Solving time:23 minutes
This was an unusually easy puzzle that only caused me a little trouble. I couldn’t see a couple of obvious ones in the SE, and got held up a little bit after racing through most of it in under 15 minutes, a good time for me. I mostly didn’t
Music: Symphony #4, Horenstein/LSO
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | SIGMA, middle letter of Aesop, but not really. His name is spelled alpha, iota, sigma, omega, pi, omicron, sigma, so the middle letter is actually omega. The setter must have thought he was third declension, but he is second. |
| 4 | PROTOCOLS, PRO + TO(C)OLS. PRO is indicated by ‘for’, since a drill is not a pro tool, but is used by amateurs everywhere. |
| 8 | CROCODILE TEARS. CROCODILE(TEAR)S. I suspect there is an allusion to a children’s game or rhyme that I don’ t know, so I open the floor to our erudite commenters. |
| 10 | NUMERICAL, anagram of MAIN LUCRE. |
| 11 | DREAR, DR + EAR. The cryptic is a little awkward, with ‘demanding’ not serving much of a function. |
| 12 | TROPPO, OP + PORT backwards. |
| 14 | FORGIVEN, FORG(IV)E + N[ote]. I never liked N = ‘note’, but there you are. |
| 17 | NEONATAL, N(anagram of ONE)ATAL. The answer is telegraphed by the literal, no need for the cryptic. |
| 18 | VESSEL, double definition, where a bark is a ship. I was expecting something a little fancier. |
| 20 | NURSE, triple definition. I got it from the fish, and only then realized that Florence Nightingale was meant. |
| 22 | ECCENTRIC, E(C + CENT)RIC. Another clue where ‘fellow’ can indicate any male name. |
| 24 | WESTERNISATION, anagram of STEW IN ORIENT, AS. Why westernisation would improve the cuisine is not clear. |
| 25 | PSALTERY, PSALTER + Y. Not the first book you think of, but reasonably fair. |
| 25 | DINGY, DING[h]Y. |
| Down | |
| 1 | Omitted, need I say? |
| 2 | GROOM, G[iven} + ROOM. |
| 3 | APOCRYPHA, anagram of HAPPY, CORA. One of the most well-known books in that disputed seuuence. |
| 4 | PRINCE, PRI(N)CE. |
| 5 | OVERLOOK, OVER = deliveries in cricket, LOOK = butcher’s hook in Cockney rhyming slang. |
| 6 | OREAD, O + RE + AD. The Royal Engineers, however, do not in themselves constitute a whole army, so a little weak. |
| 7 | OURSELVES, anagram of LOVERS SUE, a classic lift and separate, where ‘us, emphatically’ is the literal. |
| 9 | TRANSLUCENCY, TRA[i]NS + ???. It ought to be a ‘C’ inside a particular city, but I don’t see it. Suggestions? OK, Sotira has it. The crytic is LUCE inserted into TRA[i]NS, N(C)Y. My problem was taking ‘Filmy quality of fish’ as the literal. |
| 13 | ODOURLESS, [p]O[p]S[y] around DOUR LES, another arbitrary man’s name. |
| 15 | GREENLAND, GREEN + LA(N)D. |
| 16 | CAREFREE, CA (chartered accountant) + REF[e]REE. |
| 19 | ACUITY, A(CU)IT + Y. |
| 21 | EXTOL, hidden in [middles]EX TO L[ondon]. This meaning of ‘crack up’ is mostly used in negative phrases, e.g. ‘not all he’s cracked up to be’. |
| 23 | REIGN, sounds like rain, i.e.CATS AND DOGS! |
For having VESSEL as my last in, when I was onto bark meaning a, um, vessel, straight away, I will be spending the rest of the day standing in the corner, wearing a dunce’s hat and writing self-criticisms – detention with Chinese characteristics.
Overall a bit weak, I thought.
Agree with all comments
Not quite a walk in the park
I think that 24A makes more sense if you forget that “stew in Orient” seems connected to Asian cuisine and think of it instead as a troublesome situation or an agitated mental state brought about by being in the east.
