ACROSS
1 From an ancient city, goddess cut in bronze (6)
THEBAN – HEB{e} in TAN. FOI for this aging classicist.
5 Brilliant being fed starter in restaurant, taste somewhat pungent (8)
GARLICKY – GAY [brilliant] being “fed” R{estaurant} + LICK. Good definition, 50 years on from Stonewall!
9 Period is reviewed in military post (8)
PRESIDIO – (PERIOD IS*) [“reviewed”]
10 Tool male found in jacket (6)
GIMLET – M found in GILET
11 Equally smart twins, females replacing leading names? (5-5)
FIFTY-FIFTY – NIFTY [smart], twinned, with F’s replacing leading N’s
13 In recital, follow story (4)
TALE – homophone of TAIL
14 Structure that floats a lot (4)
RAFT – double def
15 What Mary had, briefly, put about singular bridge building feat (6,4)
LITTLE SLAM – LITTLE LAM{b} put about S. That’s Bridge the card game, of course.
18 Important fresh arguments should be backed: the reader’s old-fashioned! (10)
NEWSWORTHY – NEW [fresh] + reversed ROWS + THY [the reader (of this clue)’s, in old-fashioned language]. LOI.
20 Night light activated after flash (4)
MOON – ON [activated] after MO [flash]
21 Moulding I reversed, ending on mantelpiece (4)
OGEE – EGO [I] reversed, + {mantelpiec}E
23 Come to pass with tennis stroke in advance (10)
BEFOREHAND – BE [come to pass] with FOREHAND
25 Irregular racket skill returning (6)
CONTRA – CON [racket] + reversed ART
26 Mobilising in the war, start to be ineffective (4,4)
WEAR THIN – (IN THE WAR*) [“mobilising”]
28 Judge rose, as excited to imprison Nazis (8)
ASSESSOR – (ROSE AS*) [“excited”], to “imprisons” SS
29 African flower colour (6)
ORANGE – double def. The Orange is the longest river in Lesotho, but features significantly in South African parts too. I’m sure I won’t be the only person who started off with VIOLET in here…
DOWN
2 Beginning to regret entering the game, I pathetically retreat (9)
HERMITAGE – R{egret} “entering” (THE GAME I*) [“pathetically”]
3 Singer smashed it, nailing opening of hymn (4,3)
BUSH TIT – BUST IT, “nailing” H{ymn}
4 Gesture with which mood becomes low? (3)
NOD – MOOD with NO D becomes MOO = low
5 Turn and leave (2,3)
GO OFF – double def
6 Person settling school fees arguably holding learner back, perhaps? (5,6)
RUGBY PLAYER – RUGBY PAYER [person settling school fees… “arguably”], holding L
7 One’s crossing northern China — and lags (7)
INMATES – I’S “crossing” N MATE
8 Ring Dickensian character put through the ear? (5)
KNELL – homophone of The Old Curiosity Shop’s Little NELL
12 Energetic — after vegetarian meal? (4,2,5)
FULL OF BEANS – literal-metaphorical cryptic def
16 Short child (3)
TOT – double def
17 A skip in middle of night filled up (9)
ABOUNDING – A BOUND IN {ni}G{ht}
19 Heading for parliament in secret, maltreated royal staff (7)
SCEPTRE – P{arliament} in (SECRET*) [“maltreated”]. I bet there’s more than one gaunt SPECTRE on the royal staff, but manfully resisted the urge to enter this.
20 Panama, say, toured by parent, venerable soul (7)
MAHATMA – HAT [Panama, say] “toured by” MAMA
22 Earn exclamation of disgust (5)
GROSS – double def
24 If confidence low, the Exchequer ultimately produces not so many (5)
FEWER – {i}F {confidenc}E {lo}W {th}E {excheque}R. According to my dictionary, FEWER is an obsolete word meaning “less”.
27 Trouble ahead over harbours (3)
ADO – hidden in {ahe}AD O{ver}
I believe our honorable blogger is having us on with his cod dictionary, more or less….
DK PRESIDIO, nho BUSH TIT (its first outing apparently) and OGEE dredged from the recesses of my mind.
ORANGE known from my stamp-collecting days via the colourful stamps produced by the Orange Free State.
FIFTY-FIFTY was nifty.
