Solving time: 17:10
Toughest weekday puzzle for ages, for me – I hope it doesn’t turn out to be a case of blogger’s nerves. Answers solved early on were fairly thin on the ground – and mostly in the bottom half of the grid – 12, 20, 26, 27, 7, 17, 22, 23, 24. Only two went in without full wordplay understanding – 3 and 13. The harder answers came pretty well in groups filling out the four corners in the order SW, SE, NE, NW.
There were a few bits of knowledge required, but most of the difficulty seems to come from crafty clue-writing.
On reflection: not quite a “stinker” – that’s probably reserved for the ones that take me more than 20 minutes. But a good stiff test all the same.
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | CATEGORIC=unqualified – E in (Acrtic, go)* – it took a bit of effort to make sense of the cryptic reading but I think “A to travel in B” is OK for saying that A is an anagram of B |
| 6 | PAS(s) = “succeed in” as in “He passed Geography”,T.A. = (Territorial) Army |
| 9 | PROLO(N=noon)G – “prolog” being the US spelling |
| 10 | R,(ch)ICHEST(er) – made harder by a longer-than-usual “heart of” component |
| 11 | TAKE TO TASK – 2 defs, one cryptic |
| 12 | W.I. = West Indies, M.P. = representative |
| 14 | M=mass,O(c)TET – I wasn’t 100% sure that all motets are sacred pieces, but ODE agrees |
| 15 | LAM.=short book,PLIGHT=promise, usu. with “troth” |
| 16 | LYME REGIS = (grey slime)* – this took longer than it should have done because L?M? only suggested LIME to me. The literary reference is to Louisa Musgrove in “Persuasion” – full news at the Jane Austen blog (where some of the pictures may be slow to load) |
| 18 | TIPSY – 2 defs, one whimsical (“like some pieces of advice”=”like tips”) |
| 20 | S(teer),ARK – I’ve never visited Sark but was almost certainly conceived there. |
| 21 | BlUrB,BLEW=wasted,RAP=criticism – here is the ecological version, in which “Manic Mode” is strongly recommended. |
| 25 | ACCOUNT – 2 defs, one using the phrase “turn to account“ |
| 26 | RENTIER = (retire,N=new)* – “a person living on income from property or investments” covers interest as well as rent |
| 27 | (r)EL(e.g.)Y |
| 28 | READY=prompt, MADE=”maid” – “beautifully suited” seemed hightly debatable but could be read as “very well suited”, for which I think there is some support in colloquial usage |
| Down | |
| 1 | CAPE T(own) – here are the kings |
| 2 | TOO(L)K IT |
| 3 | GHOSTS=play (by Ibsen), TORY=right (ODE has “often the Right” so “right” alone is just the right side of the line) |
| 4 | ROGET = collector of words – letter-change in “roger” = “I acknowledge” in radio communications |
| 5 | CHRISTMAS – cryptic def (ho ho ho) |
| 6 | PECK – two defs, one an actor, he says in case someone’s never heard of him |
| 7 | SEE=”spot”,KING=ruler – relatively easy as the meanings of “spot” and “look for” are as closely related as the forms of the words they represent, though as the words have different origins, no crossword pedants can say “same roots!” |
| 8 | A(N.T.=New Testament=books,I)PATHY |
| 13 | S(LATTE=coffee,R.N.)LY – watch out for knowing = “sly” (or “fly”) |
| 14 | MILKS = takes advantage of, HAKE – “being in the” is a fairly long linking phrase that helps to confuse a bit. There’s also MILKS,T(r)OUT which comes quite close to matching both definition and wordplay |
| 15 | LEG=on,CUTTER=ship – as far as I can tell from this example, a leg cutter moves sharply away from the apparent direction, which may mean sharply towards the batsman or stumps |
| 17 | M=medium (clothes sizes),1=single,(o)RACLE |
| 19 | PER(D.I.)T,A=answer – the Wagdagger girl is in “ |
| 22 | BERIA = “burier” – I suspect you need Home Counties pronunciations of both the henchman and the sexton here |
| 23 | today’s omission – it should be straightforward with checking letters |
| 24 | PUN=joke,Y=”why” |
CAPET from wordplay and ACCOUNT from definition and I can’t claim to have recalled Ms Musgrove but was aware that Lyme Regis was a place to be avoided by literary heroines. Didn’t know ORACLE could be a prophecy. Expect the cricket pedants to be out in force on LEG CUTTER. COD to GHOST STORY simply for giving me a rare feeling of smugness once I had figured it out.
