Serpent fills the Thursday spot this week.
Overall, we found much of this rather less challenging than we have come to expect from Serpent, but one or two clues did cause some head-scratching – not least 16d, a composer we had never heard of before.
As usual with Serpent puzzles, we found ourselves checking the completed grid for a theme or nina, and, lo and behold, we realised that there was a nina running clockwise round the outermost unches. With a bit of electronic help we discovered that this is the title of a piece of chamber music by the hitherto (to us) unknown composer at 16d. Having listened to an extract of the piece, we’re rather glad we’d never heard it before!
S (society) in or ‘donning’ REIGNED (‘were in control’)
B (book) in U (university) SALE (town in Cheshire)
DEdUCE (infer) minus the second ‘d’ (Roman numeral for 500)
An anagram of EU CREATED – anagrind is ‘reforms’
ME reversed or ‘backed’ + BY round or ‘detaining’ ASS (fool)
OLD (former) WIFE (partner) – a kind of fish we’d never come across before
ENG (engineer) in or ‘gripped by’ SAG (depression) with DIED (stopped working) outside
HE’D (he had) in POLY (former college) NOR (and not) reversed or ‘returned’
E (on-line) NT (New Testament – ‘books’) after STUD (boss)
An anagram of GREET US – anagrind is ‘waving’
AFT (behind) ER (the Queen – ‘head of state’) + ON (about) following NO (denial)
BA (degree) in or ‘concealed by’ alternate or ‘regular’ letters of pArTnEr
L (lecturer) ON (working) DON (fellow) – a reference to Jack London, American author (1876 – 1916)
A man performing as a woman could be described as a TRANS ACT
An anagram of HE DREADS – anagrind is ‘being mistaken’
SQUAt (short) without the last letter or ‘cut’ + BASH (party)
Hidden in or ‘kept by’ colleaGUES SINGle-handedly
An anagram of RELAY – anagrind is ‘broadcast’
TURD (dropping) in or ‘guarded by’ first and last letters or ‘case’ of SecuritY
BE A TIT (be a fool or ‘act the giddy goat’)
A homophone (‘recording’) of ISLET (small island)
R (republican) VERY (really) round or ’embracing’ ECO (‘concern for the environment’)
ADOraTION (worship) with ‘ra’ (god) replaced or ‘usurped’ by P (priest)
MESSIAh (oratorio) without the last letter or ‘unfinished’ ENd (finale) without the last letter or ‘incomplete’
OU (French for ‘where’) HAHA (expression of amusement) after or ‘faced by’ BR (British)
IN + an anagram of STREET – anagrind is ‘dancing’
AIL (trouble) follows or ‘dogs’ ASS (American word for ‘behind’)
NOT (hardly) reversed or ‘raised’ after BUT (objection)
An anagram of WIDOwER without one of the ‘w’s (wife) – anagrind is ‘devastated’
GR (King George) round or ‘stopped by’ ONE (1)
Since EYELET can refer to a peephole, I think the definition for 8d could be “opening to see”.
I wondered whether to consider GESTURE as an &lit.
Didn’t know SQUABASH or MESSIAEN and needed word fits for these. Easy to parse after these cheats. I did spot the nina after finishing and googled to see the 16d link.
Didn’t know OLDWIFE either. Guessed it then checked my Chambers where it is listed as two words.
Thanks, as always, to Serpent and to Bertandjoyce.
The Nina music doesn’t quite do it for me either, but the story of the circumstances under which it was composed and first performed is fascinating. I didn’t know OLDWIFE (which apparently is another word for that old crossword staple the ‘alewife’) or SQUABASH, but I didn’t have too many quibbles with the rest. I liked the surface for WEIRDO.
Time for a bit of Wolfgang Amadeus I think.
Thanks to Serpent & B&J
A nice of the straightforward and the head-scratching but enjoyable to solve as usual with a Serpent. My favourite was the ‘numbery’ one 10a
Thanks to Serpent and B&J
One or two guesses that we had to confirm in Chambers, but otherwise quite straightforward. We got MESSAIEN without difficulty but confess to our shame that we missed the nina, especially as it’s one of Messaien’s more approachable works (and, yes, we like Wolfgang Amadeus as well).
Thanks, Serpent and B&J
Needed word searches to get 2dn and 13ac, neither of which I knew. Didn’t spot the Nina, despite Messiaen being one of my favourite composers. I can get quite ecstatic over his Vingt Regards sur L’enfant Jesus, a two-hour long piano piece. (The quartet is a bit too short for my liking.)
It would be his 111th birthday next week.
Many thanks to Bertandjoyce for the excellent blog and to everyone who has taken the time to solve and comment on the puzzle.