oscar? And tea, perhaps! (2,1,4) |
| BAPTISE | Christen bachelor and sip tea perhaps (7) |
| CHARADE | A riddle, sweetened tea perhaps is one (7) |
| INFUSER | From sun, fire device for making tea perhaps (7) |
| GARTH | The -; mountain on the outskirts of Cardiff said to have been the inspiration for The Englishman Who Went up a Hill But Came Down a Mountain (5) |
| OATMEAL | Source of biscuits put round at tea, perhaps |
| DRINKTO | Make toast and tea, perhaps, using odd tool |
| RIVERS | The Ghost, the Slave and the Englishman |
| ATHERTON | The Englishman who got out to Mcgrath 19 times in Test matches. (8) |
| SPROUT | Come out to get something from the garden (6) |