| OFTIME | "At the hour of our death," pray those with convictions for deliverance there and then. (2,3,4,2,4) |
| INTHENICK | "At the hour of our death," pray those with convictions for deliverance there and then. (2,3,4,2,4) |
| OSCARWILDE | Ladies crow about one with conviction for love |
| AUTHORED | Was responsible for our death in crash (8) |
| HYLEG | Astrological term, from "nativity", for the ruling planet at the hour of birth and "giver of life" on a birth chart (5) |
| ANGUS | Scotsman may commonly cause our deaths |
| RELIEF | From "raise up", a word for deliverance from burden, pain or stress; comfort thereafter; a sculpture protruding from a background; a rest or breather; or, aid to the poor (6) |
| POINTSOFVIEW | Convictions for breaking speed limit going around French landscape (6,2,4) |
| SALVATION | Boy conceals a vital design for deliverance (9) |
| HOPES | Convictions for putting erosive lead in skips (5) |
| PRIORS | Previous convictions for religious leaders (6) |
| SPLENDOUR | Though nothing can bring back the hour, Of ___ in the grass, of glory in the flower: William Wordsworth (9) |
| WOLFE | General James ____ died in the hour of victory, over the French at Quebec in 1759 |
| ATHAND | Where to look for the hour of the day? Well that was convenient (2,4) |
| ELEVENTH | In the nick of time, at the - hour |
| JAMESWOLFE | British general who died in the hour of victory when capturing Quebec from the French in 1759 |
| ATTAINDER | Formerly, the extinction of a person's civil rights resulting from a sentence of death or outlawry on conviction for treason or felony |
| ONTHESPOT | A thousand were banished in the month despot lost the head - right there and then |
| CLARICE | "The Hour of the Star" novelist Lispector |
| KILLINGTIME | The hour of execution, and one is wasting it! (7,4) |