Solving time: 50 minutes
Today’s puzzle is a bit difficult for a Monday. There is some clever wordplay that makes it difficult to find the literal, so I had to pay more careful attention than I am usually inclined to do. I was not helped at all by bad handwriting, putting a ‘c’ that looked like a ‘p’ at the beginning of 9 across.
Music: None, golf is back on TV
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | ROPY, double definition, one referring to the nautical rope. |
| 3 | BLOODSTAIN, anagram of NOT SO BAD I + L, a different kind of clue from the one at hand. |
| 9 | CLOBBER, double definition, one of them UK-centric slang. |
| 11 | CLUTTER, CL[ass] + UTTER. |
| 12 | SPECTACLE, anagram of ACCEPTS + LE. |
| 13 | DACHA, A C[ommunist] inside anagram of HAD. One of the view obvious literals, nearly a write-in. |
| 14 | ABBREVIATING, A(I VERB backwards)BATING. |
| 18 | WILLIAM BLAKE, WILL + IAMB + LAKE, e.g. carmine lake. Quite a good clue, but there are not many who fit the literal. |
| 21 | BRING, B[ishop] + RING. |
| 22 | GALVANISE, GAL(VAN IS)E. I wasted a lot of time with ‘gust’, not even considering ‘gale’ until I saw the answer from the literal. |
| 24 | INSTALL, IN (ST) ALL, where ‘st’ is the standard abbreviation for ‘stone’, the UK measure of body weight. |
| 25 | MIDRIFF, M(I DR)IFF. I wanted to put in ‘ribcage’, i.e. R(I BC)AGE, but there is no doctor who abbreviates to ‘BC’….a Bachelor of Chiropractic, I suppose. |
| 26 | TROTSKYITE, TROTS + K(Y)ITE, a word not often fully spelled out in crosswords. |
| 27 | STOW, [-e+S]TO[-n+W]. A clever substitition clue with some good misdirection, or missed directions if you don’t get it. |
| Down | |
| 1 | RICKSHAW, RICKS + HAW. |
| 2 | PROVERBS, PROVER(B)S. |
| 4 | LYRIC, [p]L[a]Y(R)[d]I[s]C. The ‘lyric’ is not really the whole song, but the cryptic hands you the answer. |
| 5 | ORCHESTRA, anagram of HER ACTORS. |
| 6 | SOUNDING BOARD, double definition. |
| 7 | ANTICS, ANTI(C)S. |
| 8 | NORMAN, NOR MAN. |
| 10 | BATTERING RAMS, BATTER + IN GRAMS. A brilliant clue, as many solvers will think that ‘mix’ is an obvious anagram indicator. |
| 15 | ILLEGALLY, ILL + E.G. + ALLY. |
| 16 | PACIFIST, PAC(IF I’S)T. |
| 17 | FEVERFEW, F(EVER F[lu’s])EW. Nearly the same clue as in the puzzle I blogged two weeks ago, where the medicinal plant was also 17 down. What happened? |
| 19 | OBOIST, [j]OB [t]O [l]IST, one of the few easy ones. |
| 20 | FIASCO, FI(AS)CO, i.e. the ‘fico mano’. |
| 23 | LIMIT, sounds like ‘limn it’. The problem is, no one ever says ‘limn it’. |
Didn’t know (or had forgotten) FICO or LIMN.
I was going to have a moan about 27 because I was led to think of another public school, STOWE, which has an E at the end, but then I realised that this was irrelevant.
4dn is LYRIC btw.
20dn was a bit hard to parse and I did it as: FI (contemptuous gesture) + AS (for example) and c/o (care of = “conveyed” [by?]). —Not sure whether the “by” is part of “conveyed by” or whether it indicates “next to” (the FI).
27ac was a good clue, eliciting (as Jack says) STOWE which turns out to be a red herring.
Lots of weird stuff in the wikipedia entry for ‘fig sign’. En route to that, I stumbled across an Italian dictionary and discovered that ‘to not give a fig’ is the same in Italian, so I’m assuming we borrowed it from them, being figless ourselves. Also no clue about the ‘lake’.
Had the same thought processes re the alma mater of Branson spelled as if it had shifted to the Cotswolds.
As a meagre thanks, ODO’s etymol. for “fiasco”:
ORIGIN mid 19th cent.: from Italian, literally ‘bottle, flask’, in the phrase far fiasco, literally ‘make a bottle’, figuratively ‘fail in a performance’: the reason for the figurative sense is unexplained.
Looks like I made a bottle of that parsing.
Edited at 2014-01-06 06:44 am (UTC)
The other half of the class get to show how they are incompatible, and the client gets the bill.
Any more?
Loved the batter in grams, my cod
Liked the cake clue very much.
Fico turns up in Henry V before Agincourt reduced the obscene gesture using three fingers to the long lived Harvey Smith using two. I can do history, me.
FIASCO LOI from checkers, but then remembered ‘fico’ – I’d come across LIMNER for ‘artist’ (probably in some other puzzle) so LIMN came to mind at once.
Edited at 2014-01-06 02:17 pm (UTC)
The cleverness of 27 went way over my head (I just assumed there was a public school at Stow-on-the Wold) but, like others, I loved the batter in grams device.
Saturday’s crossword – my COE (not clue of day but of ever). The laws governing such things then came into play and I had a really bad day getting a lot on definition and getting into knots on word play and in the end DNF. Hey ho.
24ac took longer than it should have as I tried desperately to fit “nude” or “bare” round “(1)st”. Sometimes a cigar is just a cigar.
For wit, misdirection, and general brilliance my COD is BATTERING RAMS.
Agree with sotira that Saturday’s was a corker and, well, different.
I’ve seen FEVERFEW recently in a puzzle a week or two ago, or is my memory failing me?
And yes, BATTERING RAMS is brilliant.
Liked BATTERING RAMS. RICKSHAW took me a long time (and was my LoIn), though I can’t think why.
Failed to parse FIASCO although, since I work in the NHS, the word itself sprang to mind almost unbidden.
Injury of the day (possibly of the week, though it’s early) was an impressive two-for-one deal: middle-aged gentleman had, with the aid of a nailgun, nailed his hand to his wife’s knee. What is it about East Anglians and nailguns? To give him due credit, by the time he’d finished explaining how he did it, it seemed like the sort of accident that could easily happen to anyone.
Honestly, sending any machinery more complex than a pointy stick into East Anglia is just asking for trouble.
On the plus side, sea level rises in coming decades will make webbed toes an advantage.
Fiasco from checkers and definition.
I knew “fico” so had no problem with FIASCO once I’d stopped wasting time looking for a word with EG in it.
Nice puzzle.