Financial Times no.14,835 by Peto

All perfectly satisfactory.

I don’t have very much to add to that. This was a decent puzzle, not outstandingly inventive (many of the synonyms weren’t stretched far beyond their primary meanings), but with nothing to really grumble about. Thank-you, Peto.

Across
1 COP OUT
Avoid responsibility for policeman getting exhausted (3,3)
Cop [policeman]  out [exhausted]
4 AGNOSTIC
Questioning Bill over it before Carol returns (8)
Reversal of it song [carol] within ac [account, bill]
9 PURIFY
Free from guilt but extremely fidgety after Penny takes Irish unionist back (6)
P [penny]  reversal of Ir [Irish] U [unionist]   f(idget)y
10 CAREWORN
Haggard’s mind showing the effects of age (8)
Care [mind]  worn [showing effects of age]
12 BRISLING
Bear circling island lake to find fish (8)
Is [island]  l [lake] within bring [bear]
13 FLEECE
Left in charge at church do (6)
L [left] within fee [charge]  CE [church]
15 EMIR
Helping to make sure Miranda gets a ruler (4)
Hidden in surE MIRanda
16 GET A MOVE ON
Tom gave one order to hurry up (3,1,4,2)
Anagram of tom gave one
19 CONSISTENT
Happy to admit son is in agreement (10)
S [son]  is within content [happy]
20 BOLT
About to leave town with a writer (4)
Bolton [town] minus on [about]
23 ASLEEP
Inattentive in general since before taking power (6)
As [since]  Lee [General (Robert E.)]  p [power]
25 FAIR PLAY
Spooner’s mate to severely criticise equal teatment for all concerned (4,4)
Spoonersism of pair [mate]  flay [severely criticise]
27 BANDANNA
Britain’s first man to wear woman’s clothing (8)
B(ritain)  Dan [man] within Anna [woman]
28 APTEST
Most suitable to check after father comes back (6)
Reversal of pa [father]  test [check]
29 RESOLUTE
Decided about well before money is mentioned (8)
Re [about]  so [well] lute [sounds like ‘loot’, money]
30 CARTON
Swindle involving cunning fictional lawyer (6)
Art [cunning] within con [swindle]
Down
1 CAPABLE
Qualified secretary employed by government minister (7)
PA [Personal Assistant, secretary] within Cable [government minister Vince]
2 PERDITION
Everlasting punishment for a princess into rum (9)
Per [a]  Di [Princess] anagram of into
3 UNFOLD
Tell of a Parisian near to collapse (6)
Un [French for ‘a’] fold [collapse]
5 GOAL
Metal almost covering one end (4)
A [one] within gol(d)
6 OVERLOOK
Exceeding King John’s earlier disregard (8)
Over [exceeding]  loo [john]  k [king]
7 TROPE
Against including Richards’ original exercises in irony for example (5)
R(ichards) within to [against] PE [exercises]
8 CONCERN
Business agreement curtailed by Norway (7)
Concer(t) [agreement]  N [Norway]
11 ENTENTE
An understanding of space and time at present is incomplete (7)
En [space]  t [time]  ente(r) [present? – bit dubious]
14 GAINSAY
Speak after profit is made from dispute (7)
Gain [profit]  say [speak]
17 EMOLLIENT
Conciliatory creature mostly found in English story books (9)
Mol(e) [creature] within E [English] lie [story]  NT [New Testament, books]
18 FIREWALL
Enthusiasm shown by everyone after the introduction of Webroot’s security system (8)
Fire [enthusiasm]  w(ebroot)  all [everyone]
19 CHAMBER
It may be found in a gun room (7)
Double definition
21 TRY IT ON
Attempt to fool god about end of story (3,2,2)
(Stor)y withon Triton [god]
22 GRAPPA
Doctor collars Norm over a drink (6)
Reversal of par [norm] within GP [doctor]  a
24 LINES
The French occupied by current form of school punishment (5)
In [current] within les [French for ‘the’]
26 GNAT
Flyer’s characteristic quality brought up (4)
Reversal of tang [characteristic quality]

5 comments on “Financial Times no.14,835 by Peto”

  1. Thanks, Ringo.

    I wasn’t too sure about “present” = “enter” in 11 down either. I suppose in court you could enter or present a plea, but then the “at” sits awkwardly.

  2. Yes, Ringo (thanks!), this was a perfectly all right crossword.
    However, I couldn’t get 20ac (BOLT).
    Didn’t know the writer Robert Bolt, although he’s apparently famous enough (A Man for All Seasons, screenplays for Dr Zhivago and Lawrence of Arabia).
    So, it wasn’t easy to find the solution just from the construction.

    By the way, I didn’t help myself by initially entering EBULLIENT at 17d which fits the construction perfectly well but not the definition, of course.

    Many thanks to Peto for another piece of precise clueing.

  3. Found this quite tough – not sure why, perhaps some of the constructing synonyms were a little too general. I also failed on BOLT and, ashamed to say, didn’t know CARTON but got it from wordplay.

    Thanks to Peto and Ringo for clarity

  4. I found this one hard and packed in at about 50%. Unusual words, or at least obscure meanings. Eg. Never thought of tang as a quality.

  5. Thanks Peto and Ringo

    I think that I’d done 4 or 5 puzzles by this setter previously and had found them all pretty challenging to complete. This one was no different!

    It was hard to put the finger on why – maybe putting ‘perennial’ at 2d, ‘laces’ at 24d and ‘wrinkled’ at 10a would’ve slowed things up a bit. Eventually worked the way through it on and off across a couple of weeks and got it finished. Last few in were GNAT, LINES (corrected from ‘laces’) and finally BANDANNA.

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