Which all makes it sound like I didn’t like it but it was absolutely fine, the sort of stout, reliable puzzle that made our Empire great. I ended up with a suitably middling time of neither 10 minutes, nor 15 minutes, but the point exactly in between the two, starting off strong by filling in the NW corner in no time at all by noticing that 1A almost certainly began with CAB, and so that was my FOI. LOI and the one I spent way too long staring blankly at the end was 22D, as I fixated on RE being “Shakespeare’s last two pieces”, and the actual intent of the word “pieces” in the clue became invisible to me accordingly.
On the nice clue front, 11D was quite pleasing but suffered from the fact that, once you had a few of the crossing letters, HILAIRE BELLOC becomes a bit of a freebie to bung in without parsing. So I think my clue of the day may go to the sanctified simplicity of the likes of 20A: never underestimate the power of a simple clue with a lovely limpid surface. Many thanks setter! And now, those of us whose children are off school for the next three weeks must gird up our loins for even greater battles ahead…
| Across | |
| 1 | CABALLEROS – American riders: ALL [completely] + SORE [annoyed “having to return”] by CAB [taxi] |
| 6 | AVER – state: VA [Virginia “handed over”] by E.R. [sovereign] |
| 9 | FLOATEL – accommodation: “empty apartment”, i.e. FLAT with O in it, “near” EL [centre of {Heid}EL{berg}] |
| 10 | EXHIBIT – show: I BIT [one | metal mouthpiece] “put on” EX H [old | horse] |
| 12 | CANNONBALL – big shot: homophone of CANON BAWL [clergyman (has) to raise voice “audibly”] |
| 13 | AIL – bother: L [learner] “on” A1 [trunk road] |
| 15 | ON TIME – punctually: (MENTION minus N*) [“casually” / {trai}N “finally” “leaves”] |
| 16 | DELIVERS – supplies: DELI [shop] + VERS{e} [lines “to be slightly reduced”] |
| 18 | POP GROUP – PUP [youngster] “absorbs” OP [musical work] “by” GRO{w} [“largely” mature] |
| 20 | PENCIL – drawer, i.e. something that draws: PEN [pound] + C{o}I{n} [coin “oddly”] + L [left] |
| 23 | RIO – port: “quantity of” {supe}RIO{r} |
| 24 | CHARTREUSE – green: recyclers of maps might aim for CHART RE-USE |
| 26 | EXPANSE – stretch: EXE [river] in which PANS [vessels] are “moored” |
| 27 | GALLING – irksome: ILL [“back” trouble] “among” GANG [team] |
| 28 | DORM – somewhere to sleep: DO [gathering] “in front of” RM [room] |
| 29 | REFRACTORY – stubborn: REFRY [cook again] “to hold on to” ACTOR [ham] |
| Down | |
| 1 | CUFF – strike: CU [copper] “leads” F F [force | following] |
| 2 | BUOYANT – very busy: homophone (“we’re told”) of BOY ANT [young male | worker] |
| 3 | LATIN AMERICAN – maybe Spanish-speaking: (MAN IN A RECITAL*) [“performing”] |
| 4 | EALING – part of London: ‘ospital is ‘opefully ‘ealing sick people |
| 5 | OVERAWED – intimidated: VERA [girl] got WED [married] “going after” O [love] |
| 7 | VIBRATE – shake: BRAT [naughty child] “involved in” VIE [struggle] |
| 8 | RUTHLESSLY – without compassion: (HUSTLER*) [“acting”] + SLY [like a fox] |
| 11 | HILAIRE BELLOC – writer: HILLOC{k} [rise “shortly”] after “recruiting” A1 REBEL [top | insurgent] |
| 14 | COPPERHEAD – venomous creature: COPPED [caught] “eating” RHEA [ostrich-like bird] |
| 17 | SUDANESE – African: DANE [Scandinavian] “involved in” USE [exploit] “led by” S [South] |
| 19 | PROSPER – succeed: PROPER [fitting], with S [first of S{helves}] inside |
| 21 | CASSINO – Italian town: CAS{e}S [luggage “European lost” (i.e. minus E)] + IN O [in | old] |
| 22 | STAGER – old actor: “send-up” of RE GATS [{Shakespea}RE’s “last two” | pieces] |
| 25 | EGGY – “like part of breakfast”: {p}EGGY [Margaret “hasn’t started”] |
Parents of children of a certain age will have been reminded by 18ac of the apparently devastating news that Zayn has left One Direction. No, me neither.
15m.
Good to see Belloc getting an outing. As he said “When I am dead, I hope it may be said: ‘His sins were scarlet, but his books were read.’
Thanks blogger
On Belloc, I am rather partial to his two liner “On Mundane Acquaintances” which consoled me through many a working day on arrival at the office.
Edited at 2015-03-27 11:25 am (UTC)
I’ve never considered ‘buoyant’ as meaning busy even when applied to economic matters. It’s not supported in Chambers, even in the thesaurus section. Is this one of those strange Collins definitions?
Nice Oasis reference in the blog title. I’m off work painting for 2 days so getting my fill of top tunes from BBC 6 Music.
I can’t remember the last time my DAB radio’s dial was tuned to anything other than BBC 6 Music!
This wasn’t my favourite puzzle. I’m still not entirely convinced by BUOYANT = “very busy”; and some of the words used to indicate anagrams (“casually”, “acting”, …) were a bit too far-fetched for my taste.
At least EALING went straight in.