| EPISTOLARY | English piece having advanced lines in the form of letters (10) |
| OGEE | Cross-section of moulding in the form of letter S (4) |
| TERSE | A concise form of letters easily seen here (5) |
| GUNGADIN | Piece having to wander in Kipling poem (5,3) |
| PENCILS | Writers quiet about piece having naff start (7) |
| SATIRE | Write crucial piece having taken seat with anger (6) |
| MARKETABLE | Assess English piece of furniture as appropriate for sale (10) |
| MACHINEGUN | Relative has mostly porcelain English piece for Breda, the fiery type - it'll knock them dead! (7,3) |
| REPERTOIRE | Report unbridled passion about English pieces to be played? (10) |
| MEANSTREAK | Sadly, man retakes pieces, having a tendency to be unkind |
| HERRINGBONE | Pattern consisting of columns of parallel lines, with all the lines in one column sloping one way and all the lines in the next column sloping the other (11) |
| ABOVEPAR | Almost from the start, English piece of text getting bad score on course |
| AGEDNESS | The condition of having advanced years (8) |
| HEXAGRAM | Any of the sixty-four figures made up of six parallel whole or broken lines in the I Ching, or Book of Changes (8) |
| VERNE | Author's form of letter about the navy |
| EPISTLE | A New Testament book in form of letter (7) |
| DOHA | Silly me having advanced capital in Asia (4) |
| TSELIOT | Which poet wrote the lines "In the room the women come and go, talking of Michelangelo"? (1,1,5) |
| STANZA | Lines in the stadium curtailed for the final around the 1st (6) |
| FURROW | One of many lines in the field of farming (6) |