Sunday Times 5204 by Robert Price – oh capstan my capstan

9:23. Another delightful puzzle from Robert, with a bit of a literary theme in the top and bottom rows, plus a couple of poets in the clues.

Definitions are underlined, anagrams indicated like (TIHS)*, deletions like this, anagram indicators are in italics.

Across
1 Villain in novel underwear, liver coloured
LONG JOHN SILVER – LONG JOHNS, (LIVER)*.
10 Arriviste jerk going on to Oxford
UPSTART – UP (to Oxford), START (jerk). Other universities are available.
11 Traveller’s bundle, mostly depressing
PILGRIM – PILe, GRIM.
12 Policy expert backed by one lofty US wise guy
KNOW IT ALL – reversal of WONK, I, TALL. ‘Wise guy’ is the American expression here, the answer is very much British.
13 Lines from Pindar performing classical theatre
ODEON – ODE, ON (performing). If you didn’t know that Pindar wrote odes before solving this clue, you did afterwards.
14 When out at midday, lassies take sandwiches
SIESTA – contained in ‘lassies take’. Not really an accurate definition: a SIESTA is taken after lunch, which if you’re Spanish begins no earlier than 2pm.
15 Note put on 100 formerly rare compositions
CONCERTI – C (100), ONCE (formerly), R (rare), TI (note).
18 Act without role being set out
DEPARTED – DE(PART)ED.
20 Magazine covers start off short of space
COSMIC – CO(Short)MIC.
23 Crazy place to go on vacation, Paraguay
LOOPY – LOO (place to go), ParaguaY.
25 Position berth facing west in posh cabin
STATEROOM – STATE (position), reversal of MOOR.
26 End of détente after island drops a bomb
GRENADE – GRANADa, detentE.
27 Drunk badly beaten leaving hotel
TRASHED – ThRASHED.
28 Book prize vacuous idiots win
TREASURE ISLAND – TREASURE (prize), IdiotsS, LAND.
Down
2 Maybe riding with son moving up from the sea
ONSHORE – ON HORSE with the S moved up three places.
3 Fighter pleased a riot spread
GLADIATOR – GLAD, (A RIOT)*.
4 Bar in France where Whitman retired
OUTLAW – OU (in France where), reversal of WALT. Familiar to people of my generation from Dead Poets Society.
5 New staff about to hold a card game
NAPOLEON – N(A), POLE, ON.
6 Cool home some cool girls set up
IGLOO – contained reversed in ‘cool girls’.
7 An artist’s shift I’m hesitant to interrupt
VERMEER – V(ERM)EER.
8 Film city commander raving about nothing
ROMANTIC COMEDY – (CITY COMMANDER)* containing O.
9 Sweet kid hurt his leg running back from cricket
TURKISH DELIGHT – (KID HURT HIS LEG)*, crickeT.
16 Friendly visit narrowly avoided disaster
CLOSE CALL – CLOSE, CALL.
17 Sort of clothing workers curse
MENSWEAR – MEN, SWEAR.
19 Ward training nurses got ER prepared
PROTEGE – PE containing (GOT ER)*.
21 Bird’s bare bottom (one lacking tail parts)
MOORHEN – MOO(RHEa)N.
22 We hear this setter’s game for a cocktail
MAI TAI – sounds like ‘my tie’.
24 A poet still penning a start to something
YEATS – YE(A)T, Something.

2 comments on “Sunday Times 5204 by Robert Price – oh capstan my capstan”

  1. 33:24
    I biffed several; never did parse MOORHEN. It’s ironic that Whitman should be introduced by a conventional and atypical poem of his. KNOW-IT-ALL is very much American, too; in fact, I thought you folks used ‘know-all’ (definitely not US). (ODE marks ‘know-all’ as (Brit.), and cross-references from ‘know-it-all’ as a variant.)

  2. 44 minutes. I missed the parsing of VERMEER as I was too busy thinking ER for ‘I’m hesitant’ and not noticing ERM as a possibility which I’m not sure we’ve had before.

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