Independent 10,096 / Serpent

Serpent has provided his latest puzzle for our stimulation this Thursday, on a grid that contains a higher-than-average number of lights.

I found that I made steady progress through this puzzle, although at no point did I zip through the clues. In the end, I was stuck with 20 and 34 and needed to cheat to get 34, whereupon I could sort out 20 for myself, despite not knowing the word in this particular sense.

I think that I have parsed everything correctly apart from the wordplay at 30, about which any input from fellow solvers would be gratefully received – thanks for the clarification, blog now updated. I would also appreciate confirmation of my parsing at 12, in particular the use of “do” to indicate a deletion.

My favourite clues today were 8 and 21, both for surface reading; and 2, for the surface reading and for its emptying device.

*(…) indicates an anagram; definitions are italicised; // separates definitions in multiple-definition clues

Across  
   
01 LADY One who does for Spooner’s lady

Spoonerism of “daily (=one who does, i.e. charlady)”

   
03 BIG BUCKS Lots of money made from important game?

BIG (=important, major) + BUCKS (=game, i.e. male deer)

   
04 SENNA Late driver taking this to speed up motion?

Cryptically, the laxative drug senna would “speed up the passing of a) motion”!; the reference is to Brazilian racing driver Ayrton Senna (1960-94)

   
11 ENSLAVING Doctor Van Helsing taking heroin and getting into bondage?

*(VAN + <h>ELSING); “taking heroin (=H)” means letter “h” is dropped from anagram, indicated by “doctor”

   
12 SIR Teacher doing time in prison

S<t>IR (=prison, colloquially); “doing time (=T)” means letter “t” is dropped

   
13 FIGHT Bundle of cargo about to be unloaded

F<re>IGHT (=cargo); “about (=re-) to be unloaded” means letters “re” are dropped; bundle is a slang word for fight, brawl

   
14 BLACK RAT Need to stop naughty child being a pest

LACK (=need, want) in BRAT (=naughty child)

   
16 CHANNEL Designer adopts new means of communication

N (=new) in CHANEL (=designer, i.e. Coco Chanel)

   
21 KETTLE Check elements causing trouble in demonstration // boiler

Double definition: to kettle is to contain protesters in an enclosed area, hence “check elements causing trouble in demonstrations” AND a kettle is a boiler of water

   
24 GREASER Biker changing gear to steer at regular intervals

*(GEAR) + S<t>E<e>R (“at regular intervals” means alternate letters only); “changing” is anagram indicator; colloquially, a greaser of a member of a gang of long-haired motorcyclists

   
25 ABATTOIR A club rave turned into a shambles

A + BAT (=club, in sport) + TOIR (RIOT=rave, i.e. fun time; “turned” indicates reversal)

   
28 CREAM Master race destroyed elite

*(M (=master) + RACE); “destroyed” is anagram indicator

   
30 DUO They might play back sound’s prime elements

<s>OU<n>D; “prime elements of” means letters in prime number positions in the word “sOUnD“, i.e. letters 2, 3 and 5; “back” indicates reversal

   
31 OVERWRITE Ended audience’s privilege to add new characters to script?

OVER + homophone of “right (=privilege)”

   
32 DANCE Steps taken by desperate fellow in contact with church

DAN (=desperate fellow, from The Dandy comic) + CE (=church, i.e. Church of England)

   
33 YODELLER Really taken aback about poem that was sung without a singer

ODE (=poem that was (originally) sung) in YLLER (RE<a>LLY; “without “a” ” means letter “a” is dropped; “taken aback” indicates reversal)

   
34 TREE Supporter’s run on board plane?

R (=run, on cricket scorecard) in TEE (=supporter, in golf); a plane is a type of tree

   
Down  
   
01 LOSE FACE Suffer humiliation in encounter by toilets we hear

LOSE (homophone of “loos (=toilets)”) + FACE (=encounter, as verb)

   
02 DENIGRATE On vacation, relative and I get horribly run down

*(R<elativ>E + AND I GET); “on vacation” means that all but first and last letters are emptied from this part of anagram, indicated by “horribly”

   
04 INSTALL This month, everything’s put in place

INST. (=this month, i.e. instant) + ALL (=everything)

   
05 BLACK Unofficial Labour leader splits support

L<abour> (“leader” means first letter only) in BACK (=support)

   
06 CHINA Feature of church in Asian country

Hidden (“feature of”) in “churCH IN Asian”

   
07 SAGE Plant flag on top of Everest

SAG (=flag, droop) + E<verest> (“top of” means first letter only)

   
08 CASTANET Say how one might obtain a bass instrument

Cryptically, if you “cast a net” you may catch “obtain a bass”, i.e. catch a fish!

   
09 HERBAL Right book to find remedy out?

[R (=right) + B (=book)] in HEAL (=remedy); & lit.

   
15 REV Prior defrocking pious cleric

<p>REV<ious> (=prior); “defrocking pious” means letters “pious” are dropped

   
18 AREA CODE Location-specific numbers are based on a system of rules

ARE + A + CODE (=system of rules)

   
19 EASTERNER New Yorker perhaps set to become involved in profitable venture

*(SET) in EARNER (=profitable venture); “to become involved” is anagram indicator; an easterner is a native of one of the eastern states of the US

   
20 PREMIÈRE Leading actress forgetting start of opening line before great dramatist

PRE-M<ol>IÈRE (=before great (French) dramatist); “forgetting start of opening (=O) + L (=line)” means letters “ol” are dropped; a première is a leading lady in a theatrical company

   
22/17 TEA LEAVES Duck where roof sticks out and dips?

