Crossword 198: Let's Have a Good Cry

 
Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Lesbia Weeping over a Sparrow

Sir Lawrence Alma-Tadema, Lesbia Weeping over a Sparrow

 

Taking my cue from the Victorian heroine who runs a risk of coming down with the brain fever if she doesn’t find a release in tears, I’ve been crying all week long, for myself, for the world, and for you, troubled solver, and I feel better now.  If you want to return the favor by crying for me, this week’s puzzle will get you started.


Download this week’s crossword:

198-Let's-Have-a-Good-Cry.puz

198-Let's-Have-a-Good-Cry.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

198 Let’s Have a Good Cry


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A crossword of mine appears Tuesday, September 7, in Universal Crossword


Novel 198: Margaret Agnes Paul, Uncle Ralph (1858)

 
Richard Buckner, Bust Study of an Unknown Young Girl

Richard Buckner, Bust Study of an Unknown Young Girl


An orphan girl’s unusual self-possession alienates the uncle who adopts her.


Here is another novel by Paul (see Novels 025, 136), with all its author’s usual merits.

One of the most pleasing tales of domestic life that we have seen for many a day.” Literary Gazette, February 13, 1858

“A readable little story” with some “well drawn” characters. Athenaeum, March 27, 1858

Download this week’s novel:

http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/permalink/f/89vilt/oxfaleph014181085
(Warning: text begins on page 23, after some black pages, and blurred pages, and pictures of a librarian’s pink-gloved hand)

 

Crossword 197: Neither In Nor Out

 
John William Waterhouse, “I am half-sick of shadows, said the lady of Shalott”

John William Waterhouse, “I am half-sick of shadows, said the lady of Shalott”

 

Today’s puzzle represents the equivocal position of the crossword-constructor vis-à-vis society: forced to draw upon it for words and phrases, and yet confined within a self-sufficient, cryptic world of numbered blocks and dark spaces from which there can be no escape.  It’s tragic, in a way, but oh so beautiful.


Download this week’s crossword:

197-Neither-In-Nor-Out.puz

197-Neither-In-Nor-Out.pdf

Solve this week’s crossword online:

197 Neither In Nor Out


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A crossword of mine will appear Thursday, September 2nd, in the Wall Street Journal.


Novel 194: Charles Gibbon, What Will the World Say? (1875)

 
Charles Burton Barber, An Elegantly Dressed Horsewoman Jumping Over a Gate

Charles Burton Barber, An Elegantly Dressed Horsewoman Jumping Over a Gate

 

In Scotland, a self-made millionaire’s daughter and niece fall in love with the same man.


Charles Gibbon (1843-1890) wrote some 30 novels beginning in 1864.  This one features, in addition to some stock Victorian-novel figures (the ill-bred, wealthy industrialist, the self-sacrificing virtuous young lady, the young lover enraged by a misunderstanding) two carefully delineated and thoroughly interesting main characters.

Gibbon “has imagined the extraordinary fluctuations of” a main character’s “feelings . . . with remarkable felicity, and has drawn them with great skill. . . .  It is an excellent and a very rare thing when the interest of a novel decidedly increases as it goes on.” Academy, September 9, 1875

The novel “should do much to give him a high place among delineators of character. . . .  Besides containing several very masterly studies, it is full of humour, of quaint, wise, remark, and may be taken as a reliable picture of life in the district where the scene is laid.” Spectator, October 2, 1875

Download this week’s novel:

http://solo.bodleian.ox.ac.uk/permalink/f/89vilt/oxfaleph014735908
(Right-click (or control-click, if you have a Mac) on the “view digitized copy” links to download the novel’s three volumes in pdf form)