Financial Times 15,223 – Dante

Monday Prize Crossword / Apr 25, 2016

A crossword in which Dante lived up to his reputation as a setter relying on cryptic and double definitions.

Most of these were not really my cup of tea.
With the one exception (8d, SAME HERE) which was just sheer brilliance.
Well, in my opinion, that is.

Definitions are underlined wherever possible and/or appropriate.

Across
1 EVICTION Expulsion for getting into vice criminally (8)
(INTO VICE)*    [* = criminally]
5 ASSETS Capital for a ship holding company (6)
A + SS (ship) around SET (company)
10 BLOCK Obstruction in a built-up area (5)
Double definition
11 AD NAUSEAM Using Latin to an offensive extent (2,7)
(Not so) Cryptic definition
12 ENCHILADA Prepared a Chile and Mexican dish (9)
(A CHILE AND)*    [* = prepared]
13 DITCH The last place to fight (5)
Cryptic definition
14 MOROSE Sad as the Walrus, swallowing first of the oysters? (6)
MORSE (the walrus) around O[ysters]
15 TANGIER More tasteful port? (7)
Double definition
Tangier is a port in Morocco.
18 ABSOLVE Sailors love to be free – so acquit (7)
ABS (sailors) + (LOVE)*    [* = to be free]
20 AGE-OLD A ruined lodge that’s been around for centuries (3-3)
A + (LODGE)*    [* = ruined]
22 EXTRA Run a special edition (5)
Double definition
24 ADULTHOOD Majority status (9)
Cryptic definition
25 AGAMEMNON Special among men, a legendary Greek hero (9)
(AMONG MEN A)*    [* special]
26 EATEN Where some pupils go, say, having been fed? (5)
Homophone, indicated by ‘say’, of:    ETON (where some pupils go)
27 ENTITY Body essence (6)
Double definition
28 SEXTANTS Employed by navigators remaining aboard (8)
EXTANT (remaining) inside SS (aboard)
The definition is really in the wrong part of speech.
Some may find it defendable, I don’t like it.
Down
1 EMBLEM In a gem, blemishes affect the standard (6)
Hidden solution, indicated by just ‘in’:    [g]EM BLEM[ishes]
2 IRON CROSS Award for Brand X (4,5)
IRON (brand) + CROSS (X)
3 TAKE IT OR LEAVE IT Fancy Kate over Letitia? It’s Hobson’s choice (4,2,2,5,2)
(KATE OVER LETITIA)*    [* = fancy]
4 OF AN AGE Having so many years belonging to a particular generation? (2,2,3)
Double definition
6 SOUND INVESTMENT Money well spent on hearing aids? (5,10)
Cryptic definition
7 ERECT Not having a list to put up (5)
Definition plus a cryptic extension
8 SAME HERE Like this place? Me too! (4,4)
Double definition
There were quite a few things I didn’t like in this puzzle.
However, I thought this was a marvellous clue.
9 INFANT First-class student? (6)
Cryptic definition
16 ILL-GOTTEN “Wages of Sin” – an unusually long title (3-6)
(LONG TITLE)*    [* = unusually]
Poor definition, in my opinion.
17 NAMESAKE One having the same calling (8)
Cryptic definition
19 ELAINE In the wrong lane, that’s where to see this woman (6)
(LANE + IE (that’s, id est))*    [* =wrong]
For a while, I thought this to be a faulty clue.
Also because I unjustly saw the solution as an anagram of IN and LANE.
It is, of course, an anagram of LANE and IE as Hamish pointed out in comment @1.
20 ALUMNAE Female pupils of the past (7)
Cryptic definition
21 ADONIS The handsome youth said no, unfortunately (6)
(SAID NO)*    [* =unfortunately]
23 TOAST Brown bread for good health (5)
Double definition

*anagram

8 comments on “Financial Times 15,223 – Dante”

  1. Hamish

    Thanks Dante ans Sil.

    19dn is actually an anagram of LANE and IE (that’s) which to my mind made it even poorer. Elsewhere ENTITY and ALUMNAE were barely cryptic.

    As so often with this setter, I got caught out by the curved ball at 12ac – I confidently entered DEATH instead of DITCH – until ERECT made me face facts.

    It’s strange how some of Dante’s clues can illicit opposite responses. Personally I thought SAME HERE was weak but ILL-GOTTEN was very clever.

    So the normal Dante mixed bag. Enjoyed it all the same so thanks again.

  2. brucew@aus

    Thanks Dante and Sil

    Found this puzzle a little more difficult than normal from Dante when I did it earlier this week – needed an easier one after trawling through some harder ones over the weekend – and not sure that I got it one as straightforward as I was expecting here. Have seen both AGAMEMNON and ADONIS surfacing across different puzzles of recent times.

    Like Sil, I thought that SAME HERE was excellent – just a silky smooth surface with an economy of words and a chuckle when it went in. Didn’t mind ELAINE – it was quite clear what he was getting at with it, although from a purist perspective it is maybe not quite kosher. ILL-GOTTEN was the one that probably grated the most … it just didn’t seem to be defined quite right.

    Still, overall, it was quite entertaining and enabled me to keep the numbers up after the spate of hardies. Finished in the SW corner with AGAMEMNON (even though it had done the rounds), ENTITY and NAMESAKE as the last one in.

  3. Hamish

    Surely the wages of sin are ill-gotten gains.

  4. Sil van den Hoek

    Thanks, Hamish, for putting me right re 19d (ELAINE).
    Don’t know why/how I missed that.
    Now corrected (and to avoid too much wordiness I deleted most of my original comment).

  5. brucew@aus

    Hi Hamish

    That’s the point, they are ILL-GOTTEN GAINS – not ILL-GOTTEN. It’s no big deal but it just didn’t sit quite right at the time.

  6. Hornbeam

    I agree with everyone — just a bit tame

  7. Karen

    Thought lots of te supposed cryptics were awful!! My last one in was same here, suddenly came to me in the middle of dinner. Thanks all.

  8. Charles

    The wrong part of speech clue 12 prepared, verb, answer “enchilada” noun; ditto clue 20,noun, answer, “age old” adjective. 24 across “majority status” clue, answer “ adulthood” is a hell of a stretch, I.e. clue implies math where answer is life stage.

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