Crossword 150: Richly Arrayed

 
William Etty, Preparing for a Fancy Dress Ball

William Etty, Preparing for a Fancy Dress Ball

 

Some people seem to think that, just because they never leave the house anymore, they need take no trouble about their dress—that they can sit around all day in sweatpants and t-shirts, or other sartorial atrocities named for bodily fluids or letters of the alphabet, and suffer no debilitating moral effects in consequence.

Not I! When I made this puzzle, I wore a three-piece Oxford-gray vicuna-wool suit trimmed in gold thread, a hand-stitched mulberry-silk shirt of deepest burgundy, a powder-blue diamond-plated necktie, and Belgian linen underwear lined with mink.  I trust that when you solve it you also will array yourself no less richly.


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150-Richly Arrayed.puz

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150: Richly Arrayed

Crossword 145: And There's More!

 
Edward John Poynter, Andromeda

Edward John Poynter, Andromeda

 

There seems to be a trend nowadays of including more proper names in crosswords, on the theory that it’s fun to allude to cool stuff that fun, cool people like us like.  I haven’t joined this trend, possibly for selfish reasons:  my favorite Victorian novelists almost never show up in crosswords, whereas every other puzzle seems to include at least one Star Wars reference, however gratuitous: THE, for example, clued “Jabba ___ Hutt” or “Use ___ force, Luke!”

So I try to keep proper names out of my fill and also, especially, my themes.  I sigh, more in sorrow than in anger, when I encounter yet another puzzle where the theme turns out to be a set of actors whose last names are also the names of dog breeds, or whatever.  

This time, however, I’ve compromised my standards: half the theme answers contain proper names.  But at least they’re reasonably passé proper names—a vice-president whose term ended in 2000, a children’s cartoon that premiered the same year, and a 1939 movie based on a 1900 novel.  


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145-And-There's-More!.puz

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145 And There’s More!

Crossword 143: PR Issues

 
John Everett Millais, The Twins, Portrait of Kate Edith and Grace Maud Hoare

John Everett Millais, The Twins, Portrait of Kate Edith and Grace Maud Hoare

 

One theme per puzzle—that’s always been the rule of themed crosswords. But I find myself asking—why? Why adhere blindly to the worn-out conventions of the past? Why thwart human progress with hidebound rules of unity and order? So what if a few reactionary members of the bourgeoisie are shocked or confused? Did that keep Wagner from sonic discord and narrative incoherence? Picasso from crudity and distortion? The Bauhaus from faceless rectangularity? Let the Philistines be shocked; let them be confused! So much the better! Let a crossword have not just one theme, but two!!


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143-PR-Issues.puz

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143 PR Issues

Crossword 140: Beaten Down

 
Edward John Poynter, The Champion Swimmer

Edward John Poynter, The Champion Swimmer

 

If you wait till tomorrow, you’ll find the answer to 24 Down in the title of my crossword in the Los Angeles Times, to which this one serves as a sort of prequel.  Meanwhile, here’s a painting that—while not very clearly related to either puzzle—may at any rate provide a little imaginary relief from this summer’s weather, by which so many of us find ourselves mercilessly beaten down.


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140-Beaten-Down.puz

140-Beaten-Down.pdf

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140 Beaten Down


Pointing Hand.png

A crossword of mine appears tomorrow, July 26, and another Thursday, July 30, in Universal Crossword. Another crossword of mine also appears tomorrow, July 26, and yet another Friday, July 31, in the Los Angeles Times. Meanwhile, on Thursday, July 30, another crossword of mine appears in

the Wall Street Journal.


Crossword 137: Decease

 
Evelyn de Morgan, The Angel of Death

Evelyn de Morgan, The Angel of Death

 

This is the third and final installment of the trilogy—hence the “cease” of “decease.”  Some critics may think I’ve got the order wrong, as “Defeat,” “Decease,” and “Decomposition” are, in a sense, the final three chapters of anyone’s biography.  

But the more subtly observant puzzle connoisseur will notice that the first pun of the first of the series returns as the final pun of the last of the series, giving the whole a pleasingly cyclical form that, in the face of decline and decay and despair, hints hopefully at renewal.


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137-Decease.puz

137-Decease.pdf

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137 Decease


Pointing Hand in Reverse.png

A crossword of mine appeared yesterday, July 3, in the Los Angeles Times


Crossword 133: Literal Stem-Winding

 
George Elgar Hicks, A girl listening to the ticking of a pocketwatch while sitting on her mother's lap

George Elgar Hicks, A girl listening to the ticking of a pocketwatch while sitting on her mother’s lap

 

As the attached note informs you, to appreciate this puzzle properly you must fill it entirely with lower-case letters, as though you were e.e. cummings.  I’m thinking of taking up the lower case myself and insisting that the world refer to me as “david alfred bywaters.”  The combination of apparent humility (no big letters for itty-bitty little me!) with actual ostentation (I’m not like everybody else!) should prove irresistible.


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133-Literal-Stem-Winding.puz

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133 Literal Stem-Winding

Crossword 132: Crossed Words

 
Albert Joseph Moore, Waiting to Cross

Albert Joseph Moore, Waiting to Cross

 

Here’s another crossword title that would do for any crossword whatsoever.  It’s the second in a groundbreaking series I began with Crossword 113: “Can You Fill This Out?”  I’m planning several sequels, including “Numbered Clues with Corresponding Answers,” “Across and Down,” and “It's Puzzling!”  And all these titles are, of course, available for use with my blessing to novice constructors. It’s my way of making a contribution to the common good.


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132-Crossed-Words.puz

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132 Crossed Words


Pointing Hand.png

A crossword of mine will appear today, May 30, in the Wall Street Journal.