I don’t seem to have had much success in the past in attempting to objectively gauge the difficulty level of these puzzles but, despite that, I’m still going to claim that this week’s is easier than average. There are plenty of straightforward constructions of the form A+B, and only a couple of answers that might not be considered everyday vocab. Overall an undemanding but pleasant solve – my COD goes to 11D for its believable surface.
Long may she be spared to roam
Definitions are underlined.
On this day in 1882, Queen Victoria survived the last assassination attempt of her reign, courtesy of the inaccurate marksmanship of Roderick McLean. The event was commemorated by William McGonagall, regularly considered a contender for the title of worst poet in British history, in his Attempted Assassination of the Queen. It’s hard to pick a favourite verse but I’ll plump for this one:
Long may she be spared to roam
Among the bonnie Highland floral,
And spend many a happy day
In the palace of Balmoral.
| Across | |
| 1 | Drug produced by a police department (4) |
| ACID – A + CID (police department, i.e. Criminal Investigation Department). Acid is a slang term for LSD. | |
| 4 | They resist difficult puzzles after work (8) |
| OPPOSERS – POSERS (difficult puzzles) after OP (work, i.e. the usual abbreviation for opus) | |
| 8 | Criminal American behind closed doors (2,6) |
| IN CAMERA – anagram (Criminal) of AMERICAN. A phrase perhaps most often used in reference to legal proceedings. This is a popular anagram, having appeared in the Financial Times puzzle twice this year already. | |
| 9 | Right time for storm (4) |
| RAGE – R (right) + AGE (time) | |
| 10 | Passion in part of contest (4) |
| HEAT – double definition | |
| 11 | Brass covering northern hills (8) |
| PENNINES – PENNIES (Brass, i.e. money) around (covering) N (northern). A natural barrier that keeps the Lancastrians at bay. Less facetiously, the area contains some of the most beautiful countryside in the UK. | |
| 12 | Wide stand for one painting animal (6) |
| WEASEL – W (Wide) + EASEL (stand for one painting) | |
| 14 | Just holding empty plate for all to see (6) |
| OPENLY – ONLY (Just) holding PE (empty plate, i.e. the word “plate” with its inner letters deleted) | |
| 16 | Substitute with good reputation (8) |
| STANDING – STAND-IN (Substitute) + G (good) | |
| 18 | Keep close to English giant (4) |
| HUGE – HUG (Keep close to) + E (English) | |
| 19 | Just passable (4) |
| FAIR – double definition | |
| 20 | Swiss legend possibly revealing secrets (8) |
| TELLTALE – the Swiss legend of William Tell could possibly be described as a TELL TALE | |
| 22 | They open out for novice (8) |
| NEOPHYTE – anagram (out) of THEY OPEN. Perhaps not a common word, unless you regularly listen to Walt Frazier commentating on New York Knicks basketball games. The other possible anagram from this is HYPNOTEE, but that doesn’t fit the definition. | |
| 23 | Page concealed by one poet or another (4) |
| POPE – P (Page) inside (concealed by) POE (one poet). Edgar Allan Poe (The Raven) and Alexander Pope are the poets in question. Pope’s work An Essay on Criticism is responsible for several well-known quotations – “Fools rush in where angels fear to tread”, “To err is human; to forgive, divine”, and “A little learning is a dangerous thing”. | |
| Down | |
| 2 | Grant some academic once denied (7) |
| CONCEDE – hidden in academiC ONCE DEnied | |
| 3 | Silly frame for Rembrandt’s capital sketch (5) |
| DRAFT – DAFT (Silly) outside (frame for) R (Rembrandt’s capital) | |
| 4 | Poem due to be heard (3) |
| ODE – homophone (to be heard) of OWED (due) | |
| 5 | Unattractive boy with grand church music (9) |
| PLAINSONG – PLAIN (Unattractive) + SON (boy) + G (grand, i.e. 1000) | |
| 6 | Leaders in South American republic eat fish (7) |
| SARDINE – SAR (Leaders in South American republic, i.e. the first letters of South American Republic) + DINE (eat) | |
| 7 | Short acknowledgement outside university for scoundrel (5) |
|
ROGUE – ROGE |
|
| 11 | Male is taken in by worthless fortune-telling (9) |
| PALMISTRY – M (Male) + IS, all inside (taken in by) PALTRY (worthless). This was clued very similarly in a Guardian Quiptic a couple of years ago as “Male is taken in by trivial fortune-telling” | |
| 13 | Puritans resolved to avoid one hot spot (7) |
|
SUNTRAP – anagram (resolved) of PUR |
|
| 15 | Fielder supports insolence (3,4) |
| LEG SLIP – LEGS (supports) + LIP (insolence). This is a fielding position whose name will tell the cricketing neophyte as much about its whereabouts on the field as gully, point, third man, or cover. | |
| 17 | Wind up with letters read aloud (5) |
| TEASE – homophone (read aloud) of tees/Ts/T’s (letters) | |
| 18 | Agitated male? Woolly male! (3,2) |
| HET UP – HE (male) + TUP (Woolly male). A tup is a ram. | |
| 21 | Rest claimed regularly (3) |
| LIE – alternate letters (regularly) of cLaImEd | |
I was a bit slow on this one and needed 13 minutes. I lost a bit of time along the way because on the last occasion the word at 11dn came up it was spelt with an E and caught me out, so that was the spelling I started with today and only realised my error when 16ac wouldn’t fit. I should have paid more attention to the wordplay.
A good Times lite: nail puzzles of this type and it’s time to try the main event (for those who want to, of course). 🙂
Better luck tomorrow – hopefully!