TEAL (=duck) + EAVES (=where roof sticks out); colloquially, dips are pickpockets, hence “tea leaves”, i.e. “thieves” in Cockney rhyming slang

   
23 EMOTIVE Book brought up author’s arousing feelings

EMOT (TOME=book; “brought up” indicates vertical reversal) + I’VE (=author’s, i.e. Serpent has)

   
24 GARDEN This plot could spell danger

*(DANGER); “could spell” is anagram indicator

   
26 BREAD Penning article raised money

A (=article, in grammar) in BRED (=raised, reared)

   
27 TOWEL This could dry up before source of water finally disappears

TO (=before, listed in Chambers) + WEL<l> (=source of water; “finally disappears” means last letter is dropped)

   
29 COSY Intimate sex in modest surroundings doesn’t include former partner

S<ex> (“doesn’t include former partner (=EX)” means letters “ex” are dropped) in COY (=modest)

   

 

17 comments on “Independent 10,096 / Serpent”

  1. Always enjoy a mental struggle with a Serpent puzzle. Lots to enjoy. I particularly liked DUO & TREE.

    I didn’t care so much for the crossing BLACK & BLACK RAT but that’s just personal taste. Also wasn’t convinced by “doing time” to denote removal of T in 12a but others may be able to explain it to me.

    Was ok with TO = BEFORE in 27d as in “a quarter to/before five” say.

    Thanks to Serpent and RatkojaRiku.

  2. The trickiest of all today’s cryptics – well I thought so anyway.   Like Hovis I didn’t care for the crossing ‘blacks’ but I did really like 15d

    Thanks to Serpent and RR

  3. Many thanks to RatkojaRiku for the excellent blog.  There’s a ghost theme… (the accommodation of which dictated the less-than-ideal combination of BLACK and BLACK RAT or some nasty obscurities).

  4. Oh .. of course – another theme I didn’t spot until I was told to look for a theme!!   It isn’t that ghostly either so I really should have spotted it

  5. Looked for something extra but missed it until Serpent @4 provided the hint. Now, like crypticsue and allan, it becomes glaringly obvious.

  6. I missed the cuppa as well. Good crossword with some deceptive definitions. I forgot the TEA LEAVES/thieves thingy.

    I ticked the simple FIGHT and CASTANET.

    Thanks Serpent and RR

  7. Struggled with 13a (didn’t know bundle = fight), 21a (didn’t know that meaning of kettle), and 30a (assumed they were from the letters in sound, but don’t know my elements). Spotted the TEA theme, and the T symbols in the grid after a few minutes staring at the competed grid for ninas.

  8. With all due respect to our blogger, 23ac has little if anything to do with chemical elements.  It’s true that all the letters in ‘sound’ can represent elements – Sulphur (I stll spell it the old-fashioned way), Oxygen, Uranium, Nitrogen and Deuterium (an isotope of hydrogen), but ‘elements’ can just as easily refer to the elements (=letters) of the word.  And as Hovis@1 points out the answer is just the letters whose position in ‘sound’ is represented by prime numbers in reverse order.

  9. Not a setter whose work I’m particularly familiar with and I did struggle quite a bit with some of it.

    Certainly didn’t know the slang terminology in 13a (I had fagot for the bundle & couldn’t make it parse) and am still not sure about the workings of 30a.

    I did have ticks alongside 10&14a plus 1d.

    Thanks to Serpent and to RR for the blog.

  10. Found this quite a struggle and in the end I couldn’t get 20dn and 34ac.  Not aware of that meaning of PREMIERE so even after doing a word search, I dismissed it as a possible answer.

  11. Thanks to RatkojaRiku and Serpent

    I bunged PREMIERE in without proper parsing – I thought it probably had something to do with Otto Preminger but I couldn’t be bothered to work out the necessary convolutions. My bad as they say – actually quite an elegant clue.

    @12a I’ve opined before about the meanings ascribable to DO – it can mean almost anything as long as you are prepared to infer the missing words.

    In this case it could reference the phrase “DO ONE” = disappear, as in “If the Old Bill turn up I’m going to do one”, or perhaps “If he carries on like that I’ll do for him”, where DO FOR = KILL. Maybe it appears in American crime fiction as synonymous with ICE.

    In this case the answer couldn’t be anything else so it didn’t really matter, and didn’t spoil a very good crossword.

     

     

  12. Finally finished! It was a struggle. Couldn’t parse 27 or 30. As for the theme – how could I have missed it? Wonderful. Thanks Serpent.

  13. Thanks Serpent and RR

    Another good toughie from JC. Made a mental note to look for a theme, after seeing the Ts in the grid. Then forgot to do it when I’d finished…

    I especially liked 11 having watched Herzog’s Nosferatu The Vampyre in my home cinema a couple of days ago.

  14. This took me longer than Serpents tend to these days, and I had to seek help for the parsing of PREMIÈRE.  If I sound a little teed off it’s because I didn’t find the theme.

    The CREAM for me were ENSLAVING, KETTLE, SAGE, CASTANET, REV and BREAD.

    Thanks Serpent and RatkojaRiku.

  15. While waiting for the Guardian to come on line, I happened to notice the blogger’s name RatkojaRiku and just wanted to say how nice it is to see a Finnish person on the site.  And, Riku, your English is most impressive.

    Anna-in-Helsinki

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