| EASTLYNNE | Novel of 1861 by Mrs Henry Wood (4,5) |
| MARNER | Surname of the weaver in a George Eliot novel of 1861 (6) |
| THESHIPPINGFORECAST | Service started in 1861 by Robert FitzRoy (formerly HMS Beagle's captain), aired by the BBC since 1925 |
| LYNNE | East -, novel by Mrs Henry Wood |
| EAST | - Lynne ; novel by Mrs Henry Wood (4) |
| ELLEN | Maiden name of Mrs Henry Wood, author of East Lynne (5,5) |
| PRICE | Maiden name of Mrs Henry Wood, author of East Lynne (5,5) |
| PROMENADE | Name applied to the series of concerts launched in London in 1895 by conductor Henry Wood (9) |
| EUPHONIUM | Solo instrument which starts The Saucy Arethusa in Henry Wood's Sea Songs Fantasia at the Last Night of the Proms |
| OFUDOLPHO | The -, 1794 novel by Mrs Ann Radcliffe (9,2,7) |
| MYSTERIES | And 11 The -, 1794 novel by Mrs Ann Radcliffe (9,2,7) |
| ALLIGATOR | Reptile allegorised by Mrs Malaprop (9) |
| TOMBOWLING | The fourth movement of the Fantasia on British Sea Songs by Sir Henry Wood, which uses the melody of a song by Charles Dibdin |
| CHAPLET | Laurel wreath, of the kind put on the bust of Henry Wood at the Last Night of the Proms |
| ELM | Position of leadership abandoned by Henry Wood (3) |
| PROMS | The -; annual season of concerts originally instituted by Henry Wood (5) |
| ANDREWS | "An apology for the life of Mrs ... ...", Henry Fielding novel parodying the Samuel Richardson work Pamela (7,7) |
| WOOD | Mrs Henry -; pen name of Ellen Price, author of some 30 novels including the Victorian bestseller East Lynne, Danesbury House and The Channings (4) |
| TIMBER | Trees grown for use in carpentry; a lumberjack's exclamation warning a tree is about to fall; or, the nickname of the founder conductor of the Proms, Sir Henry Wood (6) |
| PROM | In short, musical concert started by Sir Henry Wood (4) |