| A little drink may, by the sound of it, cure a sow (7) |
CURACAO |
| A tom makes this obvious at last |
NUCLEAR |
| Andersen makes it very plain that such a little bird could be swanking |
UGLY |
| Can one stand seeing it stand on its hind legs? |
BEAR |
| Even with yards on board 'e may be few and far between |
SPARSE |
| For the rest, one may take this on the cloth |
NAP |
| for those ones it's musical after a N |
THEM |
| Giving a hand, giving a hand? |
DOUBLEDEALING |
| Go after what's sure to go after what's up |
PURSUE |
| How a Scot may start to get the impulse to be a bully |
SCOURGE |
| How fishy to have a hundred going around the middle |
CHUB |
| If it's poison, the brute may need a mixture of air with it |
CURARI |
| If you're so foolish you'll be in the soup |
NOODLE |
| In the front of the kettle but not in the end |
SPOUT |
| It's no go for the boy to get to sit like this |
DESIST |
| It's not this to draw up, but bound to be good for the young |
OUTWARD |
| It's of benefit before sun-up at last |
BONUS |
| Neither a buy, nor in Italy |
SALERNO |
| Not sound well as this |
SIC |