Financial Times 15,750 – Armonie

It’s been a while since we had an FT Monday crossword. The last one, before Christmas, marked a farewell to Dante. This one, the first in 2018, seems to mark a farewell to Monday Prize puzzles.


Many will welcome Armonie on a Monday, including me. That said, I found this offering somewhat harder than the usual output of this setter.

Across
1 EVEN SO Oscar quits first, nevertheless (4,2)
O (Oscar) preceded by EVENS (quits)
4 MALINGER Swing the lead making parent hang around (8)
MA (parent) + LINGER (hang around)
10 UNIT TRUST Investment requires detachment and faith (4,5)
UNIT (detachment) + TRUST (faith)
11 PUT UP Build in either direction (3,2)
A palindrome [in either direction]
12 PROW Quietly paddle in front of boat (4)
P (quietly) + ROW (paddle)
13 SOMNOLENCE Drowsiness comes on Len unexpectedly (10)
(COMES ON LEN)*    [* = unexpectedly]
15 EPITHET Descriptive term for him hit Pete badly (7)
(HIT PETE)*    [* = badly]
16 DEMISE Failure of half the Home Counties (6)
DEMI (half) + SE (the Home Counties)
19 PLACID Charlie wears Scottish cloth still (6)
PLAID (Scottish cloth) around C (Charlie)
21 PANACHE Criticise a guerrilla for dashing style (7)
PAN (criticise) + A + CHE (guerrilla)
23 TIDDLYWINK Counter drunken amorous gesture (10)
TIDDLY (drunken) + WINK (amorous gesture)
25 FAIR Just fine (4)
Double definition
27 RIGHT Just falsify height (5)
RIG (falsify) + HT (height)
28 GRAPESEED Pip is longing to capture primates (9)
GREDD (longing) around APES (primates)
29 ELSINORE Shakespearean setting relies on production (8)
(RELIES ON)*    [* = production]
30 AUNTIE A loose family member (6)
A + UNTIE (loose)
Down
1 EQUIPPED Employers’ leader cracked, having been fitted up (8)
E[mployers] + QUIPPED( cracked)
2 EDITORIAL “I led a riot” – revolutionary leader (9)
(I LED A RIOT)*    [* = revolutionary]
3 SATE Old Bob had a meal in gorge (4)
S (old bob, shilling) + + ATE (had a meal)
5 ATTUNED Accustomed to being wrongly taunted (7)
(TAUNTED)*    [* = wrongly]
6 IMPALEMENT One trapped in device for capital punishment (10)
A (one) inside IMPLEMENT (device)
7 GET ON Hit it off board (3,2)
Double definition
8 RAPIER Artist gets support from weapon (6)
RA (artist) + PIER (support)
9 PUT OUT Anger extinguished (3,3)
Double definition
14 SHACKLETON Explorer has crude shelter to give away (10)
SHACK (crude shelter) + LET ON (give away)
Sir Ernest Henry Shackleton (1874-1922 [the year my dad was born]), Antarctic explorer.
17 SACRAMENT Driven to protect a crowd in ceremony (9)
SENT (driven) around {A + CRAM (crowd)}
18 BEGRUDGE Resent, for example, redhead wearing shift (8)
EG (for example) +R[ed] (redhead!), together inside BUDGE (shift)
20 DOWAGER Manage venture for widow (7)
DO (manage) + WAGER (venture)
21 PINDAR Mean to entertain Indian poet (6)
PAR (mean) around IND (Indian)
A Greek lyric poet (c 518-438 BC), apparently famous for his odes.
At school I was taught classics – never heard of this poet, though.
22 STARVE Look round very fast (6)
STARE (look) around V (very)
24 DEGAS Painter departed and wise man turned up (5)
D (departed) + reversal [turned up] of SAGE (wise man)
26 BEAU Lover said to be a violin player (4)
Homophone [said] of BOW (a violin player – well, sort of)
Brian @5 is surely right when he says that the homophone fodder is ‘to be a violin player’.
I should have seen that (but I didn’t).

*anagram

8 comments on “Financial Times 15,750 – Armonie”

  1. crypticsue

    I found this a mixture of the R&W and the ‘have to think a bit’ – I hadn’t noticed it wasn’t a prize until Sil pointed that out

    My particular favourite in this one was the ‘drunken amorous gesture’

    Thanks to both setter and blogger

     

     

  2. Nick Lanyon

    I used to complete them with ease:
    The Monday FT was a breeze.
    It seems the demise
    Of that simple prize
    Requires a bit more expertise.

    Nick

  3. psmith

    Thanks Armonie & Sil.

    Not every clue was harder than usual.  Armonie had TIDDLYWINK in the prize crossword four weeks ago.

  4. Sil van den Hoek

    Gosh, you’re right, psmith.

    With exactly the same clue. And I blogged it, and I didn’t even remember ….. So, Armonie is also a setter who at times repeats himself.

  5. Brian

    I’m thinking that the homophone fodder in 26d is “to be a violin player” rather than simply “a violin player” — that is, to “bow” (verb) rather than a “bow” (noun, sort of).

     

     

  6. brucew@aus

    Thanks Armonie and Sil
    Enjoyable puzzle from Armonie. The thing that I most admire with him is his ability to neatly put together the less common meaning of words into a charade, with all of the associated misdirection, that gives the answer.
    Was a good accompaniment to lunch on Monday. Finished with the clever BEAU and SHACKLETON (which strangely didn’t come until I had all of the crossing letters).

  7. Karen

    Never heard of gredd meaning longing! Thanks Armonie and Sil

  8. psmith

    Dictionaries concur, so that’s agreed!

Comments are closed.