| MADNESS | Folly and woe with son becoming married (7) |
| PLAYBOY | Drama with son becoming woman-chaser |
| SEEMLY | Becoming married in Home Counties cathedral city (6) |
| ORGANISM | Love is gran becoming married to any old creature (8) |
| ASHIEST | Son becoming cold, most pale and most painful (7) |
| ACHIEST | Son becoming cold, most pale and most painful (7) |
| ROUSHAM | Country house in Oxfordshire remodelled by William Kent along with its garden which contains the latter's "Eyecatcher" folly and also statues by Peter Scheemakers (7) |
| AWESOME | Mixture of woes with Frenchman in A&E? That's breathtaking (7) |
| BURGEON | Doctor's son becoming a bishop appears to develop rapidly |
| TONGUETWISTER | Terrible woe with stuttering? This won't help! (6, 7) |
| ERIN | "O, ___, mourn with grief and woe": James Joyce |
| JESTER | Word for a minstrel or reciter of romances; a professional buffoon, clown or court fool; a jeerer, joker or mocker; or, one who generally acts with folly and plays the tomfool (6) |
| SPINS | Drunk's woe, with "the" |
| DEBT | "A prolific mother of folly and of crime," per Benjamin Disraeli |
| ONCEINAWAY | Rarely any woe with Cain involved |
| ACHE | Teen's woe, with heart (4) |
| IMPRUDENCE | Folly and rudeness — there's little right in that |
| INHUMANITY | Be busy skewering folly and cruelty |
| YIPS | Athlete's woe (with "the") |
| BYEBYEBLACKBIRD | "Pack up all my care and woe here I go singing low", they sang in this classic from Ray Henderson and Mort Dixon (3,3,9) |