| THEPOBBLE | Poem by Edward Lear featuring Aunt Jobiska's Runcible Cat (3,6,3,3,2,4) |
| WHOHASNOTOES | Poem by Edward Lear featuring Aunt Jobiska's Runcible Cat (3,6,3,3,2,4) |
| COLDCOMFORTFARM | Stella Gibbons novel featuring Aunt Ada Doom (4,7,4) |
| PEAGREEN | Colour of the boat used by The Owl and the Pussy-cat in a poem by Edward Lear (3-5) |
| OWL | Companion of the pussy-cat in a poem by Edward Lear (3) |
| SWAT | 'The Akond of -', nonsense poem by Edward Lear (4) |
| AKOND | The ___ of Swat, nonsense poem by Edward Lear |
| PUSSYCAT | The Owl and the ___, poem by Edward Lear (8) |
| THEJUMBLIES | Poem in 1871 volume Nonsense Songs, Stories, Botany and Alphabets by Edward Lear |
| LIMERICKS | Five-line humorous verses made popular by Edward Lear |
| NONSENSEVERSE | Work by Edward Lear? (8,5) |
| LIMERICK | Verse form popularised by Edward Lear (8) |
| NONSENSE | A form of absurd verse composed by Edward Lear (8) |
| RUNCIBLESPOON | Dining accessory first named by Edward Lear |
| OFSWAT | Nonsense song by Edward Lear, last in 1877 volume Laughable Lyrics (2,4) |
| THEAKOND | Nonsense song by Edward Lear, last in 1877 volume Laughable Lyrics (3,5) |
| BONGTREE | Fictional plant mentioned in The Owl and the Pussycat by Edward Lear (4-4) |
| PARROTS | Known collectively as a pandemonium or a prattle, psittacine popinjays such as lovebirds or any of those depicted in lithographs by Edward Lear (7) |
| ADLESTROP | Former Cotswold railway station immortalised in a poem by Edward Thomas |
| LEAR | Runcible spoon inventor and limerick-maker, Edward ... |