Independent 9,702 by Morph

This, one of Morph’s two-monthly (by which I mean every two months, whether or not that word exists) appearances, was as usual difficult. But fair, and good, with some nice clues.

The theme seems something to do with vegetables, as we have pak choi, chard, salad herb, rocket, and a few others. Whether or not there is any stronger link than this I leave to you.

Across
1 MOONBEAM Drop trousers and smile – that’ll brighten up the night! (8)
moon [= drop trousers] beam [= smile]
5 SPASMS Wells manuscript contracts (6)
spas MS
10 RUMINATOR I consider sailors’ drink ration insane (9)
rum [= sailors’ drink] (ration)*
11 KILIM It’s found underfoot almost halfway across African mountain (5)
Kilim{anjaro}
12 TACKING Pet facing away from master, turning to avoid blast? (7)
(cat)rev. king — ref. sailing, where you tack when going into the wind
13 ECHIDNA Australian beast chained up (7)
(chained)*
14 OVERDRAMATISE Drive me crazy with a roast ham (13)
(Drive me a roast)*
18 ARACHNOPHOBIA Publisher’s head honcho working in Middle East region being wary of web developer? (13)
(P{ublisher} honcho)* in Arabia — the web developer is a spider
22 PROFANE Gas containing fluorine in place of phosphorus turning the air blue! (7)
propane with its second p replaced by f — a nit-picker would say that the wordplay leads to frofane — and what’s the exclam about? It’s not an especially funny or clever or misleading clue.
24 PULSATE Beat a bit of thyme into beans (7)
puls(a t{hyme})e
26 CHARD Veg is cold and tough (5)
c hard
27 CROSSWORD Right before the middle of function, almost nod off over this (9)
c(r)os (drows{e})rev.
28 CUEING Writing 27, drop line that’s stimulating (6)
I had to wait for this, but since 27 is CROSSWORD, writing crosswords = clueing — c{l}ueing
29 ASSENTER One nodding a cross in the box in commentary (8)
a “centre” — football, not the voting that I puzzled over
Down
1 MARATHON French revolutionary honourable in the long run (8)
Marat hon.
2 OHMIC 1/2-3/8 of midwestern states showing resistance (5)
For a long time I never understood this: it was obviously ohmic, with its connection to ohms, the measures of resistance, but the first bit? Oh yes: Oh{io} Mic{higan}
3 BANDIED Put it about prohibition’s ended (7)
ban died
4 AUTOGRAPH Car, one appearing in King George pub sign (9)
auto (GR (a) PH) — autograph and sign are verbs
6 PAK CHOI Greens pick a rogue to enter house? On the contrary (3,4)
ho in (pick a)* — rather than the rogue entering the house, it’s the other way round — being set in my ways, I’d never heard of this and had to check it
7 SALAD HERB Balderdash, rubbish – only one old penny for rocket? (5,4)
(Balder{d}ash)* — this time we are told that it’s only one of the d’s that is removed
8 SUMMAT Muslim community gathered in street – a northern thing? (6)
s(umma)t — I had to check what an umma (ummah?) was: this
9 URGE Encourage clearout after removal of leader (4)
{p}urge
15 EVAPORATE Prepare ground for upcoming harangue and vanish (9)
(pave)rev. orate
16 AMORPHOUS Passionate about leaders of public health lacking structure (not like me!) (9)
amor(p{ublic} h{ealth})ous — with a reference also to the name of the setter
17 LAVENDER Stopper under WC that’ll make it smell nicer! (8)
lav ender — with all the names for WC one of the most obvious ones didn’t occur to me until late in the day
19 ABANDON Oasis perhaps close to desert? (7)
a band [Oasis is an example of a band] on [= close to]
20 HOLY SEE Stop leader abandoning French official residence where Pope holds sway? (4,3)
ho! {e}lysée
21 IPECAC Melting icecap that’s hard to stomach (6)
(icecap)* — obviously an anagram, but this one didn’t appear immediately
23 ETCH Cut top off fodder plant (4)
{v}etch
25 ABOUT Engaged in a fight (5)
a bout

*anagram

13 comments on “Independent 9,702 by Morph”


  1. A CROSSWORD to have one [MOON]BEAMing throughout. There were a few I didn’t parse at first, but I left my brain fallow for a while and came back, which did the trick. Did need help to get KILIM/SUMMAT, which were both unfamiliar. Laughed when I worked out what the bit in brackets was doing in AMORPHOUS, and at various other points too.

