Financial Times 14,586 by HAMILTON

I have not blogged a Hamilton puzzle before.  I filled the grid well enough but I am clearly not thinking on Hamiltons wavelength as there are several clues that I can’t quite come to grips with.

Across
1 CANTERBURY TALES Carey burnt inaccurate stories about a pilgrimage (10,5)
(CARY BURNT)* anagram=innacurate TALES (stories) – definition is ‘a pilgrimage’?  I’m not convinced about the definition, seems to have something missing to me. Definition is ‘about a pilgrimage’ as the ‘The Canterbury Tales is about a pilgrimage’
9 ERUDITE Universal credit was halved before housing academic (7)
U (universal) creDIT (halved) in (housed by) ERE (before) – definition is ‘academic’, learned
10 TAPIOCA A company one might knock back for food (7)
A CO (company) I PAT (Postman Pat might play postman’s knock knock gently) all reversed (back) – definition is ‘food’.  I’m not sure of this explanation, it seems quite obscure compared to the rest of the puzzle.  Alternatively TAP could be ‘knock’, but this should not be reversed.
11 COOMB Valley where nothing is contributed to hunt (5)
O (nothing) in (contributing to) COMB (hunt) – a valley in the West Country
12 DEFECTORS Deserters who forecasted losing a retrial (9)
FORCaSTED* anagram=retrial (re-tried) missing A
13 EXECRABLE Hated administrator gains most of farmland (9)
EXEC (administrator) with (gains) aRABLE (farmland, most of the letters)
15 SATIN Stayed home to get material (5)
SAT IN (stayed at home)
16 LEECH Mutable echinoderm afflicted by parasite (5)
found in mtabLE ECHinoderm – ‘mutable echinoderm’ has caught (is afflicted by) a parasite (LEECH)
18 SESTERCES Mysteries coming back to haunt opponents of old money (9)
SECRETS reversed (coming back) contains (haunts, is often around) S and E (opponents in bridge) – old Roman coins
20 FALSIFIES Doctors provided breast enhancements to cover it! (9)
IF (provided) inside (is covered by)  FALSIES (breast enhancements) – definition is ‘doctors’
23 CHOIR Singers about to go round the house (5)
CIR (circa, about) to go round HO (house)
24 MARSALA Mother’s announced a Louisiana sweet wine (7)
MARS sounds like (admitted) ma’s (mother’s) A LA (Louisiana)
25 MAINTOP Platform in the circus tent? (7)
I’m guessing that a ‘big top’ (circus tent) is a ‘main top’ – the definition is ‘platform’, at the top of the main mast on a sailing vessel.  If I have this explanation correct then I don’t like it!
26 ELECTION ADDRESS Are those for whom it is intended possibly considered least? (8,7)
(CONSIDERED LEAST)* anagram=possibly – I don’t understand the definition, I would have thought the voters were very high in politicians’ conciousness, during the election at least.
Down
1 CHERCHEZ LA FEMME Actress, a foreign woman, and Hazel caught inside playing “Chase the Lady” (8,2,5)
CHER (actress) FEMME (a foreigh woman) containing (and … inside) an anagram (playing) of HAZEL and C (caught)
2 NEURONE Not one European found in the cell (7)
NONE (not one) with EUR (European) found inside – a nerve cell
3 EDINBURGH City reporter batting for town (9)
ED (editor, reporter) IN (batting, or batting for?) BURGH (town) – definition is ‘city’
4 BREAD Blumenthal began to study food (5)
B (beginning of Blumenthal) READ (to study)
5 RATIFIERS Those who sanction arrest, maybe, if I am included (9)
ARREST* anagram=maybe containing (am included) IF I
6 TOPIC Question of work in a short time (5)
OP (opus, work) in TICk (short time)
7 LOOKOUT Spooner is surprised by oaf on guard (7)
Spoonerism of ‘something lout’, but I can’t figure out what – definition is ‘guard’.  I suppose if you pronounce lookout as LUKE OUT then the Spoonerism would be ‘coo, lout’, but to me lookout is pronounced LUCK OUT. 
8 STARS AND STRIPES Flag up traders’ past sins (5,3,7)
(TRADER’S PAST SINS)* anagram=up
14 BASTINADO Fortress partially in trouble; gets a beating (9)
BASTion (fortress, partly) IN ADO (trouble) – punsishment by beating the soles of the feet
15 STEPCHILD One might come into new family surroundings (9)
cryptic definition – I can’t quite see the difference between the cryptic and literal readings here.
17 ENLARGE Design general increase (7)
GENERAL* anagram=enlarge
19 CHORTLE 23 without one let out a laugh! (7)
CHOiR (23 missing I=one) LET* anagram=out
21 INAPT Lumpy paint is not fit for purpose (5)
PAINT* anagram=lumpy
22 SAMBA Salvation Army leads graduate on a merry dance! (5)
SA (Salvation Army) in front of (leads) MB (graduate) on A – definition is ‘merry dance’, a Brazilian carnival dance

*anagram

9 comments on “Financial Times 14,586 by HAMILTON”

  1. I didn’t share all PeeDee’s qualms: the Canterbury Tales were about a pilgrimage, for instance, and I think you might shout ‘ook’ if you’re surprised (Spooner’s ‘lookout’); however, ‘maintop’ does seem to stretch things a bit. Anyway, the puzzle was good fun, and based round a good grid. Thanks, Hamilton and PeeDee.

  2. Thanks PeeDee and Hornbeam
    1a – I’m sorry to say that one word in the clue went missing between draft and submission, which was “…stories telling about… My apologies. As it is, “stories” is doing double duty, which wasn’t what I intended
    25a – noted
    26a – you may think so, but for a cynic like me who has lived through 15 different governments it is a perfectly apposite clue!
    7d – I think the issue of regional pronunciation has been debated many times on these pages. “koo (or coo) lout” does it for me – I’ve never heard “look” pronounced as “luck” (as in duck?)
    15d – I will accept that if I had my time again I would set this one differently

  3. Hi Hamilton, I enjoyed the 3/4’s of the crossword I was able to do.I don’t know which region you come from , but to my ears “look” and “luck”are very close homophones.But I haven’t managed a spoonerism yet except by some other means.1a was prefectly doable.I didn’t understand 25a and had marquee.Any thanks !
    Also many thanks to Peedee.

  4. Thanks for the reply Hamilton, and I forgot to say thank you for the crossword.

    I just had a quick look in Chambers at the pronunciation they give for ‘look’. According to them it has a short vowel sound, the examples they give are ‘good’, ‘full’ or ‘would’. But like you say, regional variations differ. I was brought up in south Manchester, where duck and look would have been a good rhyme. I think the clue would work very well just down the road in Liverpool 😉

    For 26a I knew what you were getting at, and I quite agree! The idea that politicians care only about votes makes it hard to read the clue as voters are the ‘least considered’ though.

  5. Re 6d How does tic equate to short time?
    I can only see tic(k) without the k but that would be a short short time.

    Thanks to everyone

  6. Correct ernie, the blog is fixed now. I think a tick, though short, is still an amount of time so ‘short time’ will do for TIC.

    At the time of solving the puzzle I just assumed that TIC was a possible spelling of tick, in the sense of a short moment. Unfortunately the dictionaries no not back this up.

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