| LOIR | Edible dormouse |
| GLIS | Genus whose only living member is the edible dormouse |
| LEROT | European dormouse (anagram of TOLER) |
| EDIBLE | ___ dormouse, Glis glis (6) |
| TREACLE | Syrup well described by Dormouse (7) |
| AAMILNE | "The Dormouse and the Doctor" poet |
| SLEEPER | Dormouse is unexpected success. (7) |
| TEAPOT | Head covering for the Dormouse |
| UROSOME | The tail end of a decapitated dormouse cut up (7) |
| SQUEAKED | Sounded like door, mouse or dormouse? (8) |
| ODOURS | The setter, dropping out from playing 'Dormouse', gets bouquets (6) |
| TEAPARTY | The Dormouse slept through most of it |
| THEMADHATTER | Strangely, he dreamt that he drank with a dormouse (3,3,6) |
| TEA | What the Mad Hatter pours on the Dormouse to wake it up |
| FORGOODMEASURE | Found a dormouse scurrying inside as well (3,4,7) |
| HAZEL | Associated with a species of dormouse, an often coppiced tree with filberts represented in heraldic avellane crosses and with catkins or lamb's-tails in spring; or, the greenish-brownish colour of sai |
| ARBOREAL | Tree-dwelling, like a hazel dormouse (8) |
| HAZELNUT | Whether eaten by a dormouse, squirrel or woodpecker in the wild or by a human in chocolate spread or a gold foil-wrapped Ferrero praline ball, it is a cob, filbert or noisette (8) |
| WELL | , 19 across, 8 Quite satisfied with treacle, according to the Dormouse (4,7) |
| GOOD | Edible |