| ADIEU | Farewell to the Parisian about to depart |
| ELDER | Leftie, the Parisian about to become a church figure (5) |
| AGONY | Any about to depart may give hurt (5) |
| HURRY | Rush hot Indian dish, about to depart (5) |
| EIDER | Duck is about to depart from the east |
| VALET | Farewell to the capital servant (5) |
| GONER | Old king detaining individual, a person about to depart |
| ALOHA | Farewell, to the 50th state |
| DEMOB | Protest with British farewell to the army? |
| UNCHASTE | A Parisian, about to hurry, has fallen |
| NOB | Good Parisian about to become someone important |
| TOLERANCE | Play to the Parisian, fellow leaving his homeland (9) |
| NAUSEA | Sean turned around to the Parisian with a complaint (6) |
| STIRRUPCUP | Traditionally, a farewell drink offered to someone about to depart on horseback (7,3) |
| CLEAVER | King Charles about to depart - here's the chopper |
| ANATOLEFRANCE | Writer's two articles getting to the Parisian, being connected with his country |
| AROUND | A Pole carrying a Parisian about? |
| AULDLANGSYNE | Scottish phrase meaning "old long since" that was popularised by Robert Burns as the title and refrain of a song in 1788 and is sung on New Year's Eve to bid farewell to the old year ever since (4,4,4 |
| CANTATA | Able to bid farewell to the choral work? (7) |
| CLEAVE | Stick together when about to depart (6) |