| SYRINX | Set of pan pipes; or a Greek nymph (6) |
| STOP | A bung, cork or plug; a fingerhole; a rank of organ pipes; or, a sojourn (4) |
| LILAC | With fragrant buddleia-like panicles, a plant in the olive family whose genus name Syringa, meaning "tube", alludes to its stems being used as Pan-pipes or syrinx (5) |
| SQUEAK | A sound of a mouse or a pan of bubbling, frying colcannon; a rat or snitch; a pipe or whine; a single remark; a narrow escape; a jot; a bare chance; or, a feeble paper/local rag (6) |
| SPILL | To destroy or waste; a slop of upset milk e.g.; a stick or twist of wood or paper for lighting a candle, fire or pipe; or, a tumble from a bike or a horse (5) |
| THETIS | Greek nymph, mother of Achilles (6) |
| DAPHNE | Greek nymph who was turned into a laurel bush (6) |
| OREADS | Name of the mythological Greek nymphs of mountain conifers (6) |
| RHODES | Colonist in Africa or a Greek island |
| CALAMI | Reeds for pipes or pens (Lucretius 5.1407, there in acc) |
| STOPPER | A bung, cork, plug or spigot for sealing a bottle, decanter, duct or pipe; or, a person/thing that halts a crime, goal, show or other process (7) |
| MUSETTE | French bagpipe popular in court circles of the 17th and 18th centuries; a gavotte or pastoral air with a drone bass suggestive of said shepherd's pipe; or, a dance to such a melody (7) |
| NAIADS | Mythological Greek nymphs presiding over rivers, fountains and waterfalls (6) |
| OUTLET | A pipe or hole through which water or gas can escape (6) |
| OAT | A cereal grass with grains traditionally fed to racehorses to gee them up; literary word for a straw of said plant as a shepherd's pipe; or, a pastoral poem generally (3) |
| CALYPSO | A Greek nymph and a genre of Trinidadian music (7) |
| DESPINA | Moon of Neptune named for a Greek nymph |
| NAIAD | Anagram of Diana that's a Greek nymph |
| SMOKER | Pipe or cigarette user (6) |
| NOZZLE | Projecting pipe or spout from which fluid is discharged (6) |