| POUTY | Like one in the sulks |
| INSIDER | Rides in awkward fashion, like one in the know (7) |
| ARKS | Boats like one in the Book of Genesis |
| ELDERLY | Getting on, like one in the hedgerow? (7) |
| CLEARING | Weather getting brighter, like one in the woods? (8) |
| THUMP | Plod heavily in tango, getting the sulks |
| STEPNEY | Long fits of the sulks, being sent back here in London |
| EXPLETIVE | Former student in fit of the sulks, I've produced swear-word (9) |
| HUMP | From "lump of bread", word for a gibbosity on a camel or person's back, thus a fit of depression or the sulks, when one's back is up through annoyance or despondency (4) |
| PET | Favourite; fit of the sulks |
| GROUCHO | Marx has the sulks, duck (7) |
| POUTS | Has the sulks |
| TEPID | I'd followed the sulks up, being less than warm (5) |
| TOUT | A spy or informer; a fit of the sulks; a person who buys tickets to resell them for a profit; or, a tipster who secretly watches racehorses to gain profitable information (4) |
| DRAGON | Keep going longer than one would like, like one in TV den (6) |
| SALIVATION | Watering at the mouth like one in Deliverance (10) |
| OVINE | Like one in six sheep? Just the opposite! (5) |
| LISTED | Protected, like a building like one in Pisa (6) |
| LUPINE | Increase in rank, like one in a pack? (6) |
| ERRED | Queen, like one in Through the Looking Glass, went wrong |