Solving time: 40 Minutes
This seemed like it was going to be an easy Monday puzzle, but I slowed down a little towards the end as some of the clues proved more difficult than expected. My cause was not helped when I somehow managed to write ‘gunwalep’ for 1 across, which make 5 down very difficult indeed.
Music: Schubert, Wanderer Fantasy, Pollini
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | GUNWALES, [bringin]G [yo]U [agai]N + WALES. |
| 9 | OVERCAST, double definition, one jocular. The use of ‘how’ is slightly strained, but is needed for the surface. |
| 10 | Omitted |
| 11 | KINDERGARTEN, KINDER + G(ART)EN. |
| 13 | PLANER, PLAN + ER. Very easy, but I didn’t see how the cryptic worked at all. |
| 14 | OILCLOTH, anagram of CHILL TOO. The temptation to put ‘G’ in a word meaning rain is strong, but then you have too many letters to use ‘chill’. |
| 15 | MANSION, MAN’S + I(O)N, not a good clue because a servant makes you think of a mansion. |
| 16 |
|
| 20 | BASILICA, B + A SILICA. I didn’t know that opal is a silica, but the answer is obvious enough. From Greek ‘basileus’, king. |
| 22 | RIGHTO, RIG + H + TO. |
| 23 | DONKEY JACKET, DON + KEY + JACK + [protectiv]E [garmen]T. ‘Jack’ in the sense of ‘every man Jack’ or ‘every Jack will have his Jill’. |
| 25 | OHIO, OH(I)O. |
| 26 | CATULLUS, CA(TU)LLUS. |
| 27 | MOTHERLY, M(OTHER L)Y. I had a hard time figuring this one out, thinking you had to put a second ‘l’ in the name of some writer. |
| Down | |
| 2 | UMBRELLA, E[nglish] LL in anagram of BURMA. Few will need the cryptic if the first letter is already in. |
| 3 | WALKING STICK, LAW backwards + KING’S TICK. In the US, we used to say ‘In God We Trust, All Others Must Pay Cash’, and I would think that the first clause would probably apply to the king as well. |
| 4 | LEONARDO, LE(ON A RD)O. If you think the first ‘o’ is part of ‘Leo’, you will be puzzled by the cryptic, although the answer is easy enough. |
| 5 | SOMEHOW, SO(ME)HO + W. This should have been easy! |
| 6 | BENGAL, BEGAN with the N moved, + L. It is divided between India and Bangladesh. |
| 7 | Omitted, but it won’t take long. |
| 8 | STENDHAL, [we]ST END HAL[l]. A brilliantly hidden word, which had me playing with anagrams even after I saw the answer. |
| 12 | ROLLING STONE, double definition. |
| 15 | MOBY DICK, cryptic definition of sorts, where the whale is a bete blanche. |
| 17 | PARAKEET, P(A RAKE)ET. |
| 18 | ARTERIAL, A + R + T(E)RIAL. One of the better clues, with a well-concealed literal. |
| 19 | DADAISM, DA(DAIS)M, back to the easy ones. |
| 21 | IDYLLS, anagram of SILLY + D[aughter] |
| 24 | NETT, last letters of [logicia]N [ar]E [abou]T [righ]T. A rather obscure accounting term, but the cryptic confirms it nicely. |
Talking of which, Vinyl, you have OPTICAL as the answer; just a typo. There’s also a “ligician” at 24dn.
I also managed a typo at 15d – disappointingly it was MOBU DICK rather than the more apt MOBY DUCK.
I might have fallen into the trap at 16 but for having OPTIMUM as my initial answer and then having to modify it on spotting the hidden word at 8dn, so the M was already in place.
I also lost time considering ‘maternal’ and ‘matronly at 27 before I cracked the wordplay.
Knowing the expression ‘full to the GUNWALES / gunnels’ helped with 1ac.
All went in very smoothly for me today, and was quite possibly a sub 30 minute solve (wow!) although I must admit I didn’t work out the cryptics for PLANER and OPTIMAL (like Ulaca, I luckily was not familiar with the microscope).
Good start to the week.
Thought that STENDHAL had very cleverly camouflaged himself; so much so that he was the last one to appear.
A DONKEY JACKET was, I recall, essential wear for any Trotskyite university student of the 1960s wishing to display his working-class credentials. Those who were not ashamed of their bourgeois roots wore reefer jackets.
OILCLOTH is a word that takes me back: this was the cloth that covered the kitchen table in my grandparents’ house. I also recall Spike Jones describing the music he played as “Not Chiffon Swing, but Oilcloth Jazz.”
Never heard of the poet or the author but got both easily enough from wordplay. No real quibbles and a lot of fun. 20 minutes to solve.
The DONKEY JACKET as fashion item reached its zenith (nadir?) when Michael Foot, hapless leader of the Labour Party in the early 80’s, wore one to the Cenotaph ceremony. It turned out is wasn’t a donkey jacket, but a £500 overcoat from Harrods. Should have got his money back.
The connection between “servant” and MANSION didn’t help me in the slightest, such is the extent to which I’ve trained myself to ignore the surface reading. Not always helpful!
Edited at 2012-06-11 08:08 am (UTC)
Clue of the Day: 8dn (STENDHAL).
COD to Moby Dick for reminding me of Melville’s wonderful novel. I wonder if Pequod or Queequeg have appeared in a Times puzzle… and if they have how were they clued?!