| DIRECT | Straight from the source |
| ATFIRSTHAND | If tar cracked, street worker had it straight from the source (2,5,4) |
| ABORIGINE | Latin term meaning "from the very first, from the source" (2,7) |
| COURSE | The direction of the river from the source (6) |
| DOWNSTREAM | Further from the source of a river (10) |
| FIRSTHAND | Directly from the source (5-4) |
| FONTAL | From the source |
| ORIGIN | Demo rig innovation from the source (6) |
| LODE | From the sources, London operators delivered enough ore deposit (4) |
| FIGS | Used as the scent of some luxury candles, fruits of a tree in the mulberry family, eaten straight from the vine, dried, poached in wine or baked in tarts (4) |
| AORTA | Extract from Kafka or Tallis that comes straight from the heart (5) |
| JAWS | James the First was wrong and that's straight from the horse's mouth (4) |
| PLUMTOMATO | Oval-shaped fruit used canned, straight from the vine or in the form of passata for Bolognese sauce, pizza topping or ragu for pappardelle (4,6) |
| MOUTH | Whence you might get the most accurate information, straight from the horse's ... |
| TONGUEBIT | Refrained from speech straight from the horse's mouth? (6,3) |
| WELCH | Longtime G.E. chief with the best seller "Jack: Straight From the Gut" |
| POINTBLANK | Straight from the shoulder with the head clear (5-5) |
| IAMSAM | The first three words of "Green Eggs and Ham," straight from the narrator |
| JACK | "Straight From the Gut" writer Welch |
| HAYCHEWED | Beatles song straight from the horse's mouth? |