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Cryptic clues = station name

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Calthrop

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My thanks.

Beige information letter some 75% through (or female of species) -- unconventional terminal.
 

RDP

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It is indeed an unconventional terminal being on a loop. Dungeness was also my old stamping ground.

Open floor.
 

Calthrop

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We might hear canine snobs vying with each other, concerning value of their respective residences...
 

Calthrop

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Indeed -- what's their kennel worth?

It's your prestigious pet-pad to allude to...
 

Calthrop

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Duolingual and abbreviated farewell bidden to his sylph-like sovereign by Columbus, confused -- has. la v., lean Ferdinand [first bit, short for "hasta la vista"] prior to his sailing off (northward rather than westward?)
 
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Columbus may have been very confused, as the sylph-like monarch was surely Ferdy's spouse, the delightful Isabella, who gave her name to a pit not far from the soon-to-be-operational Blyth Newsham

Easier than straining what passes for my brain with Hard Anagrams, anyway.
 

Calthrop

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Columbus may have been very confused, as the sylph-like monarch was surely Ferdy's spouse, the delightful Isabella, who gave her name to a pit not far from the soon-to-be-operational Blyth Newsham
Conversation rather than clue-solving, I ween -- answer is veritably, not Blyth thingy (a completely new one on me -- but I'm often not too good on present-day UK rail system matters).

Brought to mind, the verse by Ogden Nash about old Chris and the havoc which he set in train -- in Nash's characteristic rhyming-but-metre-less style -- a few lines, approximately remembered: the explorer is trying to get funds for his venture --

So he went to see Ferdinand
Who said, however, that going west to get to the Indies was a bird in the bush, and he'd rather have a birdinand...


So CC decides to try instead, to charm the queen in search of support --

So he perfumed his hair with bay rum and citronella,
And he went off to see Isabella...


I like this kind of stuff, which Nash turned out in profusion -- splendidly corny nonsense.
 

Calthrop

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Reckoning that people may be somewhat fed-up with barmy anagrams from me: herewith alternative clue --

We might hear -- Princess Royal, owning bosky hollow: also offers same as a guaranteed "pitch" for travelling entourages of fun rides, sideshows, and such things.
 

Calthrop

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Rather ridiculous one, just to submit something -- Bamber Bridge? Might have been good for the scorers of goals -- "Bamb !" as ball goes in -- thus, "Bamb-ers"; only as stated, they prefer the card game of Bridge.
 

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