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Listener 4130 Rattle by Augeus

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Ruthrobin | 18:16 Fri 25th Mar 2011 | Crosswords
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I see that trux and Starwalker have posted already, elsewhere. As I did, they quickly found the quotation and are now working hard.
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I'm in imminent danger of joining the Friday club so I'm putting this aside until tomorrow.
Is this another debut perhaps?
Pretty much in the same boat. End game looks not-too-interesting.
Me too - put mine aside at 17:15 after an uninspiring 45 minutes. Sorry Augeus, limp extra words gimmick - no wonder some editors refuse to accept these - making the quotation a breeze to spot. The rest started as a slog and will no doubt continue to be when I can be bothered to come back to it. Sorry, just not my kind of puzzle.
could a friend please let me know the end game - I can't be bothered
Finished and am pretty confident it is all right, but how Augeus or the editors can be 100% certain the solution is unique is beyond me. I thought the instruction about how to resolve ambiguity was particularly lame...
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Dare I comment that people are being rather harsh on a newcomer when they haven't challenged themselves with a clever endgame.
Agree with most of the comments, but quite glad of an easy one. My mind is not in the best of shape after my one-hour commute turned into four hours last night, and I've spent the week dealing with students whose projects were due in at the end of today and were ......
I got to the finish line; clever construction, some excellent clues, as always, but I can't say the endgame provided much of a thrill - too much of a scavenger hunt for my tastes.
Finished, but don't understand the title.
It's a Chaucerian reference, matching the unclued entries.
Ruthrobin, it's kind of you to defend the puzzle, but I don't think that debutant(e) status is an excuse for a fairly lame effort - in comparison, cast your mind back to Spud last year. Some of the attempts I have test solved for people would be much more deserving of publication as Listener debuts - but like I said, this was maybe just not my kind of puzzle.
I may be a bit contrarian in that I quite enjoyed the endgame, which I thought was the best part. Needed some thought and logic to work through.
cJ - yes, I agree. The setter may set, but in the end, it's the editors / vetters who have the final say. But personal opinion also colours judgement sometimes.
AHearer - thanks for the title explanation. I had missed that, because when I was at school we had to read Chaucer in the original form.
Apart from a few tired minutes last night (it was my birthday) I did this today in about an hour and a half, so not particularly demanding. Most of the time was spent looking up lists - I never knew there were so many!- and dealing with a dodgy internet connection.
I agree with others that mine may not be a unique solution, though it meets the criteria and all my entries are in Chambers. There is no independent way of checking.
Not too much of a cavil, though - this was a decent enough workout and (I thought) quite a satisfying challenge on the end game. If only there weren't so many possibilities to chose from...
I can see how 4 & 31ac can be made to fit the continuation of the quotation but the other 10 unclued entries elude me. Am I just not looking hard enough?
Thanks to dr b for pointing out what should have been fairly obvious.

Sorry about the negativity, I was held up in work last night and in a bad mood when I posted, waiting for Mrs bobbycollins to collect me.
contendo, I don't see any path to the end, other than finding a comprehensive list and plugging away at the possibilities. Just be sure you are considering the entirety of the quote and not only the bit immediately after the 6 words.
Can't even start yet as the printer is throwing a wobbly. Still, it doesn't seem that it is going to be excessively difficult. although the enthusiasm for this puzzle seems less than overwhelming.
Rattled through the clued entries in record time but then, like others, found the endgame somewhat tortuous. All done now so can concentrate on the cricket - not looking good for England right now...
Surely this could have been improved by limiting the field with a more specific comment in the pre-ramble such as "the 12 unclued entries all of which are confirmed in Chambers (1992)" (or a more recent version for the rest of you) ? As for positives, the unclueds form a very pretty symmetrical pattern, and I presume that the quotation is the base origin of a more familiar phrase ? Btw, does everybody agree with the sentiment expressed by the quotation ? Could be an interesting diversion on AB as I suspect we don't have a lot more to say about the puzzle itself ... ?

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