| BAKINGPOWDER | Local lying in The Sun contacts prisoner-of-war and the German agent responsible for The Rising (6,6) |
| SEKHMET | In Egyptian religion, she was a goddess of war and the destroyer of the enemies of the sun god Re. She was associated both with disease and with healing and medicine. She was the companion of the god |
| POWDERED | Prisoner of war and German communist in ground (8) |
| BAKINGSODA | Graduate from The Palace on the drink with agent responsible for The Rising (6,4) |
| HAROLD | Veteran Neighbours character who is now living peacefully at Eirini Rising (6,6) |
| SYPHILIS | What disease was called "the French disease" by the British and Germans, "the Neapolitan disease" by the French, "the Polish disease" by the Russians and "the German disease" by the Polish? (8) |
| INSURGENTS | Ruins sculpture for the men and women responsible for The Rising (10) |
| THEODYSSEY | Homer's epic tale of the years after the Trojan War and the return of the hero to Ithaca (3,7) |
| ACHILLES | Greek hero of the Trojan War and the tendon connecting the calf muscle to the heel |
| THIRDREPUBLIC | Governmental system of France between the fall of Napoleon III in 1870 and the German occupation of 1940 (5,8) |
| YEAST | Alley cats call out one of those responsible for The Rising (5) |
| RECIPROCAL | Turns up, the foreign army unit isn't finished getting diamonds at the end of the war - and the feeling is mutual (10) |
| BAWDEN | Author of children's novels including The Birds on the Trees, Carrie's War and The Peppermint Pig (6) |
| PLANNINGOFFICER | Programming for Mastermind with agent responsible for sorting questions regarding any new developments (8,7) |
| REVOLUTION | Rebel admits underground leader has a fair amount of the vision for The Rising (10) |
| YEASTCAKE | Agent responsible for rising? Yes, aged Conservative manning post (5,4) |
| BINYON | My work was on war and the point of writing about that in verse (6) |
| TAN | What one gets lying in the sun with Emily in Paris star Elizabeth (3) |
| BOWER | From the Old English for "dwelling" and the German for "birdcage", a shady spot under trees in a wood or a garden; a picturesque country cottage; or, a lady's private boudoir (5) |
| PITY | Wilfred Owen's subject: "War, and the ___ of War" (4) |