| HAYTER | James -, actor who starred in 1952 comedy-drama film The Pickwick Papers (6) |
| JAMESHAYTER | Actor who starred in 1952 comedy-drama film The Pickwick Papers (5,6) |
| TAYLOR | Robert, actor who starred in 1952 film Ivanhoe (6) |
| ALFRED | Strolling actor in the 1837 novel The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens (6,6) |
| JINGLE | Strolling actor in the 1837 novel The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens (6,6) |
| SAWYER | Bob --, character in 'The Pickwick Papers' (6) |
| WELLER | Sam ?, servant of Mr Pickwick in 1836 Charles Dickens novel The Posthumous Papers of the Pickwick Club |
| SERIAL | Dickens' "The Pickwick Papers," originally |
| QUIETMAN | The -, 1952 comedy-drama film for which John Ford won a Best Director Oscar |
| PAPERS | The Pickwick_, Dickens' first novel (6) |
| MASON | James, actor who starred in the 1962 film Lolita (5) |
| SERJEANTBUZFUZ | Barrister who represents Mrs Bardell in her suit against Samuel Pickwick in The Pickwick Papers by Charles Dickens (8,6) |
| SAMWELLER | Shoeshiner who features in the Dickens novel The Pickwick Papers (3,6) |
| CAAN | James -, actor who starred in Misery and Rollerball (4) |
| BOLAM | James --, actor who starred as Jack in New Tricks (5) |
| DICKENS | He wrote serialized novels beginning with The Pickwick Papers, and his name was sometimes used to describe the squalid conditions in which the lower classes lived. |
| EATANSWILL | Scene of the parliamentary elections in 'The Pickwick Papers' (10) |
| DULWICH | Suburb of London to which Samuel Pickwick retires at the end of The Pickwick Papers |
| IPSWICH | Town visited by Mr Pickwick in Chapter 22 of Charles Dickens' The Pickwick Papers (1837) (7) |
| SAM | Forename of a cockney bootblack in The Pickwick Papers, after whom the term "Wellerism" derives (3) |