This took me 10 minutes, but oon reflection there’s nothing unfair or excessively complex. I havent done one by Bob and Margaret before so maybe it’s just a wavelength thing. Good mix of clues, nice surfaces. Hard to pick a winner – I like 8ac and also 11dn
| Across |
| 1 |
Some provided source of Latin poetry (4) |
|
OVID – hidden word – prOVIDed |
| 4 |
Admen had styles personally crafted (8) |
|
HANDMADE – anagram (‘styles’) of ADMEN HAD |
| 8 |
Three of the fifteen best seats? (5,3) |
|
FRONT ROW – double definition. The front row of a rugby scrum consists of three players, two massive ‘props’ and a slightly shorter player called a ‘hooker’ (no laughing across the atlantic), out of the total of 15. |
| 9 |
Instrument in sack brought back (4) |
|
TOOL – LOOT backwards |
| 10 |
Auditor’s punished for discovery (4) |
|
FIND – sounds like FINED |
| 11 |
Yellow clay rod somehow bearing weight (8) |
|
COWARDLY – anagram (‘somehow’) of CLAY ROD with W for weight inside |
| 12 |
Judge encounters advocate, finally, when returning (6) |
|
ESTEEM – MEETS + E all backwards |
| 14 |
Month that ends too soon for girl (6) |
|
MARTHA – MAR (month) + THA(t) |
| 16 |
Hold back from relaxation, then shower (8) |
|
RESTRAIN – REST + RAIN |
| 18 |
A number a lot may go for cheaply? (4) |
|
SONG – ‘going for a song’ means to sell cheaply |
| 19 |
Raising agent, heading off in this direction? (4) |
|
EAST – YEAST minus the ‘heading’ |
| 20 |
Father’s host for old TV show (4,4) |
|
DADS ARMY – barely cryptic. |
| 22 |
Road-edge spoiled, with battered corners (3-5) |
|
DOG-EARED – anagram (‘spoiled’) of ROAD EDGE |
| 23 |
Eagle sailors found in middle of Greece (4) |
|
ERNE – sailors are RN (Royal Navy) inside EE (middle of ‘Greece’) |
| Down |
| 2 |
Maids serving King drink within six seconds (7) |
|
VIRGINS – King is R, drink is GIN. All contained within VI (six) S (seconds) |
| 3 |
Ate in study I’d set up (5) |
|
DINED – DEN ID reversed |
| 4 |
The girl’s seeing the earl regularly (3) |
|
HER – alternate letters of tHe EaRl |
| 5 |
She has the latest snowman we built (9) |
|
NEWSWOMAN – anagram (‘built’) of SNOWMAN WE |
| 6 |
Older erratum corrected (7) |
|
MATURER – anagram (‘corrected’) of ERRATUM |
| 7 |
Amusing conclusion to repeated spin (5) |
|
DROLL – D (last letter of ‘repeated’) + ROLL (spin) |
| 11 |
Someone who arrives holding mike, with officer in charge? (9) |
|
COMMANDER – Someone who arrives is a COMER, with M (Mike, phonetic alphabet) + AND (with) inside |
| 13 |
On reflection, some felt it needed permit (7) |
|
ENTITLE – ‘some’ = hidden word klaxon. This one is reversed: fELT IT NEeded |
| 15 |
Game where the suspense comes at the end (7) |
|
HANGMAN – cryptic definition |
| 17 |
Books are turning up inspirational source (5) |
|
ERATO – OT (old testament ) + ARE all backwards. One of the Muses of Greek and Roman mythology. |
| 18 |
Good fellow on the beer becoming overfamiliar (5) |
|
STALE – ST (good fellow) + ALE |
| 21 |
Detective having daughter carried out (3) |
|
DID – DI (Detective Inspector) + D |
LOI was 12A – I can’t see why JUDGE = ESTEEM, and there’s nothing in the Chambers app to suggest it.
Brian
2. formal
to judge or consider; deem
to esteem an idea improper
The Oxfords have it covered too so it’s odd that Chambers doesn’t. I think it has been acknowledged by one of the editors that Collins is the principal reference for the Weekday cryptics, and maybe the Sunday Times too, so perhaps Chambers is a little out of favour these days. On the other hand we had an abbreviation in the main puzzle yesterday (GS for Grammar School) that was only in Chambers.
Edited at 2019-07-12 10:03 am (UTC)
Chambers has
esteem /i- or e-stēm’/
transitive verb
To set a high estimate or value on
To regard with respect or friendship
To consider or think
noun
High estimation or value
Favourable regard
Estimation of worth
ORIGIN: Fr estimer, from L aestimāre
esteemed’ adjective
Respected
In commercial correspondence, a colourless complimentary word
Brian
Edited at 2019-07-12 08:59 am (UTC)
Anyway I solved this on paper in a shade over 10 minutes. Lots of constructions and words which I have learnt from crosswords so this won’t trouble experienced solvers. I was slow to start with FIND but once I got going I had no hold-ups. LOI was SONG. Good to see the ERNE again which used to appear almost daily in the Evening Standard puzzles I used to solve.
A fun puzzle. David
A very enjoyable puzzle done and dusted (though without understanding ERATO – thanks for lightening my darkness, curarist) in 1.5K for a Good Day. FOI OVID, LOI MARTHA (I was another one trying to make “Marcia” work), COD HANGMAN.
Thanks to our husband/wife or father/daughter or two mates or some other combination team.
Templar
FOI 1ac OVID
LOI 19ac EAST
COD 8ac FRONT ROW (Rugger buggers!)
WOD 5dn NEWSWOMAN
Bob and Margaret Fish that’s them – check ’em out on Wikipedia!
Time 10 minutes and 20 seconds
Edited at 2019-07-12 02:33 pm (UTC)
Thanks for the blog
Edited at 2019-07-12 10:50 pm (UTC)