Solving time : 19:49, but with two errors. One I can see immediately as a typo, the other may take a little more finding. This is a tough one, there’s an opera clued by an anagram with mostly unhelpful crossing letters, it appears to be a few letters short of a pangram (unless they’re in my incorrect entry, I can’t find a J,V, or Y).
Commence the bloggers nightmare, writing up a puzzle where he has no idea what he has done wrong.
Away we go!
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | THE DAM BUSTERS: H,EDAM,BUST(that has broken) in an anagram of REST |
| 9 | LOGOS: O in LOGS for the word of god incarnate |
| 10 | I PURITANI: anagram of (AIR,PUT,IN,1) for the Bellini opera |
| 11 | PERFECT(absolute),GAS(hoot): I don’t think I’ve called it anything other than “ideal gas”… anyway it obeys the laws of Boyle, Charles and Avogadro, usually combined into PV=nRT. I for some reason decided it was better spelled as PERCECT GAS |
| 12 | ABET: hidden reversed in staTE BAnk |
| 14 | OFF-PLAN: OFF(temporarily against), then PLAN |
| 16 | ECHELON: EC(city), H(hospital) then L(large) in EON |
| 17 | ERRATIC: RAT in ERIC |
| 19 | PRE-ECHO: |
| 20 | ITCH: PITCH without the P |
| 21 | CUSTARD PIE: (SAD,PICTURE)* |
| 24 | SNOW UNDER: NOW in SUNDER |
| 25 | BOOTS: T in BOOS(barracks) |
| 26 | SUPERPOSITION: (PITEOUS,PRISON)* |
| Down | |
| 1 | TELEPHONE KIOSK: anagram of KEEP,SILENT and HOOK |
| 2 | E, |
| 3 | AUSTER |
| 4 | BRITTEN: AHA! There it is – an O had slipped into the name of the composer… I think this is meant to be BRIT(British), then T |
| 5 | SOUTANE: OUT in SANE – got this from wordplay |
| 6 | EPIC: or E-PIC |
| 7 | SHAMBOLIC: SHAM(fake) then CARBOLIC soap without the CAR |
| 8 | LISTEN TO REASON: got this from the definition, the wordplay is LIE AS ON around STENTOR(loudmouth) |
| 13 | CHIEF RABBI: 1 in CHEF, then RABBI |
| 15 | FEROCIOUS: reverse CORE,F then IOUS |
| 18 | CH,UNDER: a word probably best known in Men At Work’s song “Down Under” |
| 19 | POTOROO: another bit of Australiana – take the middle letters of sPOTs mORe fOOd |
| 22 | POORI: POORISH without the S or H |
| 23 |
|
Someone, maybe Sotira, complained bitterly the last time we had I Puritani. It wasn’t that long ago, I hope everyone remembers it this time around.
I was a bit surprised to see ‘logos’, although quite a few non-English words and phrases have popped up lately.
I’m also not quite sure why you would guess at me being the bitter complainer. I wouldn’t have thought I’m the most likely candidate — certainly not in recent years when I’ve made a conscious effort to be positive about the puzzles whenever possible. I’m also a regular concert goer and classical music enthusiast (though without your apparently limitless knowledge of the subject), so unlikely to complain about the inclusion of an opera title.
It’s a little upsetting to come here and see a remark like that.
Whether the incredibly brave Gibson would ever have called his dog Digger is of no interest, of course, to those who would bowdlerise history.
Chances of the film actually being made?
CHUNDER raised a smile as I only knew it in connection with Sir Les Patterson, and I thought 13dn was rather clever and inventive.
I noted a couple of rather old-fashioned expressions in BOOTS as the servant responsible for cleaning shoes, and TELEPHONE KIOSK as opposed to ‘box’ or ‘booth’, which I have not heard used for decades on end.
Edited at 2014-05-08 01:15 am (UTC)
From wikipedia, I gleaned this re the difference – or not – between ‘perfect’ and ‘ideal’: ‘Sometimes, a distinction is made between an ideal gas, where hat{c}_V and hat{c}_p could vary with temperature, and a perfect gas, for which this is not the case’, which clears things up nicely (a trip here will clear up the ‘hats’).
Me, I preferred yesterday’s, even if it took me nearly twice as long.
Got going by spotting the EDAM at 1ac and finished with QUIP. Along the way, I thought there were some very good clues. AUSTERLITZ and SNOW UNDER in particular.
