Mephisto 3377 – John Grimshaw

Greetings, barred-grid fans.

I’m surprised I got through this one as readily as I did – last Sunday was the day after the Charlotte Bourbon, Beer and BBQ festival which featured all the bourbon you can drink, and I found out exactly how much bourbon I could (not should) drink. Here I am a few days later hoping to re-unravel the clues.

Fewer unusual words than expected for Mephisto and the John Grimshaw precise clueing made this one a very pleasant experience indeed.

How did you get along?

Across
1 Pilgrim friend, not entirely pure in the past (6)
PALMER – PAL(friend) then MERE(obsolete term for pure) minus the last letter
6 One knowing hovel’s changed hands (6)
KENNER – KENNEL(hovel) with the L changed for an R
11 Savage conflict left in anger (8)
WARRAGLE – WAR(conflict) then L(left) inside RAGE(anger)
12 Scots intend land free of the south (5)
ETTLE – SETTLE(alight, land) minus S(south)
13 Learned about old rook bird’s first year (6)
SORAGE – SAGE(learned) surrounding O(old) and R(rook)
14 Style of art I exhibited once in North America (7)
NIHONGA – I, HONG(obsolete form of HUNG, exhibited) inside NA(North America)
15 Scots turn to Ireland (4)
TIRL – T'(to), IRL(Ireland)
16 Site once processed mineral (8)
ICESTONE -anagram of SITE,ONCE
20 Fish bone embedded turned concerning (7)
OSSETER – OS(bone), SET(embedded), then RE(concerning) reversed
22 Following track once around Quebec (7)
SEQUENT – SENT(earlier form of SCENT, track) surrounding QUE(Quebec)
26 Green government lacking a certain bit of body? (8)
ECOSTATE – ECO(green), STATE(government)
27 Joint way to access computer’s no good (4)
LOIN – LOGIN(way to access computer) minus G(good)
28 Waterbird? Goburra regularly is included in related group (7)
COURLAN – alternating letters in gObUrRa inside CLAN(related group).
30 Fear once learned after active duty (6)
ADREAD – READ(learned) after AD(Active Duty)
31 Loos working with old penny coin that’s obsolete (5)
SOLDO – anagram of LOOS and D(old penny)
32 Church helper more commonly seen on a weekday (8)
THURIFER – RIFER(more commonly) after THU(Thursday, a weekday)
33 American in his synagogue losing time shut in (6)
EMPALE – A(American) inside TEMPLE(synagogue) minus T(time)
34 Thief once held back by harem minder? (6)
NIMMER – hidden reversed inside haREM MINder
Down
1 Domestic fowl in picture of compound (6)
PHENIC – HEN(domestic fowl) inside PIC(pic). Bit of PTSD here as I’ve been helping out some people with their organic chemistry recently
2 Mad king acted in Shakespeare’s made grotesque (8)
ANTICKED – anagram of K(king), ACTED,IN
3 In Hamlet he endured death, as the Bard had it (6)
LETHEE – hidden inside hamLET HE Endured
4 Fodder crop, mass one of small value reportedly (4)
MILO – M(mass), I(one), then a homophone of LOW(of small value)
5 Managed what survivors do where junta is in power (7)
RANGOON – RAN(managed) and GO ON(what survivors do). No question mark as I doubt Myanmar will be on the democracy list anytime soon. I was wondering if there should be an indicator that this is the older name, since the junta renamed the city YANGON
7 English stories out of place? Who cares? Could be (8)
EROTESIS -E(English) and an anagram of STORIES
8 New plaster coating put round hospital vestibule (7)
NARTHEX – N, ARTEX(plaster) surrounding H(hospital)
9 Tree out in Goa (5)
NGAIO – anagram of IN,GOA
10 Bird about eating fish on river (6)
REELER – RE(about) containing EEL(fish) then R(river)
17 Eve put in route pin on board (8)
TREENAIL – EEN(eve) inside TRAIL(route)
18 Poet’s set about finest verse book that’s turned up (8)
BESTADDE – BEST(finest) then EDDA(verse book) reversed
19 What may be planted in garden private area (7)
GUNNERA – GUNNER(private), A(area)
21 Sadly does not put up in Scotland (7)
STOODEN – anagram of DOES,NOT
22 Part of Balmoral roof he sculpted recently (6)
SCLATE – SC(sculpsit, he sculpted), LATE(recently)
23 One writing entirely in Mayan language (6)
MALLAM – ALL(entirely) inside MAM(Mayam language)
24 How to declare £10 banknote’s value once (6)
TENOUR – homophone of TENNER (£10)
25 Sweetener in US deep-fried cakes on the rise (5)
SIRUP – PURIS(deep-fried cakes) reversed
29 Space travel at speed, ignoring velocity (4)
ROOM – VROOM(travel at speed) minus V(velocity)

8 comments on “Mephisto 3377 – John Grimshaw”

  1. I have another streak going, but you guys keep saying they’re on the easier side! Had conquered this by midweek, in a series of shortish forays.

  2. I wondered whether the top line “PALMER KENNER” was a tip of the hat to fellow setter Paul McKenna, who always puts a pun at the top of his Mephistos.

    33ac. I hadn’t fully appreciated before this puzzle, that calling a synagogue “Temple”, is particularly a US usage (and marked as so in the dictionaries). Hence “American in his synagogue”.

  3. This was one of the easier John Grimshaw’s. He normally leaves me with a couple of clues where I’m uncertain of the wordplay. Nonetheless a very enjoyable puzzle.
    Rather liked RANGOON.
    ETTLE was a write-in having encounter that numerous times in John Buchan’s Witch Wood.
    Like Peter W, the US usage of temple was new to me.
    IIRC I finished this Monday morning having begun Sunday evening.

  4. Rangoon: If John had been able to incorporate an indication in the lively surface story, I’m pretty sure he would have done so. In cases where the old form of a word is well known, I think such indication can be left out.

  5. I had no particular difficulty with this, except for MALLAM. I dislike clues where the answer is an obscure word and part of the wordplay (in this case MAM) is also an obscure word, with a key letter (the first M) unchecked. I thought I would have to trawl through the dictionary, which is no fun, but managed instead to find a list of Mayan languages in Wiki – less tedious, but equally unsatisfying intellectually.

    1. I share your dislike of this kind of clue but in this case I got lucky by thinking of Malayalam, completely unrelated but it prompted my to check MALL_M in Chambers first and hey presto! Pure fluke.
      Generally I found this pretty easy for a Grimshaw.

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