Financial Times 15,225 by HAMILTON

I enjoyed this very much for a while, great surfaces and great clues.  Then I gound to a halt.   There are some I still can’t explain.  Any help appreciated.  Thanks Hamilton.

Financial-Times-1-by-HAMILTON.png
Across
1, 13 CHARITY FUND-RAISING Is it furnishing Tracy with aid? (7,4-7)
anagram (is it) of FURNISHING TRACY with AID – definition is &lit
7 ,27 HOT PANTS Clothing stolen from the lingerie department? (3,5)
cryptic definition
9 ARRAS Girl returns and picks up early Renaissance tapestry (5)
SARA (girl) reversed containing Renaissance (first letter of, early part)
10 KISSOGRAM Service provider Mark is so grammatically particular (9)
found inside (particular parts of) marK IS SO GRAMmatically
11 POSTERIOR Olympic venue accounted for in bill coming later (9)
RIO (Olympic venue) inside (accounted for in) POSTER (bill)
12 LINEN Assistant referee was not Sam – somehow that’s material (5)
LINEsmaN (assistant referee) missing SAM* anagram=somehow
13   See 1 across
15 EBBS Runs away from boarding house in El Salvador (4)
B and B (boarding house) in ES (El Salvador)
18, 8 GOOD TIMING Leaving with Tom and Di inside struggling to get suitable rhythm (4,6)
GOING (leaving) contains anagram (struggling) of TOM and DI
20 AUGMENT Swell agents pile into vehicle without Oscar (7)
G-MEN (agents) inside (pile into) AUTo (vehicle) missing O (oscar)
23 FLOES Frozen wastes wherein for lots of Eskimos safety is paramount (5)
first letters (is paramount) of For Lots Of Eskimos Safety
24 REDUCTION Introduce unfortunate cutback (9)
INTRODUCE* anagram=unfortunate
26 EXPEDIENT Changing the order, I’d pee next as it’s in my best interests (9)
anagram (changing the order) of I’D PEE NEXT
27   See 7 across
28 EWE Partners seek opening for elegant Cotswold female (3)
E and W (partners in bridge) then Elegant (opening letter for) – Cotswold is a breed of sheep
29 SOLAR ENERGY Frenchman covered in glory as renewable power supplier (5,6)
RENE (a frenchman) inside (covered in) anagram (renewable) of GLORY AS
Down
1 CHAMPERS Certain holidaymakers accept hot drink (8)
CAMPERS (certain holidaymakers) contain (accept) H (hot)
2 ACROSTIC Poem describing half this puzzle at a stroke! (8)
I can’t explain this.  Something along the lines of ACROSs (half this puzzle) and TIC (stroke) ? half of A CROSsword (this puzzle) and TICkle (a stroke)
3 ISSUE Send out the children (5)
double definition
4 YAKKING Regal animal going on interminably? (7)
YAK KING (regal animal)
5 UPSURGE Happy starting serious drive for big increase (7)
UP (happy) Serious (starting letter of) and URGE (drive)
6 DOODLEBUG Could it be a street artist making a bomb? (9)
Another I can’t explain.  Perhaps a reference to Michael Barnes-Wynters?  Seems unlikely to me.
7 HARING Bothering to change temperature in taking flight (6)
HATING (bothering?) changing T (temperature).  I’m not sure about this: you might be hating something, but that something is bothering you.  The two do not seem interchangeable.  cARING (bothering) changing C to H (cold to hot, changing temperature)
8   See 18
14 IRONSIDES Cavalry slammed in dossier (9)
anagram (slammed) of IN DOSSIER
16 DESIGNER Gender is not relevant to the inventor (8)
anagram (not relevant?) if GENDER IS
17 STANDS BY Waits next to the terraces at first (6,2)
BY (next to) following STANDS (the terraces)
19 DURRELL Naturalist Murray may not be found in valley (7)
mURRay missing MAY found in DELL (valley) – Gerald Durrell
20 AUDITOR The Listener (7)
Another I can’t explain.  Could it be a cryptic definition?  It seems to me that there should be someting more to this.
21 EFFETE Swear that summer in Provence is precious (6)
EFF (swear, eff and blind) with ETE (summer in French, in Provence)
22 CORPSE Fall about when company needs final cue (6)
Another I can’t explain.  CORPS (company) with cuE (final letter of) – to forget one’s lines or to be unable to speak them due to hysterical laughter – to fall about with laughter.  The definition is a bit vague on its own, but the surface reading of the construction part directs us to the stage (company of actors and requiring a cue) so fair enough.
25 CAPON “Got your head covered, cock?” (5)
CAP ON (got your head covered)

