| KENTISHRAG | Form of limestone visible in cliffs at the Cinque Port Hythe |
| DOVES | Where there are white cliffs at the South you'll find a lot of birds (5) |
| SCARP | Steep slope or cliff at the edge of a plateau (5) |
| FITFULHEAD | 928-feet tall cliff at the southwest corner of mainland Shetland (6,4) |
| EXE | Last June, a former partner of mine drowned in the river by the cliffs at Brampford Speke (3) |
| SANDSTONE | This sad sonnet was written about the red cliffs at Sidmouth (9) |
| CAVES | Large holes in cliffs, prehistoric dwellings (5) |
| BOWLEDOVER | Amazed to play Viola, line's forgotten in Cliff's place (6,4) |
| SANDWICH | Town in Kent, near the Strait of Dover; one of the Cinque Ports (8) |
| DEAL | One of the Cinque Ports in Kent, where Julius Caesar is said to have landed in 55BC (4) |
| HYTHE | One of the Cinque Ports, located west of Folkstone |
| RYE | In East Sussex, one of the Cinque Ports (3) |
| WARDEN | Governor of the Cinque Ports has this title |
| NICE | Pleasant to be back in the Cinque Ports (4) |
| DOVER | One of the Cinque Ports (5) |
| CHALK | Form of limestone used in sticks to write on blackboards or in cubes to apply to the ends of snooker cues (5) |
| HASTINGS | Seaside town and Cinque Port in East Sussex whose history, including its now-ruined Norman motte and bailey castle established by William the Conqueror in 1066, is stitched into the very fabric of the |
| MARBLE | From "sparkle, shine" and with the variety "pavonazzo", named after Italian for "peacock", a form of limestone used in architecture and sculpture; or, a block, carving, statue, taw etc, made of said r |
| FIVE | The number of pips on the "cinque" side of a gaming die (4) |
| FOLKESTONE | Limb of Dover in the Confederation of Cinque ports, and HQ of Saga |