Solving time: 18:06
Sorry to have missed yesterday’s blog. It was a bit late here when it came up. That was one kind of puzzle: difficult (for me) but pleasing to finish. (And I did have one or two things to say about Heidegger and the Presocratics.) This is just the opposite: mostly write-ins. I think I prefer just a bit more of a fight.
Across
1. ARCHANGEL. Anagram of “lager can” & H. Prompts me to suggest a visit to Groan 26253 (Nutmeg) which was in the most recent Groan Weakly.
http://www.theguardian.com/crosswords/cryptic/26253
6. FOCUS. FUS{s} inc OC (Officer Commanding).
9. FOXTROT. George FOX & TROT{skyite).
10. GNOCCHI. G from “{rivallin}G” & anagram of “Cochin”.
11. LYING. Hidden answer where pork pies are lies.
13. DISTILLER. D (daughter), 1, STILLER.
14. ARGENTINA. GENT (bloke) in ARIA inc N.
16. TSAR. TS (Eliot), the well-known anagram of “toilets”, & RA reversed.
18. CRAB. Two defs, one referring to a faulty stroke when rowing.
19. CHEERLESS. CHESS including ERLE — Erle Stanley Gardner, author of the Perry Mason books. (Wonderfully lampooned in one chapter of The Crying of Lot 49.)
22. WEIGHTING. A homophonic number.
24. PILAU. IL (French “he”) included in PAU, a French city.
25. ERUDITE. E (European); IT (vermouth) inside RUDE (simple).
26. INSTALL. INST (current month), ALL (everything).
28. DREAM. Our King is Martin Luther of that ilk. Anagram of “made” inc R (Republican).
29. SLENDERLY. SLY (knowing) inc LENDER.
Down
1. ALFALFA. ALF & ALFA (sounds like “alpha”).
2. COX. C{rew}, OX (neat = bovine entity).
3. ARROGANT. ART inc an anagram of “organ”.
4. GATED. GAT (gun) & ED.
5. LEG,IS,LATE.
6. FROLIC. FOLIC (acid) inc R{remark}.
7. COCKLESHELL. COCKS inc L{ak}E, HELL. “A small, shallow boat”.
8. STIRRER. Two indications, one literal the other suggestive, where Darjeeling is a variety of tea.
12. INGRATITUDE. IN (popular), GR (gross = 144), ATITUDE (sounds like a word for “opinion”).
15. {b}ITCHINESS.
17. PROPOSED. OP (work) inside PROSE, D{onne}.
18. COWHERD. HE replaces the A in COWARD.
20. S(QU)ALLY.
21. THEISM. 1s inside THEM.
23. GRIPE. G(good), RIPE (ready).
27. AYR. Hear “air” (broadcast).
However much of my work involves encouraging the use of plain English, and the old-fashioned idea that legal drafting and business correspondence require particular artificial and stilted forms of English is regrettably alive and well!
Edited at 2014-05-21 05:58 am (UTC)
That’s my 2¢.
Edited at 2014-05-21 06:20 am (UTC)
The Scottish town in the Concise is likely to cause a lot more trouble than this one.
All done in 35 minutes, but with a couple of ?s in the top left: dnk ARCHANGEL port, Mr FOX (nor did I know Mr Gardner at 19ac), and cnp ALFALFA, so thanks for those.
CRAB loi, after alphabet-running.
cod to DREAM for King misdirection.
Erle Stanley Gardner’s name is well-known among avid crossword puzzle solvers, due to his first name’s containing an unusual pattern of common letters, and few other famous people have the name Erle. As of January 2012, he is noted for having the highest ratio (5.31) of mentions in the The New York Times crossword puzzle to mentions in the rest of the newspaper among all other people since 1993.
Edited at 2014-05-21 04:36 am (UTC)
Edited at 2014-05-21 07:34 am (UTC)
Edited at 2014-05-21 10:11 am (UTC)
Edited at 2014-05-21 02:44 am (UTC)
Like many others, I imagine, I knew COCKLESHELL only from “The Cockleshell Heroes”.
Talking about confusing the under 27 year olds, I recently went into a petrol station and asked for a quart of oil to be met by a totally bemused look.
I have always felt sorry for Hamilton Burger, Perry Mason’s courtroom opposition, for losing his case every single week. Must have been depressing. As for the under 27 year olds, horseracing in the UK is still full of oddities, like horses being priced in guineas, races measured in furlongs and betting odds like 100/30.
Last in .. CHEERLESS
Grateful of explanation for IT (vermouth)
11 minutes, and yes, CoD to DREAM.I’ll get my young apprentice to try it after she’s done the Simples.
DNK Erle, but what else? Checking afterwards on Google, the sequence of helpful hints got to “stanley gardene” before it popped up with “stanley gardener” and “stanley gardener crosswords” Now there’s fame.
As it seems to be the subject of some discussion at the moment, I’ll just add my two penn’orth and say that I very much welcome and enjoy the variety of difficulty in these puzzles.
in re: inst.
Captain Spaulding, dictating a letter to his secretary, begins:
in re: yours of the fifth inst. yours to hand and beg to rep.
Google: “take a letter Jamison” for the video clip from Animal Crackers
Edited at 2014-05-21 09:42 am (UTC)
I particularly liked the ‘stirrer’ and the ‘King had one’.
Cheerless from checkers and definition.
I only started yesterday’s puzzle latish, and then had to cope with Mrs Penfold urging me to keep looking up at the telly to see the lovely flowers and that at Chelsea, so I retired to bed with the puzzle as yet unfinished but I enjoyed what I did get.
Raced through the top half then slowed down. I loved the DREAM clue. 35 mins for a personal best – hurrah!
15 dn LOI – I should have got it far quicker as I recently left my job because of the Bclue.
COD 11ac a witty all-by-myself solve, though DREAM made me go all misty-eyed.
Seriously, gents, I really do appreciate the encouragement – but I have 40 years worth of solving to catch up on!! 🙂
I may stop gnocchi-ing my head against the wall if we appoint an effective manager!
I can’t say I found this one particularly easy (I never do) – more of a slow grind to the end.
Today was enlivened – before I even arrived at what I laughingly call “work” – by my helping a man to have a heart attack. To be precise, he had started having a heart attack all by himself at the petrol station where I was filling up, and I helped him sit down and wait until the ambulance arrived. He was alive when I last saw him, which is more than I can usually say.
This is the second impromptu heart attack I’ve seen recently (the first being a gentleman who had the good sense to have his in the waiting area whilst awaiting treatment for an unrelated injury), and I’m hoping it doesn’t become a trend.