| CHARCOALPIT | In a 19th-century North American forest, a round area about 35 feet wide, used for converting wood into fuel |
| WIDOWSWALK | Rooftop platform built on 19th Century North American coastal houses (6,4) |
| TIMBERWOLF | Grey animal found in North American forests (6,4) |
| POWERPACK | Might load bundle, it's used for converting supply of electricity (5,4) |
| FARO | French gambling card game popular in 19th century North America (4) |
| SHEPHERDSARISE | Christmas carol first recorded in a 19th-century manuscript from the parish of Winterbome Zelston in Dorset (9,5) |
| ELOI | Earth dwellers of the 8,028th century in a 19th-century book |
| EMMA | Younger sister of Isabella in a 19th-century novel |
| SOUTH | One side in a 19th-century war, with "the" |
| MEG | Eldest March sister, in a 19th-century novel |
| PEEL | John, Cumbrian huntsman who was celebrated in a 19th-century song (4) |
| IDEAL | The nature of Sir Robert Chiltern in a 19th-century play title |
| WOOD | Xylem used in xylography; a small forest; a bowling bowl; or, a pulpit (4) |
| DIRECTCURRENT | Edison Electric Light Company's side, in a nineteenth-century "war" |
| KARENINA | Vronsky's lover, in a nineteenth-century novel |
| CUBICYARD | One measures three feet long by three feet wide by three feet deep |
| STERE | A timber measure, about 35 cubic feet (5) |
| KERALA | A state in south-west India (pop about 35 million) (6) |
| FAUNA | Derived from the name of the sister of a Roman god of forests, a word for the assemblage of all animal life in a particular region or time (5) |
| ABYSSINIANCAT | Pit in old South American forest finally swallowing a pet |