| AMARANTHINE | Purple fabled never-ending flower in the Orient (11) |
| LOTUS | Much that's American flowers in the Orient (5) |
| RIVER | Tear asunder never-ending flower (5) |
| AMARANTH | From "unfading", a fabled never-withering flower symbolising immortality; a plant with long-lasting crimson tassels; the purplish-red colour of said flowers; or, its grain (8) |
| WILDROSE | General name for a burnet in the buff, eglantine or sweetbrier in the rough, a dog flower in the hedgerow or other such uncultivated rambler or scrambler left naturally to grow (4,4) |
| RIVERBED | Flower in the garden is found in the lowest area of The Congo (8) |
| BUTTERCUP | Yellow wild flower in the genus Ranunculus, held under the chin in a child's game (9) |
| CYCLAMEN | Thriving in the shade of deciduous trees with ferns, a pink or white flower in the primrose family, said to have been a favourite of Leonardo da Vinci (8) |
| LILAC | Flower in the dooryard, in a Walt Whitman memorial poem for Abe Lincoln |
| PHILISTINE | Unsophisticated popular song about "The Flower in the Wood" (10) |
| WEREWOLF | Digs up flower in the middle of weeds - the point being, it's likely to turn into a monster on occasion (8) |
| ROSE | With petals distilled to make facial toner and fruits/hips simmered in sugar to make syrup, a flower in the apple family traditionally symbolising love (4) |
| LAVENDER | Sea -; coastal flower in the family that includes thrift or sea pink that retains its purple colour when dried (8) |
| ANEMONE | Associated with Aphrodite's myth, a flower in the family that includes the hellebore and winter aconite (7) |
| NILE | Longest flower in the world |
| EASTERN | Oriental flower in the borders of Eden (7) |
| WEAR | Sport a flower in the north (4) |
| LEE | Flower in the shelter (3) |
| LOREA | Flower, in the Basque language |
| LANCASTER | Long, limp-sounding flower in the house |