    Many thanks to Morph and John.

  2. Simon S

    Thanks Morph and John

    I held myself up on 17 by entering ARACHNOPHOBIC at 16 – ARABIC region for Middle East seems fair, and …IC seems a more accurate description of ‘being wary’ than …IA, to me at least. 17 was then very tricky!

  3. Eileen

    Thanks, John.

    Super puzzle: favourites RUMINATE, ARACHNOPHOBIA, OHMIC, SUMMAT, AMORPHOUS, HOLY SEE and PROFANE – I thought the wordplay was fine, as it said ‘gas *containing* fluorine’.

    Simon S – I made the same mistake re 18ac initially but it makes perfect sense if you think of ‘being wary’ as a gerund.

    Many thanks Morph – I really enjoyed it.

  4. Hovis

    Found this very hard, ultimately failing on OHMIC. Guessed SUMMAT then googled ‘umma’, then guessed KILIM and had to look that up also. Tried various anagrams for ‘icecap’, then gave up and used an anagram solver. Another word I don’t remember ever meeting before. My favourites were MOONBEAM and ABANDON for clever surfaces. Thanks to S&B.

  5. jane

    Goodness, that was hard – but well worth the effort even though I did finally admit defeat over 8d.
    New word for me at 21d – doubt that I’ll remember it!

    Favourite has to be 1a – solving that encouraged me when the going got tough further down the grid.

    Many thanks to Morph for the challenge and to John for the blog.

  6. baerchen

    always a pleasure to see Morph and thanks to John for the blog.
    Just goes to show my dear old dad was wrong; tha can get summat for nowt wi t’Indy crossword

  7. John Dunleavy

    That was tricky! A number of words I hadn’t encountered before included, umma, ipecac and kilim, so a little bit of assistance was needed before completion. I did write kilim in before checking, but summat and ipecac eluded me despite metaphorically slapping my forehead when I saw summat. I had S_M_AT and used the letter reveal to get the U before the penny dropped. I guessed IPECCA and then Googled it and was presented with the correct answer. An enjoyable puzzle with plenty of lightbulb moments. Took me ages to see the parsing for CROSSWORD and I never did parse EVAPORATE.
    Thanks John and Morph.

  8. Maysie

    Everything just glided in magically until I hit HOLY SEE( didn’t know stop could be HO) and ETCH (didn’t know it could be fodder).But I really enjoyed this……also only knew the rug as KELIM, but it seemed a reasonable punt. Had heard that IPECAC was pretty unpalatable too, so that helped, as did my one and only stay in Yorkshire for SUMMAT!
    Well-deserved thanks to Morph and John.


  9. Nice stuff with 1a being the stand-out for this reporter. Thanks to The Plasticine Man for the puzzle and to The John for the blog.

  10. allan_c

    We made steady progress through this till we were left with 27, 28 and 23. Eventually we worked out 27 but then couldn’t fathom 28. A real facepalm moment when a wordfinder suggested CLUEING. Doh!

    But thanks, Morph and John.

  11. Bertandjoyce

    Thanks Morph – great fun although we struggled on 21d and 11ac. Enjoyed the bit in brackets in 16d.

    Thanks John, we needed to come here to check the parsing for 27ac.

  12. beery hiker

    Did this one on the way home from work yesterday and enjoyed it – plenty of nice misdirection but nothing too difficult. IPECAC was familiar from a Guardian puzzle earlier in the year.

    Thanks to Morph and John

  13. flashling

    Actually I found it one of the easier of the puzzles, but hay for horses and all that. Thanks Mick and John, mind you I’d just read Mick’s book and was probably in his mindset.

Comments are closed.