Solving time : Well I submitted it without a lot of confidence in 21:16 online and it came back with two mistakes which means either I’ve made two mistakes or there’s a typo in a checking letter. Let me draw you a map – the wavelength of the setter is here, and I’m somewhere out in orbit of an undiscovered planet. More than half the clues had me scratching my head and it’s going to be a tough one to figure out what to leave off, and hopefully discover my own mistakes along the way. Hardest time I’ve had with a daily in months…
And at the end of writing the blog, I think I have found it… away we go!
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | EXCESS FARE: one I put in without a lot of confidence, but it’s in Chambers and counts as a double definition, one cryptic |
| 6 | JAM,B: should have seen this a lot easier, but I had a wrong answer for 8 that kept me stuck in this corner a while |
| 9 | RED,CUR,RANT: nice charade, I think this was my favorite clue |
| 10 | ACRE: This is my mistake – I wrote in ACME, thinking maybe it was “convert(A/C) me”, but it during the Third Crusade there was a siege there |
| 12 | BEFORE CHRIST: BC – shared abbreviation with British Columbia |
| 15 | HERBAL TEA: HER then B.A. around ALTE |
| 17 | SEE TO: Theres that river TEES again, reversed before I |
| 18 | TWEET: a social media aspect I never really got into |
| 19 | I’ll omit this one for the sake of my mirror |
| 20 | EXPLODED VIEW: a detailed plan, and a concept that has gone bust |
| 24 | TOP,1: Aaaah, found one of the typos in my submission. A hat, and hence “that goes ahead” |
| 25 | MARGUERITE: ARGUER in MITE – had to write ARGUER in once I had most of the checking letters to see what went around the outside |
| 26 | NORN: and there’s be NO R.N. if you’re anti-navy |
| 27 | HYPNOTISED: (THE,PONY,IS)*, D |
| Down | |
| 1 | EZRA: Z(last of the sequence of the alphabet) in ERA |
| 2 | CODA: sounds like CODER |
| 3 | STUPEFACTION: (CUP,OF,TEA,ISN’T)* |
| 4 | FORGO: sounds like FORE then GO – a game played with little black and white stones |
| 5 | let’s leave this one out of the downs |
| 7 | ARCHMIEDES: got this from the definition – now I see it’s DEMI reversed in ARCHES – court of appeal for the province of Canterbury |
| 8 | BRENT GOOSE: BREN, then (GOES,TO) – put the GOOSE part in first, then invented the STENT GOOSE who lingered until I figured out 6 |
| 11 | CHASTISEMENT: HAST |
| 13 | CHATTER,TO,N: got this from the wordplay and had to look it up later, had never heard of the book |
| 14 | ORDER PAPER: my last in, from the checking letters, and a fingers crossed moment. I think this is right, Wernham Hogg is the paper company from “The Office” (which I never got into), and an ORDER PAPER is an agenda |
| 15 | TIPPERARY: TIP then R in PEARY – another one I got from the definition, not being familiar with Robert Peary |
| 21 | VEGA,N: technically vegans can use animals, just not put them in their mouths |
| 22 |
|
| 23 | W,END: the last word of my high school anthem |
Fortunately, ‘Chatterton’ and ‘Acre’ were obvious to me. FYI, George, the poet was commonly called ‘The Marvelous Boy’ in the 18th century, although Dr Johnson pooh-poohed him.
I did have to get Brent Goose from the cryptic, never heard of that one.
A very fine piece of work today with a good mix of clue types — almost none of which were obvious; the types that is. I also fell for ACME at first but had that can’t-be! feeling right away. Haven’t seen WEND for a long time; so good to see its face again. Seems archaic; but it’s a verb we use every day, given that ‘to go’ doesn’t have a past tense of its own and has to borrow it from ‘to wend’ — which I shall now do as I’m due in yet another ”workshop”. Grrrrr.
“Now is the time to wend our way
Until we meet again
Some sunny day.”