Clues evidently come without a context. But that doesn’t mean setters should be free to choose their own contexts, because otherwise they could e.g. define elephants as small (which, after all, they are – compared to, say, Mars). Instead, I suggest that any implicit context that a setter relies on should be constrained by predictable expectations at the solver’s end.
Of course, we could agree on that general point while disagreeing about this particular clue. For what it’s worth, though, I spent a while wondering whether the answer was some variant of LEG BREAK (e.g. a mistaken plural), and I think if it hadn’t been for the slightly misleading “sharply” I’d have thought of LEG CUTTER sooner than I did.
I think you’re experiencing the local expert’s discovery that dictionary definitions don’t always say what you’d want them to say – I’m not sure you’d be happy with their leg cutter definition either. But for crossword clues, the dictionary is the umpire …
I speak as an amateur, by the way, and a lapsed one at that; I haven’t played cricket since chipping my shoulder (no, really) when I was 13 or 14. But back then I would have been outraged at the assimilation of my peculiar art – which I’ve heard called that of the “dusky twirler”, as for some reason it seems to be a subcontinental speciality – to mere finger-spinning.
But yes, if arbitration is called for, I suppose the umpire must be the dictionary – as long as it isn’t bloody Collins.
I’d say it was tough but not a stinker. 80 minutes to finish, with most of the problems coming on the port side. COD to LEG CUTTER – simple and elegant.
So I came here, saw the heading and decided not to waste any more time and read the blog with interest, thank you Peter for saving me the time to try and figure it out myself, there are some clues I would never have solved.
I found this an enjoyable challenge, despite various manifestations of what I’d call laxity. (Besides “stopping”, I’d query “to travel in” as an anagram indicator (1ac CATEGORIC), the lack of question marks at the end of 11ac (TAKE TO TASK) and 28ac (READY-MADE), “that moves sharply away” as a definition (15dn LEG-CUTTER), and “listen to it” as a homophone indicator (24dn PUNY), and that’s ignoring the familiar grammatical divide.) I’ve put all that in brackets because, as I say, I enjoyed it – it’s laxity without compensation that I can’t stand.
Clue of the Day: the simple but effective 20ac (SARK).
Wasted time at 3dn trying to make the play GHOST TRAIN by Arnold Ridley.
Lots in from the wordplay rather than full understanding, but no errors so maybe not quite as disheartening as I initially thought!
Oli
I did have the wrong word ‘peeking’, but eventually straightened it out without understanding the cryptic for ‘pasta’. I knew ‘Beria’, and realized that 16 was probably from Jane Austen, although I couldn’t remember which book. I had a lot of doubt about ‘lamplight’ – would they really use such an obscure book? – but eventually I saw it must be right.
I do enjoy solving this type of puzzle, although I agree the wordplay could have been a little tighter.
There is looseness that others have highlighted and some obscurity. At 15D I don’t think “that moves sharply away” is sufficient definition. I got it from word play and checkers. At 16A I got the anagram straight away (the place is just down the coast for me) but had no idea who Louisa was. Solved 22D BERIA from the definition but couldn’t make any sense of the cryptic – never even realised it was supposed to be a homophone – enough said!
I’m going to call BERIA a hm..onym.
Some looseness, sure, but generally in a good cause. This felt like a genuine battle of wits with the setter, which is how it should be.
Tom B.
After a run of EP puzzles, the last two have been progressively as one would expect. Stinker tomorrow or Friday, anyone?
Can we go back to the easier ones, please? pretty please?
A rather odd solving experience: it felt extremely hard as I was solving it so I was very surprised to look at the clock and see I’d finished in just under half an hour.
Lots to like and nice variety. A very good puzzle I thought.