At 28 minutes I found this quite an easy puzzle but there are one or two references that may prove troublesome for those who don’t happen to know them. Fortunately for me, for once I did!
Can any of my fellow bloggers or LJ experts suggest a way of preventing opening remarks appearing in larger font than the blog itself. I noticed Don’s QC blog yesterday appeared similarly. As viewed before posting (or saving an edit) the font sizes look the same, but after posting and saving the introduction appears two points larger.
As usual definitions are underlined in bold italics, {deletions are in curly brackets} and [anagrinds, containment, reversal and other indicators in square ones]
| Across | |
| 1 | Palm about to provide cover (6) |
| COCOON – COCO (palm), ON (about) | |
| 4 | Injured captain who lost control, oddly trendy (8) |
| BLIGHTED – BLIGH (captain who lost control – mutiny on the Bounty), T{r}E{n}D{y} [oddly] | |
| 10 | Soldier’s caged bird revealing musical composition (7) |
| PARTITA – PARA (soldier) contains [caged] TIT (bird). J.S. Bach wrote some famous ones. | |
| 11 | Standard / snooker balls (7) |
| COLOURS – Double definition | |
| 12 | It follows a monster around (4) |
| ERGO – OGRE (monster) reversed [around]. Latin for ‘therefore’. We have a stray ‘a’ here for those who worry about such things. | |
| 13 | Run around after evacuation with senior politician (10) |
| ADMINISTER – A{roun}D [after evacuation], MINISTER (senior politician) | |
| 15 | Catch ruffian seizing end of poker that lies by the fire (6,3) |
| HEARTH RUG – HEAR (catch), THUG (ruffian) containing [seizing] {poke}R [end] | |
| 16 | Errand boy carrying article for Echo in Excel (2,3) |
| GO FAR – GOF(-e, +A)R (errand boy / excel). E is echo in the NATO alphabet. | |
| 18 | Old lady / who wins chess game? (5) |
| MATER – A straight definition and a contrived one | |
| 19 | Before a fight performers search far and wide (4,5) |
| CAST ABOUT – CAST (performers), A, BOUT (fight) | |
| 21 | A quiet dean, sadly not up to it (10) |
| INADEQUATE – Anagram [sadly] of A QUIET DEAN | |
| 23 | Such places as Scarborough, primarily? (4) |
| SPAS – S{uch}, P{laces}, A{s}, S{carborough} [primarily] | |
| 26 | Greek girl supplying Italian dessert (7) |
| GRANITA – GR (Greek), ANITA (girl). It’s a sort of water ice. | |
| 27 | What logger may make from trees in ground (7) |
| ENTRIES – Anagram [ground] of TREES IN | |
| 28 | Calmly submissive, did not keep appointment (8) |
| RESIGNED – Two meanings | |
| 29 | Savage, not sweet, with Article 50 (6) |
| BRUTAL – BRUT (not sweet), A (article), L(50) | |
| Down | |
| 1 | A little wood catches fire ultimately (5) |
| COPSE – COPS (catches), {fir}E [ultimately]. Another redundant ‘a’. | |
| 2 | Movie star getting award after a piercing howl (4,5) |
| CARY GRANT – A contained by [piercing] CRY (howl), GRANT (award). Aka Archibald Leach, born in Bristol in 1904. | |
| 3 | God of love heading for disaster at home (4) |
| ODIN – O (love), D{isaster} [heading], IN (at home) | |
| 5 | Polish bishop’s left short (7) |
| LACKING – {b}LACKING (polish) [bishop’s left] | |
| 6 | Cotton cloaks laid up somewhere in Kent (10) |
| GILLINGHAM – GINGHAM (cotton) contains [cloaks] ILL (laid up). I wonder if the town’s fame has spread abroad? | |
| 7 | Faith bound to be heard (5) |
| TRUST – Sounds like [heard] “trussed” (bound) | |
| 8 | Soldier or sailor turning up after leave (6,3) |
| DESERT RAT – DESERT (leave), TAR (sailor) reversed [turning up] | |
| 9 | Butcher’s / bird (6) |
| GANDER – Two meanings. ‘Butcher’s hook’ / ‘look’ is CRS. ‘Gander’ is also slang for ‘look’, apparantly with reference to the long neck of the bird. Rambling Syd Rumpo used to carry his ditties in a ‘gander bag’. | |
| 14 | One of Quince’s playmates realigns TV set (10) |
| STARVELING – Anagram [set] of REALIGNS TV. Robin Starveling, a tailor, and Peter Quince, a carpenter, are among the ‘mechanicals’ in Shakespeare’s A Midsummer Night’s Dream. | |
| 15 | Lulu longing to entertain married princess (9) |
| HUMDINGER – HUNGER (longing) contains [to entertain] M (married) + DI (princess). Those of us who also do the Quick Cryptic were at an advantage here as this word came up in a puzzle only a few days before Christmas. Our regular contributor, Invariant, advised that it’s apparently derived from merging hummer and dinger, with all three words meaning (roughly) a good thing. I think ‘lulu’ in this sense came up quite recently too. | |
| 17 | Profit not unusual in area taken up (9) |
| FOOTPRINT – Anagram [unusual] of PROFIT NOT. Defined as ‘the shape and size of the area something occupies’. | |
| 19 | Bottle for Brecht’s mother (7) |
| COURAGE – A straight definition plus a reference to the play Mother Courage by Bertolt Brecht. I think by convention the ‘m’ of ‘mother’ should be capitalised here as in this context it’s a proper noun. | |
| 20 | Military assessment of turbulent priest (6) |
| SITREP – Anagram [turbulent] of PRIEST. A reference in the surface here to the saying attributed to Henry II, “Will no one rid me of this turbulent priest?” which resulted in the assassination of Thomas a Becket. | |
| 22 | Leader of assembly blocks US president (5) |
| ADAMS – A{ssembly} [leader], DAMS (blocks) | |
| 24 | Fibre in diets is a laxative (5) |
| SISAL – Hidden in {diet}S IS A L{axative} | |
| 25 | Move / jug (4) |
| STIR – Double definition, the second relying on two slang terms for prison. | |
I suspect that biffers might see ‘errand boy’ and put in ‘go fer’ without further ado, but at least I carefully examined that clue to determine what gave rise to what.
