E.B. WHITE, HERE IS NEW YORK — Although New York often imparts a feeling of great forlornness or forsakenness,... you always feel that... by shifting your location ten blocks or by reducing your fortune by five dollars you can experience rejuvenation.
A. | Here today, gone tomorrow | EVANESCENT |
B. | Avian "Rowdy of the Meadow," in an Emily Dickinson poem | BOBOLINK |
C. | Appliance for cooking some breakfast items (2 wds.) | WAFFLEIRON |
D. | Place for a sojourner to pass the night | HOSTELRY |
E. | Cryptic, enigmatic, hard to fathom | INSCRUTABLE |
F. | Name on some Art Nouveau hangings | TIFFANY |
G. | Person carrying out the provisions of a will | EXECUTOR |
H. | Vast, colossal, Brobdingnagian | HUMONGOUS |
I. | Tea flavored with bergamot (2 wds.) | EARLGREY |
J. | Beam to which rafters attach | ROOFTREE |
K. | Wastewater; stream flowing out of a lake or reservoir | EFFLUENT |
L. | Study and interpretation of images | ICONOGRAPHY |
M. | Start of a normal Saudi workweek | SATURDAY |
N. | 1946 Hitchcock film set in Brazil | NOTORIOUS |
O. | Mammal that deposits its eggs in the spring (2 wds.) | EASTERBUNNY |
P. | Port container | WINEGLASS |
Q. | 1939 Marjorie Kinnan Rawlings Pulitzer-winning novel, with "The" | YEARLING |
R. | Ecstatic, thrilled to pieces | OVERJOYED |
S. | Job sought by many an aspiring movie star | RHINOPLASTY |
T. | Quit working (2 wds.); or, when spelled without a space, a counterfeit | KNOCKOFF |