Re 1dn: I’m not the only wun in the universe who doesn’t pronounce NONE as ‘nun’. Yes, I know the RP-ers do. I found that out to my chagrin in my first university phonetics test. The tutor spoke immaculate RP for the purposes of the transcription. But my brain still heard Scouse.
Edited at 2011-04-04 08:14 am (UTC)
28 minutes for this, which turned out better than I first thought it would as I had needed to read a lot of clues before eventually solving one. Once under way it came together steadily but I don’t think it was all that suitable a puzzle for beginners
On the quibbles, I’m afraid I don’t even understand the one about SIGMA but then I never studied Greek and have picked up any knowledge of the alphabet through crossword puzzles. EXTOL for ‘crack up’ seems fine to me too and I was happy with ‘demanding’ at 11 as it belongs naturally in usage with both ‘attention’ and EAR. But like others I had been wondering about the assumption behind WESTERNISATION and RE for ‘army’.
My quibble that hasn’t bothered anyone else so far was ‘followed by’ at 23dn.
I didn’t understand how the second part of TRANLUCENCY worked until coming here.
Jack, 23dn is correct if you think of someone saying “it will rain/reign cats and dogs,” in which case the c & d do literally follow the r..
24ac doesn’t seem to make much sense to me either: while the anagram is obvious, why the result should be “welcome” is opaque. I think there’s a decent clue in there somewhere, but it’s not yet reached its final form.
CoD to 1 down – I can’t resist a really bad pun. Though I’m made curious by mctext as to how Scouse nuns are pronounced that makes them different from Scouse nones?
Edited at 2011-04-04 09:28 am (UTC)
I also put in TRANSPARENCY first, and didn’t fully understand the correct version until Sotira explained it (LUCE=fish, that’s another new one for me). Welcome back, Sotira!
I, too, wondered about WESTERNISATION and its welcome in the Orient. I assumed that the final question mark in the clue implied that it would NOT be welcome.
Surely any clue for an obscure word like this should be accessible via the wordplay, not by an even more obscure reference?
Otherwise, a fairly straightforward solve, after changing TRANSPARENCY to TRANSLUCENCY. My last in, with the use of aids, was….well, you can probably guess.
I can vouch for it being a ‘beginner’s puzzle’ today on the basis of my relative success. I can’t imagine a set of circumstances where I would ever get PSALTERY though.
>I can’t imagine a set of circumstances where I would ever get PSALTERY though.
How about next time it comes up? 😉 Which it does fairly regularly, though next time the wordplay might be an anagram of PLAYERS + T (for time).
For what it’s worth, 25ac made me really quite grumpy too for exactly the same reasons as you. However I got it right, simply because parts of it sounded vaguely plausible as matches for parts of the clue, I had all the checking letters, and I couldn’t think of anything better.
It’s amazing how often this works, and I think you get better at this sort of leap the more you do it. For someone like me, who encounters unknown bits of GK in virtually every puzzle, it’s an essential skill to acquire, and this blog has helped me enormously in acquiring it.
http://www.anmm.gov.au/site/page.cfm?u=1372
dyste
The clue for 1ac seems to be of a type that’s quite common now. I don’t think it’s invalidated by the Greek spelling of ‘Aesop’.
I agree with some that the surface of 25 is unconvincing, but I had no real quibbles overall.
I do wish Live Journal would not keep rejecting my password.
Dyste
Mind you, I’ve been in quite a few places where they sing an enthusiastic version of the 150th psalm “praise him on the trumpet, the psaltery and harp” where the psaltery is adequately represented (apparently) by the guitar.
our Maine Coon cat which we had to put down this evening. This amazing feline
had suffered 4 strokes and kept coming back. He just gave us that look which said “it’s time” …cat lovers will know what we mean. His image can be found on my wife’s quilting blog for which I take the snaps. If you care to look…
http://quiltobsession.wordpress.com/
His brother Smudge, pictured in the current avatar, misses him sorely, as do we.
We still miss our own cat, but since then we’ve acquired a visiting cat who spends nearly all her time with us. She really only goes back to her “owners” for meals, which seems a bit ungrateful of her, but at least it’s softened the blow for us.
Smudge, Lester’s half-brother is also feeling the loss. They were together for over ten years.