Solving time : 24:51 – I was utterly stuck on the bottom left hand side and needed to take a break, answer some text messages and see if things came together. They did, but this is not a puzzle for the faint-hearted, with there being five completions so far on the Crossword Club and none of them under 20 minutes. Every trick in the book here!
There’s a fair bit of general knowledge here and an unusual word clued by an anagram which adds to the trickiness.
Doubt it was intentional by the setter, but I put in an appearance on the bottom right, so thanks!
Here we go…
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | GUINEA(old coin),PIG(lump of iron) |
| 6 | VATIC |
| 9 | TETRA: T |
| 10 | LONELIEST: ONE,LIES in LT(Lieutenant) |
| 11 | PURE MATHEMATICS: (A,PATHETIC,SUMMER)* |
| 13 | CLASS ACT: take 1,ON away from CLASS ACTION |
| 14 | GODIVA: or GO DIVA! |
| 16 | R,WANDA: referencing “A Fish Called Wanda” |
| 18 | BONHOMIE: NOB(head) reversed, then 1 in HOME |
| 21 | THE MERRY MONARCH: THEME(subject), MONARCH(butterfly) surrounding R(right),RY – reference Charles II |
| 23 | KETTLEFUL: sounds like KETTLE FULL. KETTLE can mean a police cordon, a meaning that is in Collins but not in Chambers |
| 25 | VIOLA: ALIV |
| 26 | RIGID: RID(shot, as in if something is shot it’s been gotten rid of) around GI(recruit) |
| 27 | BEE ORCHID: (HEROIC)* in BED |
| Down | |
| 1 | GET UP: triple definition |
| 2 | INTERCALATE: (NEAT,ARTICLE)* |
| 3 | ERASMUS: SUMS,ARE all reversed |
| 4 | POLITICO: I,TIC |
| 5 | GANGES: E in GANGS |
| 6 | VOLCANO: cryptic definition |
| 7 | TOE: since TIPTOE would be walk quietly |
| 8 | CITY STATE: take R from TRYST, then put it in CIA,TE(note) |
| 12 | IRIS MURDOCH: (HORRID,MUSIC)* |
| 13 | CARETAKER: A,RETAKE in CAR |
| 15 | FORMULAE: A,LUM(chimney) reversed in FORE(front) |
| 17 | DUELLED: sounds like DUALED, as in make a road a dual carriageway |
| 19 | HANOVER: HAND OVER withoutthe D |
| 20 | PREFAB: or PRE FAB |
| 22 | HEARD: A |
| 24 | TUG: GUT reversed |
Didn’t know INTERCALATE or VATIC and failed to understand 13ac as CLASS ACTION is not an expression I knew the exact meaning of.
GI = ‘recruit’ has come up before and raised a few eyebrows. I can’t see anything in the usual sources (or in the American Dictionary.com) to support it.
I see ‘clothes’ and ‘stand’ for GET UP but not ‘study’. Could someone explain it please?
Edited at 2014-02-13 02:00 am (UTC)
Edited at 2014-02-13 02:19 am (UTC)
And a fine chuckle of recognition at 22dn. Setters 2, McText 0.
I didn’t like the ‘pathetic summer’ clue, since my idea of pure mathematics is number theory or non-Euclidean geometry.
I had to think about ‘intercalate’, and force myself to lift and separate ‘day’s work’. The technical terminology of the calendar-maker does not often come up, but it’s out there.
Edited at 2014-02-13 06:21 am (UTC)
Last 2 in were duelled (after yesterday’s wield/weald), when I decided it was Charles = Merry Monarch, and not the name of a locomotive, or a butterfly (e.g. Darwin) or a book (e.g. Dickens).
Printed, started well, got stuck, fell asleep, woke up, finished. Delighted with my 100%, currently 21st on board, even with a total elapsed time of 6+ hours.
Thanks to George & well done to the setter (you can have a few days off now, please – my head hurts)
I was determined to get make better work of this than yesterday’s, and I did, but still failed to get two: with 3 checkers in place I should have got VOLCANO, which would have led to VATIC.
dnk: INTERCALATE (nor did I spot the anagram, so a lucky guess), TETRA, and couldn’t parse FORMULAE, so thanks for working that out.
I spent ages at the end on 2dn. I saw fairly early that INTERCALATE would fit but I wasn’t sure it was a word and I just couldn’t see how it worked. When I finally spotted the anagram it was a big self-kicking moment. I don’t think I’d have got this if I hadn’t known the French word intercalaire, which is a file divider.
Bravo, setter, thank you.
