| CAESOS | Cut down or slaughtered (masc. acc. plur.), perhaps by the crosser of the Rubicon |
| COMMOTOS | Moved, excited, stirred up (masc. acc. plur.) |
| JULIUSCAESAR | Crosser of the Rubicon, 49 BC (6,6) |
| SLAIN | Killed or slaughtered |
| EXANIMATA | Lifeless (fem.nom.sing. or neut.nom./acc. plur.) — the soul imprisoned in the entrails? |
| BAULKED | Snookered, perhaps, by the chap at one end of the table? (7) |
| STUB | Small piece, especially of something cut down or worn away (4) |
| GAUL | Land on one side of the Rubicon |
| MUTUAS | Borrowed, lent (fem. acc. plur.); ____ pecunias sumere, to borrow money |
| IMMISSOS | Men who've been sent against and let loose at (acc. plur. PPP) |
| EXPERTES | Free from, having no part in (c. nom./acc. plur.) |
| NINA | Early crosser of the Atlantic |
| BETSYROSSBRIDGE | Crosser of the |
| LITTHETORCH | "I ____, I looked to the east, and I crossed the Rubicon" (Bob Dylan, Crossing the Rubicon) |
| ADVERTS | Crossers of the Red Sea, The ------- (7) |
| PLERUM | The most part (saepe cum ~que), masc. acc., neut. nom./acc. sing. |
| FELL | Cut down, or dropped down |
| STREETWISE | A good taxi driver perhaps, by the way, has The Knowledge (10) |
| BALLBOYS | Working around The Courts, employed to pick up those getting hit hardest perhaps by The Rackets (4,4) |
| PHYSIO | Trainer's bubbly Evian perhaps, by the sound of it (6) |