| LONGFELLOW | Henry Wadsworth -; "fireside poet" who wrote The Wreck of the Hesperus,The Village Blacksmith and The Song of Hiawatha (10) |
| INNES | Hammond ____ wrote The Wreck of the Mary Deare |
| ANGLE | A member of a people from N. Germany who invaded and settled large parts of England in the 5th and th centuries (5) |
| TOBY | Country singer Keith who appeared on the finales of "The Late Late Show With Craig Ferguson" and "Th |
| ALDI | German supermarket chain founded by brothers Karl and Th eo in 1946 (4) |
| SINEWY | Like the village blacksmith's hands |
| ANSWERED | 'But the father ___ never a word, A frozen corpse was he' (Wreck of the Hesperus) (8) |
| WRECK | The - of the Hesperus; poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (5) |
| CAPEANN | Setting for Longfellow's "The Wreck of the Hesperus" |
| REEF | Wreck of the Hesperus cause |
| HIAWATHA | 'By the shore of Gitche Gumee; By the shining Big-Sea-Water; At the doorway of his wigwam; In the pleasant Summer morning,' stood this creation of poet Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |
| HESPERIDES | In Greek mythology, daughters of Hesperus who kept watch over the garden of the golden apples (10) |
| HESPERUS | 'The Wreck Of The ---', poem by Henry Wadsworth Longfellow included in the 1841 collection Ballads And Other Poems (8) |
| DEERE | John ---, American blacksmith and manufacturer who invented the first commercially successful steel plough in 1837 (5) |
| VESPER | Latin for evening; the planet Venus as the evening star; or, the Roman equivalent of Greek Hesperus (6) |
| RICHTER | Johann, German author who, under the name Jean Paul wrote the novel Hesperus (7) |
| ETTY | William -; artist who painted Hesperus and The Bridge of Sighs (4) |
| EVENINGSTAR | One of the names (along with Hesperus) for Venus when it appears in the west evening sky after sunse |
| OSSEO | 'Son of the Evening Star' in Henry Wadsworth Longfellow's epic 1855 poem The Song of Hiawatha |
| THATCHROOFEDVILLAGE | Evangeline: A Tale of Acadie: "Where is the ___-___ ___, the home of Acadian farmers..." - Henry Wadsworth Longfellow |