Edited at 2019-06-28 04:45 am (UTC)
Seems the BUSH TIT is more often the bushtit, with no space, but I don’t suppose it minds (actually, that’s very presumptuous; perhaps it minds very much). The Audubon Society is rather dismissive of it …. “Tiny, drab birds … inconspicuous …. may go unnoticed ….” But then they include a photograph that reveals it to be an exquisite little creature: https://www.audubon.org/field-guide/bird/bushtit
COD NOD
Edited at 2019-06-28 06:26 am (UTC)
I did wonder if, in an English crossword, the fact that it is 100% North American might need mentioning.
Edited at 2019-06-30 11:06 am (UTC)
OGEE reminded me of my time working in a DIY store as a teenager where I always found the names for timber mouldings curious – OGEE in particular but also scotia, dado and several others that I no longer recall.
P.S. I usually visit Livejournal after doing The Times crossword every day. I usually complete within 30-45 mins, but visit the blog too late to add anything that has not already been said and written far more wittily/ eloquently than I would do.
Ever impressed by your completion times, Verlaine – rarely do I complete in under 30 mins.
I only ever cheat with aids occasionally for the weekend ‘prize’ ones, to speed things up!
It was the unknown LITTLE SLAM that did for me, though. I put in LITTLE STAR in desperation, on the grounds that it had something to do with a Mary. I never even thought of the nursery rhyme one, confounded by visions of women on donkeys…
I was delayed in the NE. Pre-Knell I toyed with Geminal converting to GeRminal but they don’t quite mean Brilliant/Pungent unfortunately. Toying with Garlicky yielded Knell.
Thanks setter and V.
Like Bolton Wanderer, I wondered if a Hamer was a sort of jacket.
CONTRA brought back memories of “Arms-to-Iran-Money-to-the-Contras”, Reagan and Oliver North. The airline I used to work for was involved in the ‘arms-to-Iran’ bit but before my time of course….
Edited at 2019-06-28 08:12 am (UTC)
I thought I knew my tits but the Bush variety was a new one. Liked RAFT best.
Not that most gay people I know aren’t brilliant, but it was gladsome to see the word restored to its former glory, as exemplified in the fractured English of Haydn’s Creation (South West Essex Choir, Chingford, Saturday 6th July):
“With verdure clad the fields appear delightful to the ravish’d sense; by flowers sweet and gay enhanced is the charming sight.”
I’d have put an A in PRESIDIO, but apparently I’d have been wrong.
V, do you make your own lime syrup or do you make do with Rose’s?
Edited at 2019-06-28 09:44 am (UTC)
In my bridge days, it was known as a small SLAM. Rather liked RAFT.
Thanks verlaine and setter.
Biffed a ton today, owing to tricksy wordplay. A few notes for the archives including brilliant=GAY.
COD for me is 4d – I always think clues like this are pure genius.
Thanks to all.
My challenge is at 55/57. Need to work out when to stop and start the next one!
WS
I remember people referring to the supporters of the opponents of the Contras as the Sandalistas (sic). With apologies for trivialising a horrible conflict.
I’ve got a Russian newsfeed thingy running at the bottom of my LJ screen on my laptop; does anyone have any ideas? 🙂
Me too. Seems to originate in LJ under *Ratings* link.
I’ve done the usual things to try and get rid of it – to no avail.
Anybody got any suggestions?
Thanks for explaining the biffs, esp GARLICKY. Thought taste was part of the def.
LOI 10ac GIMLET
COD 4dn NOD
WOD 5ac GARLICKY
I did not pass 14ac RAFT! I’m sure have seen 3dn BUSH TIT somewhere before, or might that be BS?
Time 55 minutes!
Edited at 2019-06-28 04:19 pm (UTC)
Later edit: These may be the ones I was thinking of issued by South Africa:
https://farm4.staticflickr.com/3253/2340770373_40e9f843df.jpg
My mistake if not the OFS then, but I was going back a long way!
Edited at 2019-06-28 04:32 pm (UTC)
The stamps are free of orange, bar the 1 shilling value which is entirely orange buff.
The was also the Orange River Colony but they depicted King Edward VII with grazing springbok and gnu.
Your child’s eye was pretty imaginative methink!
Edit update – Ah! of course South Africa Suid-Afrika! well remembered.
Edited at 2019-06-28 04:46 pm (UTC)