| UPSWEPT | Uphill; moving to the top of a hill (7) |
| LEGATOR | One willing to put stage on top of a hill |
| BROW | The top of a hill; a gallery in a colliery; a gangway from a ship to the shore; the first point/tine of an antler; or, one's forehead or supercilium (4) |
| SISYPHUS | In Greek mythology, a king who was forced to roll a large boulder to the top of a hill, only for it to roll back when he neared the top (8) |
| SENSORY | Receptive; of a nerve fibre or impulse moving to the central nervous system (7) |
| DANCING | Fellow to croon for an audience, maybe, moving to the music (7) |
| LEEWARD | Moving to the quarter towards which the wind blows (7) |
| INITIAL | The first in line moving to the tail, possibly (7) |
| COPPIN | Dialect for the crest or top of a hill; or, a conical mass of thread on a spindle, possibly tump-shaped (6) |
| TORRENT | Fast stream split at the foot of a hill (7) |
| LOWBROW | A Philistine down on the edge of a hill (3-4) |
| IPSWICH | County town of Suffolk where Thomas Gainsborough lived before moving to the Circus in Bath (7) |
| TRAINEE | Fourth and fifth in racecourse moving to the front - one's a colt (7) |
| BALFOUR | Tory PM, figure behind party moving to the left (7) |
| NORWICH | City that's currently prosperous (Labour finally moving to the left) (7) |
| OTTOMAN | Saw male moving to the end, being given a new seat |
| IDYLLIC | Idly moving to the insurers - that's perfect! (7) |
| CREST | Many take a break at the top of a hill (5) |
| RUNUP | Make Bill get to the top of a hill? (3-2) |
| ENGLAND | I run away from Leningrad, moving to the country |