One has to admire a real class act here by the setter with only the cryptic definition of VOLCANO causing me to wince. The only one I didn’t have to parse was Charles (the second). A combination of Chas and butterfly led me straight to the answer.
Thank you setter and well done 22D
Edited at 2014-02-13 10:14 am (UTC)
If I had seen the CD for VOLCANO, my LOI, my time would have been quicker, but I needed VATIC before I saw it. I was misdirected with the latter when I had ??T?C because I was thinking that the definition was “prophecy”, the “rejected article” was “it” reversed, and the “about” was the final “c”, so I was looking for a two letter word for the front of the answer that meant “religious centre”. It took me a while to read the clue the proper way.
I also spent a lot of time on INTERCALATE like quite a few of you seem to have done. I didn’t see the anagram fodder for ages, and then it was a matter of seeing what looked like the most likely answer. Once I saw that the definition was probably “put in a day” I realised “calate” probably related to “calendar”. Tough but gettable, so no quibbles there.
Even though the bottom half of the puzzle had some cunning cluing I managed to get onto the setter’s wavelength for the most part, although I’m not sure I like “on” as an envelopment indicator for the “RRY” in 21ac.
On your second point, as mentioned previously I don’t thing envelopment/enclosure/containment is applicable to this clue.
I can understand the sense of achievement with a speedy completion, but sometimes a great crossword can be drawn out and enjoyed like a great cigar.
Well done you speed merchants, i.e. just about everyone but me!
COD 21ac
Edited at 2014-02-13 11:22 am (UTC)
Didn’t get Merry Monarch which is embarrassing as I studied Tudor/Stuart history at university.
Didn’t find this as inventive or fun as yesterday but good to be mentally stretched. Good blog, thank you.
Nairobi Wallah
As commented supra, many clues where careful working out of the wordplay led to the right answer, rather than having a stab at the definition and then seeing how the wordplay worked. Takes particular genius in a setter, methinks.
Glad it was your turn this week, George, and thanks for the unravelling where I had the luxury of not having to work it fully through.
And well done Woodsy on a commendable (and probably painful) fifth!
Edited at 2014-02-13 12:50 pm (UTC)
Well done Woodsy from me too.
I have to agree with Z8 and disagree with others that VOLCANO was pretty much the perfect CD. It was my LOI but once I saw the V the penny dropped with a massive clang. I also ticked PREFAB as being a great clue.
Seeing Charles and butterfly I instantly thought of monarch (I had the I Spy book of butterflies as a lad) and whilst I didn’t know which monarch it was, I’d encountered the term before.
Regarding piecing clues together, that’s how I arrived at City state and it gave a feeling of satisfaction like putting the last piece in a jigsaw puzzle.
Props to Woodsy, a brave performance and coming 5th in any Olympic event is a massive achievement.
And very well done Woodsy. Extremely impressive.
One forgotten word today – “lum”, the key to parsing 15dn, but three too many unknown words – INTERCALATE, VATIC, TETRA, all approachable via wordplay, but that’s not the point. I’m old (or arrogant) enough to think that if I haven’t come across a word in a lifetime’s reading, it’s well and truly obscure. Dictionaries are for weekend prize crosswords, Mephistos and Spectators, not for the daily Times. Grouse over.
Agree with cozzielex that much enjoyment was to be had from the slow unravelling of the solutions – I wasn’t counting today, but somewhere just under the hour.
More generally I can’t agree with you: I find getting unknown words from wordplay the most satisfying part of solving. This is fortunate really because it happens a lot.
I hope our man Woodsy is pleased with 5th rather than disappointed not to make the podium (based partly on the impression that the freestyle skiers are a bit more relaxed about competition than most sportspeople).
Well done setter. Well done editor.
Good fun, and a long time here. I couldn’t pick a COD if I had to; too many choices.
Managed to get about half of today’s (a significant advance on yesterday’s dismal effort), but this has been a time to watch and learn from the majestic strokeplay of the top order. Thanks for the excellent blogs and further elucidation from the comments – have learned a lot.
Great stuff, Woodsy.
Please keep us informed of your progress.
Second, thanks to the blogger for his sterling work.
Third, commiserations to Woodsy for having to compete with a hampering injury, but greatest respect and congratulations on a most creditable result in the circumstances.
Total time on this was something atrocious, even allowing for the odd five minutes spent working and 8 hours sleeping, but frankly I’m just glad I got there in the end.
VADIC was new to me, as was KETTLEFUL. I spent ages trying to force ADMIRAL into 21ac (that being the only butterfly I could think of), before the checkers gave me MONARCH and I settled on MERRY as being more plausible than BEERY or LEERY.
Et viola, as they say in French orchestras.