Solving time: 33:12
Got fooled into thinking the two 1s had to be harder than they turned out to be. So went to the bottom half first where a bit of wordplay parsing and a couple of giveaways helped to get most of the answers quite quickly. Still not sure that my entry for 5dn is right though.
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | C(A,BB)AGE. |
| 5 | BARN,A,RD. Christiaan of heart-surgery fame. There’s a notorious story about his chauffeur substituting for him during a lecture tour. |
| 9 | SNOWDRIFT. Anagram: wind + frost. |
| 10 | GO(N)ER. The N from the end of ‘marathoN’. Stiff as in corpse. |
| 11 | SENT,I,MENTALLY. It’s been a long time since I’ve heard ‘sent’ associated with powerful emotions (excited). |
| 13 | RAM,E,KIN,S. An old stand-by: ‘butter’ for RAM. |
| 15 | BORS,CH. Had to guess this then look it up. The Round Table Knights apparently included Bors the Younger and the Elder. |
| 17 | DEMO,TE. |
| 19 | CRU(SA)DER. Salvation Army. |
| 22 | ELEPHANT GRASS. Anagram: plant here sags. Has to be a semi-&lit with ‘plant’ included as part of the anagram material. |
| 25 | Omitted. ET al: that’s new! |
| 26 | TEACHABLE. Anagram: the cable; including A for ‘area’. |
| 27 | HO,GARTH. HO for ‘house’; GARTH = an open space surrounded by cloisters. |
| 28 | TERENCE. This is TERCE including EN{d}. |
| Down | |
|---|---|
| 1 | CAST. Two defs; one dramatic. |
| 2 | BLOSSOM. Reverse of MOB, including LOSS. |
| 3 | AU,DEN. |
| 4 | EDITIONS. SEDITION with its first/leader taken to the end. |
| 5 | BATTER? Suppose this has to be the answer. OK I suppose if ‘a hit’ = one who bats. If so, new to me. All comments appreciated. No doubt I’m missing something. On edit: john_from_lancs has it aright in the comments below. I think. |
| 6 | RIGHTEOUS. Anagram: is tougher. |
| 7 | ANN,U,LUS{t}. |
| 8 | DERBYSHIRE. A reference to the Derbyshire Well Dressings. |
| 12 | BRIDLE PATH. A pun on ‘bridal’. ‘Gee’ = horse. Lift and separate between ‘that’ and ‘wedding’. |
| 14 | K(ITCHEN)ER. The River Itchen is in Hampshire. |
| 16 | F(RAG,RAN)T. FT, Financial Times, including RAG (paper) and RAN (managed). |
| 18 | MEET,IN,G. |
| 20 | DU(STBI)N. DUN (dingy colour) inc. an anagram of ‘bits’. |
| 21 | S(NIT)CH. |
| 23 | Omitted. A case of in-corporation? |
| 24 | MERE. Two defs.
The terce is nigh and I must go! |

There was some very clever cluing and obscure words here. I suspect the less able solvers may get stuck on something.
Didn’t understand DERBYSHIRE at all so thanks, mct, for that, and I had the same query and reservations as you about 5dn. Also didn’t know the knight at 15.
Terence and Plautus were Latin A-level texts back in the day, while BORS is known to me from Mallory’s Morte Darthur, read as part of my CS Lewis project. Lewis wrote three essays on the Morte alone. Prodigious output, the man had!
5dn looks OK to me. I find it hard to explain but a hit is a batter, both being the verb, in a certain sense.
Not sure what’s at stake here. But I would dearly love to know. How can we be dealing with a verb when there’s an indefinite article in both “a hit” and “(a) batter”?
There’s more obscurity “terce” in the equally obscure TERENCE but these arty setters are obsessed with the ancients and so they crop up from time to time. Likewise “garth” in this setters mandatory painter (who only died 250 or so years ago – wow modern stuff!)
20 minutes for this less than impressive puzzle
Slow all round on this one, 39 minutes with a wrong answer – couldn’t see mere and guessed dene. There a nice line by Kingsley Amis (as poet) about the soup:
‘Borsch, pate, filthy caviare / say I’ve respectfully declined…’
DERBYSHIRE had to be right but I had no idea why till coming here (after which I thought “Ah, yes, it should have been obvious all along…wait, what?”)
I knew Sir Bors: I’d love to say it’s because of the Morte D’Arthur, but in fact my source is the rather more lowbrow Monty Python and the Holy Grail, in which he is played by Terry Gilliam and falls victim to the infamous killer rabbit.
Edited at 2012-08-01 12:52 pm (UTC)
Batter: my Shorter Oxford gives batter as a noun meaning “a heavy bruising blow (rare 1823)”, and Chambers also lists it as a noun meaning “the action of or skill at using a bat in cricket or baseball”.
No problem with Derbyshire well dressing: used to visit Tissington as a child.
Coincidentally there was something on Radio 4’s Farming Today this morning about the use of a type of ELEPHANT GRASS (Miscanthus) as a biofuel at Ely Power Station.
Edited at 2012-08-01 10:29 am (UTC)
Edit: But are the Shorter and Chambers on THE OFFICIAL LIST these days? If so, I’m calling “obscure”.
Edited at 2012-08-01 11:11 am (UTC)
My electronic Chambers (12th edition) has:
batting noun
1. The action of or skill or skill at using a bat in cricket or baseball
2. Cotton wadding prepared in sheets, for quilts, etc
Strange puzzle this: full of real obscurities (garth, terce/TERENCE, Barnard, Bors, well whating?), none of which I knew, yet easy. The most difficult clue was 4dn, which took me ages at the end but contains no obscurity at all.
The Chambers entry for BORSCH says “also bortsch/börch/, etc”, so clearly you can spell it however you like.
For me, the issue with DERBYSHIRE was that the only cryptic element in the clue was that you had to take “well” as a noun, not an adverb. Once you’d done that, it was just a GK clue with no cryptic merit. Since I already had D?R?Y and was looking for a county, there really wasn’t much choice. I haven’t been able to find it, but I believe Buxton Spring water used to be advertised with reference to well dressing, and certainly that’s what sprang to mind.
Other than that, of a fairly humdrum bunch, I thought the (?) &lit for DUSTBIN was the pick of the day.
Derbyshire and Borsch went in without understanding so thanks mctext for explaining those.
Thought Snowdrift, Dustbin and Abhor were particularly good clues – the latter putting in mind the Olympic swimmers whose toned bodies have been gracing out TV screens for the past four nights.
With B-T— in place for 5dn, I was momentarily tempted by (a chip) BUTTIE, but wasn’t convinced that you could spell it that way and so went for BATTER – with the thought that I could change it later if it the E didn’t fit.