Independent 9,222 by Klingsor

The love affair with Klingsor continues. He must be wondering if there are any other bloggers. But as I have said before from my point of view this is fine. As always he has given us a nice sound crossword with consistently good clues.

My apologies. I am without broadband at present and have done all this on my phone, so it is rather terse. Definitions underlined.

Across
1 ANTECHAPEL Article by college lecturer on primate shows part of place of worship (10)
An tech ape L
7 WAND Rod Stewart’s middle name features in bill (4)
{Ste}w{art} a(n)d
9 TWEENAGE Cute Jade’s last to become prematurely adolescent (8)
Twee nag {becom}e
10 GDANSK Desperate fellow’s hiding in Greek port (6)
G(Dan’s)k. Desperate Dan.
11 GENTRY Posh folk regularly avoided green tax (6)
g{r}e{e}n try
13 NARRATOR One relates to breaking rule island brought back (8)
to in (r Arran)rev.
14 SHORT-SIGHTED New shirt got discarded outside? That’s improvident (5-7)
shed round (shirt got)*.
17 EVEN-TEMPERED Calm influence at last prevented me freaking out (4-8)
({influenc}e prevented me)*
20 PARAFFIN Fuel container filled by pilots if on the way back (8)
pa(RAF (if)rev.)n
21 CARBOY Seat for one lad showing bottle (6)
Car [Seat for one] boy. See-at, the car manufacturer.
22 MAI TAI Sounds like fancy Bond cocktail (3,3)
“my tie”. My = fancy as in ‘fancy that’.
23 ARMCHAIR Stay-at-home Archie mostly is out on a limb (8)
arm (Archi{e})*. I’m not quite clear why armchair  = stay-at-home. Connected no doubt and perhaps I’m just ignorant.
25 BEER Busy sort’s given right wallop (4)
bee r. Wallop = beer.
26 DEDICATION Treatment initially 50% off, as a tribute (10)
medication with its initial m changed to d. M = 1000, D = 500.
Down
2 NEW DELHI According to Spooner, owed foolish person capital (3,5)
“due Nellie” Spoonerised
3 EXE In case of earthquake cross river (3)
X in e{arthquak}e, the case of “earthquake”
4 HEADY Violent thug gets day for victory (5)
heavy with its v replaced by d. Again my possible ignorance : so heady = violent then?
5 PFENNIG Bit of old spirit returning after fellow’s put in prison (7)
p(f)en (gin)rev.. Bit of old is coin of old.
6 LOGARITHM Mathematicians use it to record a recurring pattern, reportedly (9)
“log a rhythm”
7 WEAR AND TEAR Sport’s about money and drink, resulting in deterioration (4,3,4)
wea(rand tea)r. Wear = sport.
8 NO-SHOW One who’s unexpectedly not here, ultimately? (2-4)
(One who’s)* minus {her}e. &lit. Anagram indicator unexpectedly. Good clue.
12 THREE-MASTER Husband in service perhaps wants to become skilful in a craft (5-6)
t(h)ree master [= wants to become skilful]. Service tree.
15 SIEGFRIED Operatic hero tragically dies with grief (9)
(dies grief)*
16 GERONIMO When returning, ring child and say “Here I come!” (8)
(O minor eg)rev.
18 TANKARD Drink at a bar I swilled from this? (7)
(drink at a)* minus I
19 MANAGE Engineer‘s staff get on (6)
man age
21 COMIC Funny business with victims of farmer’s wife? (5)
co mic{e}. The farmer’s wife cut off their tails.
24 HAT Perhaps bowler‘s left out of game (3)
ha(l)t. Halt = game.

*anagram

5 comments on “Independent 9,222 by Klingsor”

  1. Good fun. The mice with their tails cut off made me laugh aloud, always a good thing, and ‘Seat for one’ as a def for ‘car’, which crossed the above, made for a pretty SE corner. Though I’m a bit iffy about Spoonerisms: they seem always to be solvable only in retrospect.
    Thanks to Klingsor and John.

  2. Enjoyable and difficult enough, but not unreasonably so. Slow to start but then went in steadily, although I couldn’t parse a few including HAT, COMIC (missed ‘mice’ – very good!) and DEDICATION. Had ‘carson’ instead of CARBOY, but enjoyed the ‘Seat’ bit. In my ignorance, hadn’t heard of ‘service tree’. Favourites were the &lit NO-SHOW, PFENNIG, GERONIMO and my LOI & COD, GDANSK.

    Thanks to Klingsor and John.

  3. ‘Violent’ as a synonym for HEADY surprised me, too, but I see it’s in Chambers as one of several meanings. ARMCHAIR can be ‘stay-at-home’ in the sense of an ‘armchair traveller’ – one who stays at home and travels vicariously by watching travelogues on TV etc.

    MAI TAI was new to me, but I guessed the ‘tai’ bit from crossing letters and found it by googling for cocktails with ‘tai’ in the name. Jamie tells you how to make it here.

    5dn was one of my last ones in – it took a while for the PFENNIG to drop.

    Thanks, Klingsor and John

  4. Thought this was brilliant. Had to cheat on MAI TAI to finish. Superb and comic clues including, but not limited to, GDANSK, COMIC, PFENNIG (standout), ARMCHAIR. Also note customary Wagnerian reference in SIEGFRIED.

    Thanks to Klingsor and John.

  5. Lovely puzzle. As a change Bert and Joyce solved this independently. Joyce has to admit that she needed a hint from Bert to finish.

    Spoonerisms are not our strong point but as we completed the puzzle awaiting a flight to 2d it went in quickly.

    Thanks to Klingsor and John.

Comments are closed.