I enjoyed this more than some recent puzzles – not too hard but difficult enough to make you think and work through the wordplay. Not many went in on definition.
Edited at 2014-05-08 02:57 am (UTC)
But much enjoyed, anyway. The four 13-letter answers all took me a while to work out, which I would say is good setting .
COD probably QUIP — short and sweet.
I had hesitations over 15 FEROCIOUS because I couldn’t account for the S – the printed version has only one promise. Just picky, perhaps, but trying to make sense of “score F” with the rest of the wordplay was a distraction.
While I get OFF and PLAN separately (the latter somewhere in the muddle of the clue) I don’t get the whole – Chambers says its about buying a property on the basis of the architect’s plan only. Anyone care to push the penny until it drops? It was my LOI and a bit of a tant pis (Gallic shrug).
Well (and honestly!) blogged, George – glad it wasn’t my turn this week.
Geoffrey
Conversely I’ve heard it as a positive for housebuilders who can build a development safe in the knowledge that they’ll get their money back if enough properties have been sold off-plan.
COD to CUSTARD PIE
I sat with about half done for ages thinking that if I could just get one more the rest would fall into place and so it proved when FEROCIOUS went in.
Nice reference to Men at Work in the blog – now I have Down Under as an earworm. Definitely my favourite Men at Work song.
First saw the word CHUNDER in Barry Humphries’s comic strip “Barry McKenzie” in Private Eye during the 1960s. There was an irritatingly memorable song in that too, sung to the tune of Maggie May and which began:
Sitting down by Bondi Pier
Drinking tubes of ice-cold beer…
and ending
And we’ll CHUNDER in the old Pacific Sea
TELEPHONE KIOSK reminded me of those times too: walking about trying to find one that hadn’t been vandalized; the fug of cigarette smoke and urine when you finally discovered one that worked; the beep-beep-beep as you fumbled to force in your extra tanner when you ran out of time just as you were about to ask the girl if she would meet you that evening …..
LOI 13dn – had been thinking ‘services’ might indicate a famous tennis player I’d never heard of.
LOI perfect gas. I was happy with perfect but as for the rest of the clue I had no way of knowing which field of knowledge where I have a lack of same we were dealing with. Religion? Politics? Luckily I plumped for science which made gas the obvious guess.
So not very gruntled today, the above spoiling an otherwise enjoyable and reasonably quick solve (if a tad too heavy on the anagrams), to and from St George’s on the No 155 plus a few minutes at home, under half an hour in all, before the fruitless hunt for the aforesaid gas.
AUSTERLITZ today, WATERLOO quite recently – can we expect a trend?
As for I PURITANI, less known than it perhaps should be, as with all those Bellini/Donizetti operas which require an outstanding soprano with the right sort of voice, who only appears maybe every other generation. We’re still waiting for Joan Sutherland’s successor …
FOI EAGER, LOI the excellent QUIP. COD, spoilt for choice today, a toss-up between the CHIEF RABBI and SNOW UNDER.
The last time I PURITANI came up (and as I commented at the time) I thought it was a terribly unfair clue at first, because it appears the checking letters can go almost anywhere, but then you put them in the right place and it is obviously the right answer. This time I remembered it immediately.
Thanks for mentioning the Men at Work song, George. I need a regular supply of new ear-worms to displace Let it Go from Frozen, which my kids won’t stop playing and singing.
Edited at 2014-05-08 10:08 pm (UTC)
Stuck for a bit on POORI – put in PARSI for Indian when I had the P and the I, thought that was it so didn’t check the parsing properly and LOI therefore BOOTS which didn’t fit the R. Silly…
Edited at 2014-05-08 09:09 pm (UTC)
To be fair, I did break off to make coffee as I was feeling stumped, but I got there in the end. I still don’t really understand ‘off-plan’ and I have never heard of ‘potoroo’. I also spent a long time looking at ‘ferocious’, as I was not confident of the parsing.
I also remember the button A and button B telephone boxes: does anyone else remember Sydney Carter’s plaintive song in which one features?
If I had to guess the setter, I’d plump for Don Manley: a bit of religion (if you’re prepared to accept LOGOS), a bit of science (PERFECT GAS), and beautifully constructed clues. Anyway I thought it a delight from start to finish and I raise my hat to whoever produced it.
Oh, and I’d even heard of the foodie POORI (though only ever in crosswords, and it was my LOI).