Financial Times 14,524 – Dante

Monday Prize Crossword/Jan 20

If my memory serves me well, I think I found this Dante puzzle slightly harder than average for our beloved setter.

I also remember me not immensely enjoying the puzzle. Must have been one of those days (for me, of course).

Definitions are underlined wherever possible and/or appropriate.

Across
1 REMAIN Don’t go and clip them in wet weather (6)
    EM (them, clipped: ‘em) inside RAIN (wet weather)
     
4 CHAPERON   Broken car phone in Escort (8)
    (CAR PHONE)*
    I am pretty sure I saw this anagram very recently. Perhaps it was in a Rufus. Nice one though.
     
9 ADDLED Corrupt theologian in crooked deal (6)
    DD (theologician, Doctor of Divinity) inside (DEAL)*
     
10   PENNINES Write numbers of chain letters? (8)
    PEN (write) + NINES (numbers)
    I am still thinking about ‘letters’. Yes, it’s there for the surface and I also think that it’s technically justifiable. But I fear I don’t like it.
     
12 HOT-PLATE   Stolen silverware used by restaurant cooks (3-5)
    HOT (stolen) + PLATE (silverware)
     
13 ARCHER A bowed old soldier (6)
    Is this a cryptic definition?
     
15 SEEN Observed and heard making a scene (4)
    Homophone (‘heard’) of:    SCENE
     
16 HEAVY METAL  Lead, say, in hard rock (5,5)
    Double definition
     
19   DIMINUENDO   Notable decrease in volume (10)
    Cryptic definition
    Musical term, hence the use of the word ‘notable’.
     
20 BAWL Shout and dance, say (4)
    Homophone (‘say’) of :   BALL (dance)
     
23 ACTION Order to start shooting in battle (6)
    Double definition
     
25 ANALYSIS Determination that snail, say, is about to demonstrate (8)
    (SNAIL SAY)*
     
27 OVERCAME Subdued, having arrived after it’s finished (8)
    CAME (arrived) after OVER (finished)
     
28 BIREME It had row upon row of rowers (6)
    Cryptic definition
     
29 DREADING Not looking forward to daughter going to university (8)
    D (daughter) + READING (university)
     
30 AGATES Name for stones when placed round an entrance (6)
    AS (when) around GATE (an entrance)
     
     
Down
1 REACHES Stretches between bends (7)
    Cryptic definition – is it?
     
2   MIDSTREAM    The farthest one will be from a bank (9)
    Cryptic definition
     
3   IDEALS Reformed ladies showing the highest standards (6)
    (LADIES)*
     
5 HIED Rushed a hide-out (4)
    (HIDE)*
     
6 PANORAMA    Latin American country holds an alternative view (8)
    PANAMA (Latin American country) around OR ((an) alternative)
     
7 RANCH Managed to get central heating at the farm (5)
    RAN (managed) + CH (central heating)
     
8 NOSTRIL It joins another for a breather (7)
    Cryptic definition
     
11   STEERED Third mate to be furious about having taken the helm (7)
    SEERED (furious) around [ma]T[e] (third letter of ‘mate’)
    I still cannot get used to things like ‘third mate’ for T. That said, I know that many solvers/setters are fine with it.
     
14 EVIDENT It’s obvious I’d enter the contest (7)
    I’D inside EVENT ((the) contest)
     
17   TRANSIENT Passing test, ran in, all excited (9)
    (TEST RAN IN)*
     
18 ENFORCED Compelled to use pressure in extremity (8)
    FORCE (pressure, really?) inside END (extremity)
     
19 DIAMOND Area inside American bases (7)
    Definition
    An (American) baseball term: the area of a baseball field that is enclosed by 3 bases and home plate. How cryptic is that? [Not that I knew the term!]
     
21 LESSENS    Belittles schoolwork, we hear (7)
    Homophone  (‘we hear’) of:   LESSONS (schoolwork)
     
22 FLYING Taking flight and running fast (6)
    Double definition
    ‘Flight’ and ‘flying’ are very close, aren’t they?
     
24   THERE Article about that particular place (5)
    THE (article) + RE (about)
    Nice one, in my opinion.
     
26   OMEN A sign that Verne’s captain has turned up (4)
    Reversal (‘turned up’) of NEMO (Verne’s captain, of “20,000 Leagues Under the Sea” fame)
     
     

4 comments on “Financial Times 14,524 – Dante”

  1. The best I could do for 10a with p??n?n?s was pennants thinking that they might have letters on them.
    Didn’t know hied.
    I guessed that 19a would be a musical term that I didn’t know and I don’t think I would ever have got 19d or explained it if you’d given me the answer.

    Tough I’d agree

  2. Thanks, Sil.

    Your memory does serve you: Rufus used 4a (verbatim) in Guardian 26,149.

    I would argue that there are two valid solutions to 27a: OVERCOME and OVERCAME. Both words (and their respective components, COME and CAME) can indicate the past, with the former being the past participle, and the latter the simple past/preterite. It’s possible the intended parsing was “having arrived” (a participle phrase) = COME. For CAME to work, it would be just “arrived” = CAME, with “having” serving as a bit of fodder for a smoother reading.

    Glad to see a clue (19d) where I had an advantage over UK solvers!

  3. I did realise that there were two possible answers for 27a.
    I see now that the actual answer given is shown as ‘overcame’ which was my initial thought.

  4. ernie (and perhaps others), now tweaked 27ac in the blog.
    I just saw that it was actually CAME that I entered into my grid ….. 🙂

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