*anagram
definitions underlined

14 comments on “Financial Times 15,225 by HAMILTON”

  1. I think 2d may be A CROS(sword) TIC(kle).and 7d is ‘caring’ (bothering) with C (cold) replaced by H (hot) to give HARING

  2. Thank you PeeDee. On 2 down, I thought it was “this puzzle” = “a crossword”, half of which is “acros”.

  3. Years ago, in a Pan book of crosswords, I came across a clue that went something like this: Has he then heard of defalcation? for AUDITOR. 20d above seems to be too cryptic and I too miss any beauty that may be hidden there.

  4. Thanks Hamilton and PeeDee

    I thought this was quite tough, and had ground to a halt until I worked out the anagram at 1, 13 from the firsty and last Is and the D, after which things flowed again.

    For 22 I had CORPSE, as in what one does on stage when you forget your lines or get distracted (cf Dudley Moore when Peter Cook went off on one), constructed from CORPS (miltary company) plus cuE.

    Plausible?

  5. According to Chambers CORPSE can be to be unable to speak ones lines due to hysterical laughter, which could be to fall about with laughter.

    This is certainly better than TOPPLE.

  6. Many thanks for the blog PeeDee
    There are two clues remaining for which I can offer explanations:
    6d – Doodlebug – modern day graffiti to me is doodling on a massive scale, and is a nuisance (bug) – our council has spent quite a lot trying to obliterate it. Per contra, some people have made a bomb out of it!
    20d – I was attempting a cryptic definition, using capitals to denote the late lamented magazine, whose crossword lives on in a new home.
    Thanks too to passerby for ACROSTIC and Simon S for CORPSE

  7. Thanks for explaining the remaining clues Hamilton. I did’t think of graffiti* for street artists at the time, only scriveners, who are not generally regarded as pests.

    *PS what is the noun for people who produce graffiti – graffitiers? graffitieri? graffitioso?

  8. For 2d I had “half this puzzle” being “across” (as opposed to “down”) and “stroke” being “tick”, the “describing” meaning it’s a homophone: “across tick” -> “acrostic”. (Although I now see that Hamilton has endorsed the other explanation.)

    Thanks to Hamilton and PeeDee.

  9. PeeDee @10 – Chambers suggests graffitist or graffiti artist (I prefer the former!)

    Steve @ 11 – that’s just as good, it works either way

  10. Thanks Hamilton and PeeDee

    This was tough which lasted most of today to get filled out … and came here before I had fully parsed TOPPLE to find that I never would have – got as far as justifying PPL as people or loosely company but was missing the TO part !!! Not sure that I would ever have got CORPSE from that definition and dunno whether I would have been able to construct it from the rest of the word play.

    I went down the path of the ACROSS clues represented half of the crossword similar to Steve. Had also tried to convert HATING to HARING rather than the neater CARING.

    There was plenty to do with the rest of it … coming across the Cotswold sheep for the first time and taking a while to decipher others around the grid. Finally got to the NW corner where ACROSTIC, POSTERIOR and CHAMPERS were the last few in.

  11. Thanks PeeDee and Hamilton and to other contributors for sorting out the parsing of ACROSTIC and HARING which both defeated me.

    Interesting to see two unusual anagrinds at 14 & 16dn – “not relevant” and “slammed”.

    Overall I found the style very unusual – which was refreshing if tough.

    So thanks again.

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