| MADEWARSHERE | In 2.2, Antony discusses the political landscape of the country with Caesar. He says, "Truth is that Fulvia, To have me out of Egypt," did something. What does he say she did? |
| TELLING | "The greatest thing about ___ the truth is that nobody ever believes it": Dorothy L. Sayers (7) |
| CARTOGRAPHERS | They may need to get the political landscape mapped out afresh (13) |
| DARED | Didn't say "Truth" |
| AUGUSTUS | This puzzle's clues refer to "Caesar." He was the adopted son of Julius Caesar. What is the name by which, historically speaking, he is best known? |
| MARCUSBRUTUS | In Julius Caesar, he is one of the conspirators. He is also Portia's husband. |
| OPALS | National gemstones of the country with the capital Canberra; one of which is worn in Lady Hermione's |
| ACADIANS | The World Heritage site designated as the Landscape of Grand Pre, in Nova Scotia, celebrates the heritage of these French settlers of North America, some of whom became the Cajuns of southern Louisian |
| TRENCH | Ditch or channel such as any one of the rhynes forming part of the landscape of the Somerset Levels (6) |
| HUNGRY | Similar to the name of the country with the capital Budapest, is a word meaning empty, famished, ravenous or undernourished (6) |
| MERCUTIO | In 2.2, Romeo is in Juliet's courtyard and looks up at the balcony. Romeo says, "He jests at scars that never felt a wound." Who is he referring to? |
| SCOTSPINES | Dominating the landscape of the Caledonian forests, national trees of a country whose other identifying symbols include thistle, tartan and the unicorn (5,5) |
| ELM | English -; a once common species of tree forming part of the landscape of the British countryside, Ulmus procera (3) |
| INDOLOGIST | A person who studies the history and culture of the country with the capital New Delhi (10) |
| SCOTS | - pine; national tree of the country with the capital Edinburgh; the world's most widely distributed conifer (5) |
| SESSHU | Japanese Zen monk said to have drawn a rat in the dust with his own tears - his masterful use of ink in the sumi-e manner can be observed in his Landscape of Four Seasons (6) |
| MUSTERMEN | In 2.2, the Duke of York is informed of the Duke of Hereford's arrival. What does he command these three gentlemen to do? |
| HEDGEROW | Flora-rich border/habitat forming the landscape of the countryside, preserved though a traditional pleaching method advocated by the Prince of Wales (8) |
| WEB | An arachnid's trap to whose intricate network of threads the vast mind- and time-entrapping digital landscape of the internet is likened (3) |
| CONSTABLE | Painter from Suffolk remembered for his landscapes of the English countryside including The Hay Wain, The Cornfield (The Drinking Boy), Dedham Vale and Salisbury Cathedral from The Bishops Ground (9) |