ACROSS
1. LEAFLETS – anagram* of SALE FELT.
6. KVETCH – abbreviation of V[ery] in KETCH for the Yiddish Moaning Minnie.
9. GUY FAWKES – hero to some (William Cobbett – no lover of the Scots – calls him ‘that honest Englishman’ and even James I was moved to call him ‘the English Scaevola’), villain to many, the Yorkshireman’s lineage is by ‘tease’ (GUY) out of ‘pirates’ (FAKES) around W[ith].
11. SPRAT – the setter cunningly offsets an easy solution with fiendish wordplay; to spot means to spit, which means to rain lightly: the past tense of that round R[iver].
12. CANTATA – CAN (meaning to dismiss Stateside) + TATA.
13. ANTHILL – ALL around NT (National Trust) + HI.
14. ALEXANDER POPE – he of the highly quotable lines, or misquotable in my case; after all, a little knowledge….
16. MARY BAKER EDDY – according to its webpage, the ‘discoverer (sic) and founder of Christian Science’; BY ME + DARKER DAY*.
20. CUBICLE – CUB + L[eft] in ICE.
21. GRAM+MAR
23. EXTOL – EX + LOT reversed.
24. TOUGH LUCK – TOUGH (‘gangster’) + lady LUCK.
25. SECURE – SURE around EC (where the City of London is).
26. MENSWEAR – M + S + ARE NEW*.
DOWNS
1. LEGACY – ‘sort of gift that’s left’; LACY around EG.
2. ARYAN – hidden.
3. LEAKAGE – ALE A KEG*.
4. TAKE A BACK SEAT – a clue in search of its crypticity?
6. VISITOR – VI + OR (‘Other Ranks’, viz soldiers, AKA men) around SIT (‘model’ – verb).
7. TERRITORY – ‘realm’; ERR + IT in TORY.
8. HOTELIER – a substitution clue, which is somewhat wasted as many people will just BIF it; HO (abbreviation for ‘house’) in place of A in ATELIER (dingy garret or incredibly overpriced French restaurant).
10. STANDARD GAUGE – SAD GUARD A GENT*; a write-in for many, but not for me, who was brought up on Scalextric rather than Hornby.
14. ACROBATIC – ‘with lots of twists and turns’; another letter substitution clue which is rather otiose, as well as being borderline grammatically. We have ACROSTIC, which changes to ACROBATIC according to the instruction ‘Arts graduate’s succeeded’, parsed as ‘Arts graduate (BA) has succeeded (S)’, where we must be as loose in our translation as Chapman with his Iliad to derive the meaning ‘Arts graduate takes the place of succeeded’. At least, that’s how I see it (through a glass darkly). For S as an abbreviation, we have no less an authority than Tim Moorey. On edit: The cryptic grammar of the clue is ‘Arts graduate (BA) is succeeded (S)’ (where ‘is’ operates as in ‘Olivier is [appears as] Hamlet’), while the surface grammar is as I had it.
15. SMACKERS – double definition (a sop to the British solvers!).
17. BUCKLER – a buckler is a small round shield typically worn on the forearm in all those sword and sandal epics; someone who gives way under pressure might be called a ‘buckler’, although he is usually called an English one-day cricketer.
18. DRACHMS – in the UK, one eighth of a fluid ounce, in the US one eight of an apothecaries’ ounce; either way, I’d never heard of it. SM + H + CARD (‘He’s a right card is that Jeffrey’) reversed.
19. BROKER – BROKE + [sti]R.
22. MOUSE – USE in MO.
Wasn’t helped by not having heard of MARY BAKER EDDY, nor by having ‘guage’ in for a while at 10dn. Couldn’t parse ACROBATIC, or GUY FAWKES, and put in TAKE A BACK SEAT without too much thought, but on rereading, I’m not sure I really get the ‘maybe not’ part of it?
Anyone else spot the hidden alpaca?
Edited at 2015-03-16 03:53 am (UTC)
On looking at it now it seems to be “arts graduate is/has succeeded” (pace ulaca) but I’m not sure the substitution indicator really works either way. That is no excuse for my carelessness however.
Ma Baker was unfamiliar, a gap in my GK which I won’t be aiming to rectify. KVETCH and DRACHMS are both great words, but I’m not sure I could have used either of them in a sentence. Biggest hold-up was in the Cape York corner, taking ages over HOTELIER and SPRAT.
Nice start to the week though, thanks setter and blogger. I was going to ask if the “one-day” in 17ac was really required, but that would be unkind.
I expect my unknowns, MBE and KVETCH, have come up before. I only just about managed to dredge up the required meaning of CAN at 12ac. Solved 1dn from L (left), EG (say) and the definition (sort of gift),with ACY and ‘fancy packaging’ unexplained until post- completion.
Edited at 2015-03-16 05:21 am (UTC)
Edited at 2015-03-16 09:02 am (UTC)
Everything else tickety boo. Thanks for the blog Ulaca.
CoD HOTELIER (Ulaca I’ve never seen a resto in France called an ‘atelier’, it’s always a place to find a carpenter, glassblower or other artisans?)
The MBE reference sent me to Wiki for a refesher on Chri Sci, once again leaving me wondering how intelligent people can go in for this kind of guff. But there again, I am a Clinton Richard Dawkins fan.
I genuinely needed Chambers Word Wizards to discover what BigTone’s “other anagram” was. Good grief. I’m glad it wasn’t that.
A thousand years down the line any of the ridiculous pseudo-religions we find it easy to mock now may have turned into mainstream religions. All religions need to become entrenched are enough people subscribing to them, especially if backed by the state, and the further away you get from the source of a religion the harder it is to convince people that it is based on nonsense. Read into that what you will.
I also hadn’t seen the parsing for SPRAT so thanks for that.
Two rather splendid exotic consonant combinations and two A is B conceits in one crossword? Are you not entertained?
Footnote: Spit spat spot is part of a charm to find birds’ nests. The rest requires a Boston adolescent. Apparently it can be adapted for anything lost, so long as you don’t mind saliva puddles on the floor. We do the research so you don’t have to.
He was also the inventor of electric blankets that put 20mph on the top speed of the Spitfire, and a real mensch.
Nope. In this case the wings tended not to rust and fall off.
Indeed. In his case, the ones whose future contributions to the planet were lost were almost all the rest of his family. His wife stayed behind to organise taking the furniture out og the country.
I may have traded away an easy one….
Regards,
Harry.
I think I must have first come across DRACHMS on the back covers of school exercise books where they used to print tables of weights and measures including apothecaries’ weights.