Monthly Club Special 20,225: Levi Stubbs’ Tears

Crikey, is the year half over already? This was another quality MCS displaying the usual delight in the mad, bad and dangerous to define words bulking out our dictionaries, all clued with the usual precision and flair – thanks be to the awesomely talented setter! I think my favourite clue for wordplay was the semi-unhinged 28ac, but kudos also to 18dn for having a truly amazing entry in my dictionary, and 26ac for word of the day despite some stiff competition. I bet if we hunted long enough we could find an English accent where QUACKSALVER was a homophone of mercury…

ACROSS
1 In well-known tragedy, mischief left one in Jock’s possession (7)
MALICHO – L I in MACHO [Jock]. The “well-known tragedy” is Shakespeare’s Hamlet.

5 Refer to what I said months back about transmitted ideas (7)
MEMETIC – CITE ME [refer to what I said] + M [months], the whole reversed

9 Study ditch height across odd parts of gully for cutting in wood (11)
DENDROGLYPH – DEN DROP H [study | ditch | height] “across” G{u}L{l}Y

10 For Romans, this is almost Rhenish (3)
HOC – HOC{k}

11 Not clever to smother constant sound of
encouragement
(6)
TCHICK – THICK [not clever] to “smother” C

12 To grasp location of grand mausoleum, cursorily
study photo of shadows (8)
SKIAGRAM – To “grasp” AGRA [location of the Taj Mahal], SKIM [cursorily study]

14 In lead, recovers alchemised gold, by reports (6-7)
PROCES-VERBAUX – In PB [lead], (RECOVERS*) [“alchemised”] + AU X [gold | by]

17 Gasbags for some British planes carrying sweats (13)
BLATHERSKITES – B KITES [British | planes] “carrying” LATHERS [sweats]

21 Developed cities, DC for example, here and now (8)
DEICTICS – (CITIES DC*) [“developed”]

23 I try to spoil Filipino miner (6)
IGOROT – I GO ROT [I | try | to spoil]

25 Polynesian drink: in local dress you’ll want large one double (3)
AVA – The local dress is a LAVA-LAVA – L AVA times two.

26 Once I faked noise from bird tray (11)
QUACKSALVER – QUACK SALVER [noise from bird | tray]

27 Poet’s to make productive politician prevail, putting the writer first (7)
IMPREGN – MP REIGN = politician | prevail, but take I [the writer] and put it to the beginning.

28 Send cuckoo with both wings replaced by a diving bird (7)
ANHINGA – send cuckoo is UNHINGE, replace both its first and last letter with an A.

DOWN
1 Hearts, the ones for taming Tweedsmuir Scotsmen (6)
MIDSTS – {ta}MI{ng} {twee}DS{muir} {sco}TS{men}

2 Bouncer’s close before ejecting one in circle (4,3)
LONG HOP – N{I}GH [close, “ejecting” I = one] in LOOP [circle]

3 Church play area unwilling to display historical shroud
material
(9)
CERECLOTH – CE REC LOTH [church | play area | unwilling]

4 In other words, Gray depicts a revel (4)
ORGY – OR, GY [in other words | Gray (the SI unit for absorbed dose of ionizing radiation)]

5 Futurist Communist leader restricting chatter against outer space (10)
MAYAKOVSKY – MAO [Communist leader] “restricting” YAK, against SKY [outer space]. Vladimir Mayakovsky was amongst the signers of The Communist Manifesto. He wrote Talking With The Taxman About Poetry, which may be better known in these parts as the title of a Billy Bragg album.

6 Raising this liquor made from flowers is a big hit (5)
MAHWA – A WHAM [a | big hit] reversed

7 From main character’s angle, a green soup (7)
TOHEROA – TO HERO [from main character’s angle] + A. Toheroa is a distinctively green New Zealand shellfish soup.

8 American native strips in California (8)
CACOMIXL – COMIX [strips] in CAL. An American relative of the raccoon.

13 Sprite before tea drunk by Parisian’s the French one (10)
LEPRECHAUN – PRE CHA [before tea] “drunk” by LE UN [Parisian’s the | French one]

15 Reverse picture of dress trim in Covent Garden venue (9)
ROTOGRAPH – TOG RAP [dress | trim] in ROH [Royal Opera House = Covent Garden Venue]. I think TRIM means RAP in the sense of “rebuke”.

16 A half-hearted religious founder born originally in sheikhdom (3,5)
ABU DHABI – A BUD{d}HA B I{n}

18 One-eyed northerner with snake touring border area (7)
ARIMASP – ASP [snake] “touring” RIM A [border | area]. Perhaps you never knew you needed a synonym for “one-eyed northerner”. The Arimaspians were at perpetual war with the griffins for their gold hoards, as the ever-reliable Herodotus informs us.

19 Ben’s name comes up, admitting personnel confessed (7)
SHRIVEN – reversed NEVIS, admitting HR

20 Private broadcast over meeting points on head (6)
PTERIA – PTE [private] + AIR reversed

22 Sri Lankan monkey said to pull on grass (5)
TOQUE – homophone of TOKE [pull on grass]

24 Rocket man regularly inspected amount of obscured
sky
(4)
OKTA – {r}O{c}K{e}T {m}A{n}

5 comments on “Monthly Club Special 20,225: Levi Stubbs’ Tears”

  1. Hmm, I got one wrong too .. mimetic for memetic. I mean, so what if it doesn’t quite parse, it fits doesn’t it? Grrr again..
  2. My first completed club monthly, but I failed by one letter by not reading past the first spelling of MAHUA in my dictionary for 6D. Grr. No wonder I failed to parse it! LONG HOP was the other I never understood. Treating it as I do the Mephisto, with liberal and extensive use of the dictionary got me there. I think I could grow to like these… if I can find the time to solve them. Entertaining and educational with some lovely words… WOD to BLATHERSKITES for me. Thanks V and setter.
    1. welcome aboard, John. Sometimes I use the club monthly as a filler, just do a handful of clues when you have a little time spare. If it takes a couple of weeks it doesn’t matter.. and it is easier to solve in small doses
  3. In think it’s a mark of a good setter when you can get to words you didn’t know you knew by way of the wordplay and the application of bits of other words. DENDROGLYPH, SKIAGRAM and ROTOGRAPH (all illustrative things, was there a theme?) and CERECLOTH are cases in point, and made this MCS a bit of an ego-massaging treat rather than a laborious dictionary trawling grind. I liked working out ANHINGA, ARIMASP and COCOMIXAL, despite their unlikeliness, and the generous wordplay that encouraged me to spell LEPRECHAUN right for once.
    And I knew the Shakespeare!
    Cheers V for exemplary dedication to duty and for revealing (once again) the joy of the Call My Bluff fringes of the dictionary.

    Edited at 2019-07-01 10:03 am (UTC)

  4. I’ve been back in harness with the Club Monthly since May, after a very prolonged absence, and I’m enjoying them a lot. This was quite a treat, I thought. Around an hour and a half of solving time over numerous sessions (I like that the Club timer keeps track of your actual time spent with the puzzle open).

    I had a lot of trouble assembling Comrade MAYAKOVSKY from his component parts. I had vaguely heard of him but had no idea about the two degrees of separation with Comrade Bragg, so thanks for that nugget, verlaine.

    I also spent rather a long time, after solving it, trying to decide if I could pronounce the word MIDSTS. I’m pretty sure I can’t.

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