Solving time : 14:40, but over five minutes of that was spent agonizing possibilities for 20 down, before cottoning on to it as a straight out anagram clue. So up until that point I was making pretty roaring progress. I suspect the reference that was completely unknown to me will be immediately familiar to UK-based solvers, so I expect some lightning fast times.
Unless 7 down has slipped from memory…
Away we go!
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | GEOGRAPHY: I got this from checking letters originally, but the wordplay is intricate it’s EOG (odd letters from EnOuGh) in GRAPH, Y(unknown) |
| 6 | BOSOM: S in BOOM |
| 9 | INDIANS: alternating letters of aDmIrAl in INNS |
| 10 | NIB(point of a pen), LICK(defeat): old-style golf wedge |
| 11 | GRAFT: double definition |
| 12 | AMENITIES: MEN in A1, TIES |
| 13 | BOHEMIAN: strange clue – MI(half of MIMI) in BOHEA(tea), N. Edit for clarity: the definition is “Mimi, say” referring to the character in “La Boheme” – my “strange clue” meaning that a part of the definition reappears in the wordplay – referenced of course, so it isn’t doing double duty |
| 14 | YOGI: cartoon bear and spiritual leader |
| 17 | CUR,L: lock of hair |
| 18 | QUICK(live),SET(established): got this from wordplay, it’s a living barrier, hence a hedge |
| 21 | BEHEADING: HE in BEADING |
| 22 | let’s omit this from the acrosses |
| 24 | N,A,MASTE |
| 25 | IMPOUND: or I’M POUND |
| 26 |
|
| 27 | THEORISER: HE in (RIOTERS)* |
| Down | |
| 1 | GRIEG: RE separately in GIG |
| 2 | OLD FATHER THAMES: cryptic definition? Edit: and a reference to an old song, see comments |
| 3 | our down omission |
| 4 | PASS AWAY: WASSA |
| 5 | YANKEE: one who is yanked |
| 6 | BOBBIN |
| 7 | SPIRIT OF ST LOUIS: (I,SPOIL,TOURIST’S,F)* – plane used in Lindbergh’s solo flight from New York to Paris. It’s on display at the National Air And Space Museum in Washington DC. When I saw it a few years ago I was surprised by how small it is |
| 8 | MAKESHIFT: MAKES HIT with F(ollowing) inside |
| 13 | BACK,BENCH |
| 15 | QUAGMIRE: AGM (Annual General Meeting) in QUIRE. Giggity, giggity |
| 16 | SCRAPPER: CR in SAPPER |
| 19 | LASSI,E |
| 20 | SILENT: (LISTEN)*, reference to William of Orange |
| 23 | WADER: WARDER without the first R |
Keeps rolling along
Down to the mighty sea.
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WfR5z-MsU5U
Stirring stuff!
Edited at 2012-02-16 03:29 am (UTC)
Oh Shenandoah,
I long to see you,
Away you rolling river.
Oh Shenandoah,
I long to see you,
Away, I’m bound away,
‘cross the wide Missouri.
And yes, I too spent far too long on 20dn before seeing the obvious. Had no idea how to parse 13ac (though the answer was obvious), so thanks for that. Anyone here ever hear of a NAMASTE? Not this one!
This was mostly straightforward but there were several unknowns: GRAFT (make money from corruption), QUICKSET and NAMASTE. The explanation I had for SILENT that I went to sleep on last night did not stand up to scrutiny this morning; I had been thinking of the Prince in the Oscar Wide story, but of course he was ‘happy’ and not ‘silent’. On 13ac, perhaps we need to mention Mimi in ‘La Boheme’ by Puccini.
GRAFT is very well known out east.
NAMASTE is both a gracious and easily performed greeting, a delightful contributions from the Subcontinent. Working in multicultural Hackney, I encountered it quite a bit, and found that answering the courtesy in kind was itself welcome.
I too spent a while wondering what the first US “right” was, but couldn’t find a way of fitting in Freedom of Whatever.
QUICKSET from wordplay, otherwise unknown. Quick=live might prove tricky to those outside the 1662 prayerbook community. Perhaps the days are passing when “There are only two types of pedestrians: the quick and the dead” would be a recognisable witticism.
“Rolling” is there in 2d to be generous to the slowing recall capability of those of us old enough to remember the song.
CoD to YANKEE for the delicious reimagining of the word is true Yankee fashion.
George is quite right to comment on the awesomely small size of the plane. Another awesome aircraft in the same museum is John Glenn’s space capsule Friendship7 – 50th anniversary coming up. 22 minutes today. Would have been faster but I always get the composer’s vowels muddled.
Same as Joe, in that I managed all but NE in pretty good time.
Defeated by (the unknown) NIBLICK. Didn’t think of LICK for ‘defeat’. QUICKSET another unknown, but managed that one. Was a bit unsure of INDIANS for people, but I guess it’s as opposed to ‘chiefs’ (who are also people, no?).
Thanks to George for blog, needed a couple explained (SOSL, BOHEMIAN, SILENT).
Paul S.
I wonder how many people saw ‘drinking’ and ‘wages disappear’ in 4 and thought ‘piss away’? No, couldn’t be, not in the Times, but it is surprisingly close to the actual answer. It’s ‘sip’ upside down, right? Nope. I also had ‘wash away’ on another theory until I saw ‘geography’.
So time was not very good, but I got there in the end.
…have just looked up your ‘Giggity, giggity…’ ref, George. Wish I hadn’t…
My teenage boys watch it ad nauseam and guffaw with laughter. Must admit, I just don’t ‘get’ it… I’d like to think it was a gender thing rather than an age thing!
The bloomin’ hidden answer was my last in. Like others I first thought that 7 was going to be something rom the Bill of Rights or whatever but I guess that was the setter’s intention.
George, I think you’ve had a case of fat finger syndrome at 10. I doubt that even Tiger Woods has golden clubs.
Diamond encrusted putter
Enigma
Thanks for all the comments, I’ll add in a few edits. Also seems most people liked this, so I should add in a congrats to the setter.
I liked 1ac.
BW
Andrew Kitching
No problems with anything apart from “shuttle” = BOBBIN. Since no-one else has mentioned it, I suspect I’m missing something obvious, but I’ve never come across this before and can’t find any dictionary to support it. A shuttle can have a bobbin in it, but that’s as far as it goes.
The OED’s definitions of “shuttle” include
and its definitions of “bobbin” include
I’m more familiar with the sort of shuttle you find in weaving, about which the OED offers the following gloss:
Edited at 2012-02-17 12:21 am (UTC)