Telegraph Herculis Answers - Monday, 21st August 2023 There are 18 across clues and 14 down clues for the Telegraph Herculis crossword on Monday, 21st August 2023. View the answers below.. Also try..All Telegraph Herculis AnswersAll PublicationsThe AnswersNumber# Clue Answer AAcross 6: Dramatist, novelist and poet who wrote Lady Windermere’s Fan during a trip to the Lake District in 1891WILDEAAcross 7: Spread said to be loved or hated, hence its name being used in reference to something polarisingMARMITEAAcross 9: Another name for bog myrtle; word for a strong wind but also for a gentle breeze; or, an outburst of laughterGALEAAcross 10: A constrictor snake; or, a long serpent-like scarf of feathers/furBOAAAcross 11: Rare pale-yellow primulas of ancient woodlands, adopted as Suffolk’s county flowers in 2002OXLIPSAAcross 12: County with a predominantly green flag, dedicated to St PetrocDEVONAAcross 13: A man-eating giant of fairy tales and folklore; or, by extension, any cruel, beastly or brutish personOGREAAcross 14: Seaweed sold in the form of thin dried sheets for wrapping sushiNORIAAcross 16: Word for an event causing public outrage that was used as the title of a film based on the Profumo affairSCANDALAAcross 18: A type of hassock, pillow or squab; or, something serving to deaden a blow of some kindCUSHIONAAcross 21: French word meaning “very”TRESAAcross 23: A gambit, strategy or tactic; or, any doings/frolic for amusementPLOYAAcross 24: From “step”, a level or degree in proficiency, quality, rank etcGRADEAAcross 27: Sandpiper named for its brown winter plumage, Calidris alpinaDUNLINAAcross 28: A throw of a coconut, for example; or, a startled movement of a horseSHYAAcross 29: A narrow country road; an urban street; or, a strip of a racetrackLANEAAcross 30: From the Latin for “three tooth”, a word for a three-pronged spearTRIDENTAAcross 31: A quick swill in water to remove dirt or soap; a preparation for tinting hair; or, mouthwashRINSEDDown 1: A purplish form of fluorite, also known as Derbyshire spar, that is one of Britain’s rarest mineralsBLUE JOHNDDown 2: “Green Island” forming part of the Zanzibar archipelago, where cloves are of one of its main cash cropsPEMBADDown 3: From Spanish for “arrest”, word for a stoppage on ships entering/leaving a port originally, later a prohibition on trade; or, a ban generallyEMBARGODDown 4: A botanical garden of treesARBORETUMDDown 5: Played under the chin using a horsehair bow, one of the instruments forming a string quartet or the string section of an orchestraVIOLINDDown 6: A cetacean able to echolocate under water by means of the mass of specialised adipose tissue, or “melon”, on its foreheadWHALEDDown 8: From the Greek for “rope”, a species of grass, also called halfa, from which a type of light canvas rope-soled shoe takes its nameESPARTODDown 15: Known informally as a “chippy” or “chips”, a cabinetmaker, joiner, woodworker or wrightCARPENTERDDown 17: A journey/way round; a lap or orbit; a perimeter; the path of an electric current; or, a motor racing trackCIRCUITDDown 19: Sport in which a runner races over a series of obstaclesHURDLINGDDown 20: Novelist whose books, including The Day of the Jackal, The Fourth Protocol and The Odessa File, have been adapted into filmsFORSYTHDDown 22: Latin name of plants including clary, rosemary and sageSALVIADDown 25: Actor whose roles have included Louis Mountbatten, Mr Tulkinghorn and Tywin LannisterDANCEDDown 26: Synthetic fibre used for close-fitting sportswear, including the garb worn by so-called “Mamils”LYCRA