I knew ‘brent goose’ but did myself there by anagristing ‘gun’ as well as ‘goes to’ (I had to invent a ‘v’ for seeing – or summat, as David BRENT would say). There’s another Wernham Hogg connection for you – Rioky Gervais’s character’s name, for those who haven’t watched this piece of televisual genius (especially Series 1).
I thought for a moment we might have the same answer twice at 8dn and 14dn what with the Brent/Wernham Hogg and goose/down connections but it was obviously not meant to be despite the first R being checked by HERBAL TEA.
Didn’t understand 11 before coming here. I had the HAST(e),IS bit but took the EM from ‘setter up’ and was left wondering how the container CENT was clued.
I think this one counts as a beast (for me, anway) so I’m hoping for an easier ride tomorrow.
Would someone expand on TWEET for this ignoramus. (I know the message bit).
Far too much unknown vocab/GK (BREN, PEARY, ARCHES, NORN) for this to be in any way accessible to me. A shock after yesterday’s easy-ish puzzle.
🙁
We had Chatterton on August 11 last year, and I was looking at Wallis’s painting in the Tate only a couple of weeks ago.
Never heard of Peary, or Wernham Hogg: I’m all in favour of historical and cultural references as long as I’m familiar with them!
Didn’t care much for EXCESS FARE either, possibly because I couldn’t get past the “halt, who goes there” sequence. They’re not guards these days anyway, and haven’t been for many a year: currently, they’re “Customer Service Ticket Sales”, which admittedly would make for a less snappy clue.
It doesn’t help that I can’t spell Tipararee, and apparently neither can half the InterWeb, but that’s no recommendation.
Feeling grumpy, so no CoD
Wernham Hogg was unfamiliar to me even though I’ve watched some of The Office (as much as I can bear: brilliant but excruciating) and is certainly pushing some kind of boundary. NORN, PEARY and ARCHES were unknown. And EXPLODED VIEW and RANGELAND are not exactly everyday vocabulary.
Perhaps the most difficult thing about this puzzle though was the number of short words where the possibilities were very numerous and the answer ultimately somewhat obscure: EZRA, TOPI, NORN, HIPS, JAMB, ACRE. I spent ages trawling through the alphabet on all of these.
Thanks for the blog, George, and for full explanations. In this PC age, is ‘BC’ as ‘Before Christ’ still acceptable. I though we were supposed to use ‘BCE’, ‘Before Common Era’?
Some great definitions here, like ‘man of principle’ for Archimedes, and ‘that goes ahead’ for TOPI.
As a keen player of the Assassin’s Creed videogame, I had no problem with ACRE. It’s set in the Holy Land during the time of the crusades, and Acre is one of the main locations used.
Like Z8, I detected a retro sensibility in this puzzle, but it took me a long, long time to tune into that. I kept looking for highly engineered wordplay that wasn’t there. I did enjoy it a lot once I found the wavelength.
COD: BEFORE CHRIST
Last in, after much messin’ about with ‘excuse’ and ‘excise’: EXCESS FARE
http://www.cerbslair.com/ltcc/main-acme.html
Edited at 2011-03-10 07:52 pm (UTC)
Track him in the later apocryphal writings, though, and he’s way up there with Elijah and Moses. I suppose it depends on what you think a prophet is or does, but “Ezra the Prophet” doesn’t sound as right as “Ezra the Scribe” does.
Or am I on the wrong track here, so to speak?
Didn’t get time to have a proper crack at this yesterday as I was out for most of my lunch hour.
Started up the online puzzle when I got back to the office, got exactly zero answers on first read-through so printed it off to try later. Did about 1/3rd while grabbing a quick tea last night then finished off over a coffee this morning (“working” from home as one of the kids is off sick). No idea of time but this was tough. I had to cheat to get the flower when I hit a wall but managed to get through it from there.
It took me ages to recall where I knew Wernham Hogg from.