| WAITOMO | Location of famous glow-worm caves (7) |
| WILLIAM | Forename of a Lake poet who described glow-worms as Earth-born stars, an evening as beauteous and calm, a multitude of golden daffodils as a host and a crowd and himself as a lonely floating cloud (7) |
| FIREFLY | Beetle related to the glow-worm (7) |
| LUCERNE | From "glow worm", a name for alfalfa, in allusion to its shiny seeds (7) |
| EALING | A borough of West London, the location of famous film studios (6) |
| AGRA | A river in Georgia ___ location of famous building (4) |
| TARSUS | Location of famous saint's bones (6) |
| BAYEUX | Location of famous old tapestry |
| SOMME | Location of famous WW1 battle (5) |
| PISA | Location of famous building that's listed |
| SHEPPERTON | Surrey town, location of famous film studios (10) |
| ASCOT | Location of famous British horse racecourse (5) |
| EASTER | ___ Island, South Pacific location of famous statues (6) |
| EYECATCHER | Glow-worm gets the girl, we hear ? a bobby-dazzler! (3-7) |
| BEETLE | A coleopteran such as a devil's coach-horse, firefly, glow-worm, ladybird or rose chafer; or, a dice game in which a picture of said insect is gradually drawn or assembled (6) |
| GLEAM | From "glow-worm", word first for a bright/brilliant light such as a sunbeam, but now a dim or transient glow (5) |
| MILLS | Brothers who sang "Glow Worm" |
| LEGUMINOUS | Resembling a pulse, like a glow-worm, say, trapped (10) |
| MOIRE | Watered port drunk up by Glow-worm (5) |
| MILLSBROTHERS | Group whose hits included "The Glow-Worm" and "Tiger Rag" |