| OSPREYS | These birds are so spry in the East! (7) |
| LAMER | Not so spry in the sea at Dieppe (5) |
| CRANES | These birds are so uplifting (6) |
| FLAMINGOS | These birds are so flaming good |
| IMAGINE | Fancy finding the Wise Men in the East! (7) |
| RELIEVE | It will ease your burden - you live again in the East! (7) |
| ETERNAL | There's no end to rental in the East! (7) |
| PRESAGE | There's an indication of things to come for you! Grapes in the East! (7) |
| REGIME | Such grime in the East! Must be the administration! |
| EAGRE | What a bore! Wants to rage in the East! (5) |
| GENUS | How it's sung in the East! There's class for you! (5) |
| DESIRE | How I long to take rides in the East! (6) |
| ADULATES | How it flatters them when you laud in the East! (8) |
| NIECE | She's there - it's nice in the East! |
| TAMBOURINE | Instrument that usually is shaken, drum in the east! (10) |
| SLEEPER | One who snores possibly repels, out East! (7) |
| CHOUGH | These birds are gregarious, have whistling calls, and are aerial acrobats. In The Tempest (act 2, scene 1), Antonio says, "As this Gonzalo; I myself could make / A ___ of as deep chat. O that you bore |
| DOVES | These birds are smaller, long-tailed members of the pigeon family. They're also a symbol of peace. In Henry VI Part 3 (act 2, scene 2), Clifford says, "The smallest worm will turn being trodden on, / |
| ORAL | Viva the foreign king, over from the east! (4) |
| EON | No! Return to the East! It's the age for it (3) |