Sunday Times Cryptic No 5211 by Dean Mayer — I saw the light!

Hmm… Not much very obscure here—I didn’t know the idiom or the fish or another interesting word (it’s always great to discover a novel nugget of crystallized meaning)—so I don’t know why this seemed to take longer than my last blogged Sunday. Maybe I needed another anagram or two?

I indicate (Ars Magna)* like this, and words flagging such rearrangements are italicized in the clues.

ACROSS
 1 Band’s sound causes fury (6)
CHOLER    “collar”
 4 Bid to catch complete miscreant (8)
OFFENDER    OFF(END)ER
10 Island’s gold seized by returning vessel (5)
NAURU    URN<=“returning” filled with AU, “gold”   Nauru is the third-smallest and the most obese nation in the world — with 94.5% of its citizens overweight and 71.7% of those age 27–49 obese (WHO statistics) — thanks to a sedentary lifestyle and an unhealthy diet. Wikipedia: “The traditional Nauruan diet was primarily composed of marine fish, fruits, root vegetables, and coconuts.” But now? “Approximately 90% of the land area of Nauru is covered with phosphate deposits, with the majority strip-mined and non-arable. This has led to Nauruan reliance on processed food, high in both sugar and fat, imported from large Oceanian countries such as Australia and New Zealand. University of Queensland professor and South Pacific researcher Clive Moore stated that obesity is mistakenly seen as a sign of wealth in Nauru.”   …The day after I wrote that, a video about the place (a tragic story, in many ways) suddenly appeared in my YouTube recommendations. That must be just a coincidence…
11 Jelly can now be drunk? (9)
ISINGLASS    IS IN GLASS
12 God can shut up minister (4,5,4)
Hallelujah!
LORD PRIVY SEAL    LORD, “God” + PRIVY, “can” + SEAL, “shut up”
14 Group of women with similar habits (10)
SISTERHOOD    CD, playing on “habits”
15 No cap on pay for a long time (4)
AGES    WAGES
17 Order parts for old wind instrument (4)
OBOE    OB(O)E   Order of the British Empire
19 Who delivers curtains for you? (4,6)
GRIM REAPER    CD, playing on “curtains”   …Not as GRIM if they’re for the other fellow?
22 Folds towel, heats log, spreads out (4,2,3,4)
GOES TO THE WALL   (towel, heats log)*   “To be ruined; collapse financially” in Collins, with a broader meaning in American English of yielding in a conflict   …Not an expression I was familiar with!
24 Large working farm’s future (4-5)
LONG-RANGE    L(arge) + ON, “working” + GRANGE, “farm”
25 Scarce good deed? (5)
THING    THIN, “Scarce” + G(ood)
26 Rats eating dead fish (8)
DRAGONET    DRA(GONE)T    Wikipedia: “These ‘little dragons’ are generally very colorful and possess cryptic patterns.” Intriguing!
27 Victim put back in railway vehicle (6)
MARTYR    RY (“railway”) + TRAM (“vehicle”) <=“put back”
DOWN
 1 Close decision (10)
CONCLUSION    DD
 2 Man missing from plots in French opera (7)
OEUVRES    MANOEUVRES   What Americans spell “maneuvers” is spelled “manoeuvres” in British English but also in French (admittedly, the British spelling must be a remnant of the Norman Conquest!)—and œuvres, OEUVRES in English, means the same thing as opera (works) in the original Latin. (In French, properly manœuvres and œuvres, with the ligature, mais ça va,  « contraint typographique »)   …Since “oeuvres” means “works” in (both American and UK) English as well as in French, and “manoeuvres” can mean “plots” (stratagems) on both sides of the Channel, I can’t see why French is specified here, except to help the surface.
 3 We finally came back prepared (8)
EQUIPPED    WE + QUIPPED, “came back”   …I don’t think QUIPs are always retorts, but they are certainly always a reaction to something worthy of humorous critique.
 5 She who isn’t really a good speller? (5,9)
FAIRY GODMOTHER    CD   …Not sure I get this. FAIRY GODMOTHERS — who are not figures of folklore (says Wikipedia) but were invented by the writers of literary fairy tales, particularly those in the 17th-century French movement known as the Précieuses (French: la préciosité, “preciousness”) and those influenced by them, such as Charles Perrault — “are traditionally portrayed as kind, gentle, and loving,” though “there are exceptions.” Does our setter remember only those exceptions? But maybe this is meant to be a roundabout way of saying “fictional (unreal) female character who casts spells.”
 6 Young flier, say, without a permit (6)
EAGLET    E(A)G + LET, “permit”
 7 PIN number? (4,3)
DEAD LEG    CD   “temporary loss of sensation in the leg, caused by a blow to a muscle” (Collins)
 8 Busy bee’s missed chance (4)
RISK    BRISK
 9 Cutting off inner cities had to be silly (14)
DISINHERITANCE    (inner cities had)*
13 On surveying house, one may see problems (10)
ASTROLOGER    CD, playing on “house”   …and one will play on a client’s credulity… In the New Age early 1980s of my lingering adolescence, my lover, the late Judith Rosenblum, was an (amateur) astrologer, and I adopted a (Jung-influenced) positive view of the ancient pseudoscience as part of my temporary conversion to Judyism. (She fully deserved my devotion.)
16 Retreat in fear, swinging light (8)
FENESTRA    “Retreat,” NEST, nestled inside (fear)*   Definition 9 of “light” in Collins: “anything that allows the entrance of light, such as a window or compartment of a window”   This word is from Latin, and besides “a window or window-like opening in the outside wall of a building” (Collins), also means a small opening in anatomical structures like the bones in the inner ear or “a transparent marking or spot, as on the wings of moths.” The plural is fenestrae.   …I knew the English defenestrate, as well as fenêtre in French and Fenster in German.
18 Fabric made from skin, eg — skin of zebra? (7)
ORGANZA    ORGAN (the skin is our largest!) + ZebrA
20 Performer, thes{pian, is t}errible in part (7)
PIANIST    Hidden
21 Odd fish to study south of dam (6)
WEIRDO    WEIR, “dam” + DO, “study”
23 Tramp left in school (4)
PLOD    P(L)OD

7 comments on “Sunday Times Cryptic No 5211 by Dean Mayer — I saw the light!”

  1. 24 across is L + ON + GRANGE
    And, now you’ve discussed it, I see 5 down is just saying “fictional, good fairy”. Didn’t get that at the time!
    Thanks!

  2. Can’t remember having any problems with this, pretty standard Sunday fare and enjoyable. DEAD LEG remembered from school days. I always thought that knowing the lyrics from classic shows like Oklahoma would reward me someday:
    With ISINGLASS curtains you can roll right down, in case there’s a change in the weather.
    Thanks Guy and setter.

  3. This took me forever, and I can’t remember why. DNK DEAD LEG, GOES TO THE WALL. A MER at came back=QUIPPED. I liked LORD PRIVY SEAL. I did not like study=DO.

    1. I didn’t get it either at the time but then I thought of ‘up at Oxford studying/doing science’.

  4. FAIRY GODMOTHER is just outstanding. I actually made a note to commend it, so I wouldn’t forget.

    Study for do is so common (‘She did linguistics at uni’) that I can see nothing to object to.

  5. I had all but 3 answers in 25 minutes which seemed easy for a Sunday especially a puzzle by Dean. But the remaining clues, intersecting of course, did for me, and eventually I gave up on them and resorted to aids. CHOLER, OEUVRES and NAURU were the ones. Elsewhere there had been much to enjoy, FAIRY GODMOITHR, ISINGLASS reminding me of The Surrey with the Fringe On Top and GRIM REAPER, for example.

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