Even though the weekly link for the listener has been taken away, I thought I would create a thread anyway.
Llig gave us a fairly straightforward puzzle last year concerning Ralph Vaughan Williams, and this one is also a fairly easy, but satisfying, effort. (Compared to last 2 weeks)
Lots of anagrams and hidden answers for beginners to the Listener world. Enjoy and if anyone misses the paper tomorrow I can e-mail a copy of the crossword to you:
I agree with you Lewap: the shorter one should have been
connected with the other one, in my view. There was an
obvious candidate to link with the longer one, if I am not
barking up the wrong tree.
(Latin O Level)
Had to look it up though. 1968 O-Level not up to the job without a hint.
I'm temorarily indisposed with a dodgy knee so have taken a few days' leave. Nothing to do but read and crosswords. May I recommend this week's Spectator & Mephisto? I found both more difficult than the Listener under discussion. Off to do AZED before the Leader of the Opposition gets home.
Only just completed it (thanks Midazolam, we are snowbound in the Alps with more falling and no access to the Times).
We found the quotation difficult to spot at first - missed the obvious three-letter hint.
I have to agree that the 'possible alternative for the shorter high-lighted word' might have been preferable.
Like Clueless Joe, O level then four terms of extra A level Latin to fill free periods but I went on to teach it to Americans who invert all the declensions (porta portae porta portam portae porta etc.) Picture that for a headache.
Hi Ziller - guess that depends on what answer you got....
There's a missing A in the grid answer which adds to the final letter of the answer to give a word for rock (lava). The first three letters of the answer are a reversal of a word for John (= toilet)
I am catching up on a back log of puzzles whilst hors de combat, and was struggling to finish Spectator 1898 until a google produced an Answerbank posting from growf advising that a list of Spenser's nereids could be found at the end of Canto XI of book four of The Faerie Queene. Thanks, growf.
Whilst googling I was saddened to learn that Spenser was an advocate of razing Ireland to create famine conditions. It rather put me of the chap.
I agree absolutely with the earlier remarks concerning the teaching of Latin. I was taught the subject in the 1950s, so I'm practically a contemporary of Caesar et al.
Enjoyed the puzzle but I too was not entirely happy with one of the highlights.
Tried googling the two words, and (though I understand not a lot of what was written) it seems that a one of them was approaching the other on Feb 6th. But i would suggest this is tenuous in the extreme, and suggests I have too much time on my hands!
Despite the step change in difficulty, I still enjoyed this one and thought that the highlighted sections were very clever(though lucky the number of cells was specified, or I would have been looking for a certain 6 letter sibling for some time!).
The title also made me chuckle, I was definitely sold a dummy on that one till the quotation became clear.
As for me, have not studied any later since pre GCSE, and am an Engineer :)