| AMRITA | Beverage of immortality |
| IDUN | Norse goddess of spring, keeper of the apples of immortality (4) |
| ODE | Wordsworth work subtitled 'Intimations of Immortality From Recollections of Early Childhood' |
| GERALDFINZI | English composer (1901-1956) of In Terra Pax and Intimations of Immortality |
| ALOE | Ancient Egyptians referred to it as the "plant of immortality" because of its ability to survive without soil |
| ANTHEA | An epithet of Hera, the goddess of immortality and shapeshifting power; or, a girl's name meaning "blossomy, blooming", directly derived from the Greek for "flower" (6) |
| ELIOT | "Whispers of Immortality" poet |
| ALOEVERA | Egyptian's "plant of immortality" |
| TSELIOT | 'Whispers of Immortality' poet |
| ALOES | Plants of immortality, to ancient Egyptians |
| NECTAROFTHEGODS | Greek drink of immortality |
| ELIXIR | Legendary source of immortality |
| AMARANTH | Martha with an extraordinary emblem of immortality |
| PETERPAN | The character of immortality (5,3) |
| ACTAEON | His view of immortality led to his own mortality (7) |
| EVERLASTINGFAME | Evangelism after presenting a form of immortality (11,4) |
| TREEOFLIFE | Cunningly offer elite symbol of immortality (4,2,4) |
| AMARANT | A trading place stocking an unfading symbol of immortality |
| DREAM | 'Where is it now, the glory and the ___?' (William Wordsworth 'Ode: Intimations of Immortality' (1807) |
| RAINBOW | 'The ___ comes and goes,/And lovely is the rose' (William Wordsworth 'Ode: Intimations of Immortality') (7) |