I tend to associate ‘lulu’ more with the very bad than the very good but I suppose either sense is OK.
Did you know there are also 2 meanings of HUMDINGER? From the OED:
“humdinger… 2. Electronics. A voltage divider connected across the heater circuit of a valve with the variable tap connected to a source of fixed potential, so that the hum introduced by the heater can be reduced by suitably biasing it with respect to the cathode.”
Er…? Well, now you do know anyway.
Thanks for the reference to Rambling Syd Rumpo. Kenneth Williams at his best.
Thanks to setter and blogger.
Don’t think I’d ever heard before of GILLINGHAM, but it was obviously going to be an “ingham” name, so not too hard to guess.
Last night I was regaling (wishful thinking) my dining companions with the fact that COURAGE and “bottle” are synonymous in UK slang and cryptic puzzles. It came up because I said I wanted to wait until I’d had a bit more wine before taking advantage of the open mic to sing with the live band (I did “The Way You Look Tonight” and “You Go to My Head,” and I am never really afflicted with stage fright).
Edited at 2018-01-02 05:53 am (UTC)
FOI 2d CARY GRANT, LOI 1a COCOON (not knowing “coco” for “palm” didn’t help, and like Vinyl I went a bit “cuckoo” for a while.) Biffed 15a HUMDINGER.
Enjoyed the turbulent priest, though SITREP is one of those annoying phrases used by managers in dull industries who like to pretend they’re in the marines…
Mostly I liked: Article 50, Lulu and the Literary GK.
Thanks setter and Jack.
PS Well spotted on the stray ‘a’.
Edited at 2018-01-02 08:04 am (UTC)
There is of course another Gillingham, in Dorset – the distinguishing feature being that this one is pronounced with a hard G whilst the Kentish version has a soft G.
Thanks for parsing 1a Jack. And BTW Cary Grant’s name was spelt Leach (not Leech), not to be confused with Archibald Leach who was a leading pioneer in football stadium design.
Satisfying puzzle.
I did like Bligh as the captain who lost control, though it took too long trying to take rein from captain in some sense.
My mind being what it is, I dawdled for a while wondering whether Scarborough was really a Spa town: another smart clue.
Thanks Jack for all those additional factoids.
I’m afraid my knowledge of controlling font sizes is limited to messing them up in the HTML version, then asking nicely followed by and hit and hope.
Like deezza was familiar with the Dorset Gillingham and its pronunciation being different from the Kent one.
Wiki is interesting on Gillingham Kent as against Gilliam Dorset. It says the Dorset one comes from Gylla’s home and hence the hard G whilst the Kent version is from Jillingham and thus a soft G.
Oh, I don’t think ‘mother’ needed an initial capital: although it is being used in the play as a proper name, she is also, simply, a mother.
I thought there were some nice clues today. ‘Profit not’ was a well disguised anagram for FOOTPRINT to my eyes though perhaps I should have spotted unusual as the anagrind earlier. I thought ADMINISTER was also good with the deceptively simple definition of ‘run’.
So for the time being you will have to do with the result of the horryd WoLY (Word of Last Year)
which is…….. tarantara………. HYGGE (hʊɡə) – The Ogsford Dictionary defines as: a quality of cosiness and comfortable conviviality that
engenders a feeling of contentment or well-being – (Demmark). We need a bit that presently with WWIII on the menu. Thank-you the Danes!
As for 26924 I was off the pace and crawled over the line at about 51 mins with LOI 9dn GANDER my COD – for double slang!
FOI 11ac COLOURS and WOD 15dn HUMDINGER a real humdinger!
Edited at 2018-01-02 01:41 pm (UTC)
I’ve been to watch football at Gillingham a few times and went through the station twice a day one summer when working at Shepherd Neame brewery in Faversham but it still took me a while to get that one.
I’ll stop short of telling the Anita Harris “joke”
But knew a bit of useless Mother Courage trivia, which is that Brecht adapted it, and Grass adapted The Tin Drum, from a 17th century novel, Simplicius Simplicissimus. The things we learn over a slow Christmas holiday.
Lots of nice clues, thx.
Edited at 2018-01-02 07:49 pm (UTC)