An odd feel to this one: it felt harder than is was, and I disposed of it in 15.12, about 2 minutes sub par for me. Mostly somewhat lengthy clues, of the kind which conjure up rather pleasing, but also properly distracting, word pictures and fragments of exciting looking stories. I counted an above-average number of (plausibly) religious references, none of them particularly obscure. It’s possible that’s just my imagination.
Two unchecked rows provide enigmatic phrases of a kind. ITS SW ONE is both a contradiction and a confirmation of the prosperous region mentioned late on, and OUT, ETC, RE possibly militates against my fancied religious references.
Across
1 SICILY Island
Ah, the heady days of Imperial Chemical Industries! That’s the “company that was”, because it is no more. It has gone to join the FTSE Celestial. Wrapped in SLY cunning, it produces the island of our search.
4 ADVANCED Sophisticated
A rather surreal surface image produces a VAN by C(hurch of) E(ngland) clamped orheldby A D(octor of) D(ivinity)
10 PAULINEGirl
Or, if you prefer, “following early Christian convert”. That’ll be Paul, previously Saul of Tarsus, whose name is attached to thirteen of the canonical 27 books of the New Testament. Try your friends out with this question, and win easy money: Who wrote Paul’s letter to the Romans? Answer: Tertius.
11 GOSLING Little bird
A fine example of surface concealing wordplay. To become is “GO” (“it’s gone green”) and shy gives SLING as in throw.
12 DÁIL Parliament
In this case the Irish lower house. A brief paper is a DAIL(y). I hope those filling in on paper defiantly put in the diacritic.
13 NEW ORLEANS port
The first clue where the definition is not at the front. The wordplay, in case you want to work it out, is NEWS (information) about Other Ranks (men) and LEAN (bank)
15 CONVERTED brought to faith
Down
1 SAPID completely agreeable
A word which might win the competition for “word which looks almost exactly what it isn’t”. PI is holy, more usually “than thou”, and unhappy is SAD.
2 CAUTIONED Given formal warning
In Britain, the procedure whereby the Police get something looking like a conviction without having to go through the messy business of a trial. And everywhere else too, a slightly surprising anagram of EDUCATION
3 LEIS garlands
Todays hidden, with the Hawaiians whose word it is posing as affabLE ISlanders. Pretty clue of its kind
5 DOGWOOD tree or shrub
Take your pick, because it can be either. DO GOOD for act beneficially, top of Weak provides the intruding W
6 ABSOLUTELY Yes indeed!
Skilfully is ABLY, which swallows something dissolved, which is a SOLUTE
7 CHINA chum
Me old china plate, mate. Our fellow is a CHAp, who has lost his P(arking) and is outside IN, crosswordese for home.
8 DIGESTIVE biscuit
A sleazy bar is a DIVE, in which 1 unusual GETS resides
9 RESENT Feel bad about
Remove the P(age) from pRESENT and voilà!
14 VENERATION worship
Our Pauline setter pontificates again with this observational clue. Five is V, and age gENERATION. Remove the G(ood)
15 CALLIOPES makers of music
Todays possibly less well known and pronounced word, though you’ve surely heard one: it’s a mechanical organ, originally driven by steam. Here’s one. Ivor the Engine had a rather minimalist one, featuring in this episide. A hundred provides C, ALLIES are (sometimes) colleagues, and work is OP, which goes within.
17 TENDERING Offering
An anagram of DINNER inside TEG, one of the less familiar of the 1,000,000 words for sheep. It’s a 2 year old ewe.
19 ASCETIC Austere type
No, not sans serif. Revolutionary agents are the CIA upside down, here nabbing an anagram of SECT. Paulines, again?
20 HASTEN Hurry
Yup, it’s just ATHENS, rebuilt. Scene of Paul’s possibly least successful attempt at gaining converts.
22 TULSA See one of its (America’s) cities
Universally known as the city Gene Pitney was 24 hours away from. Careful how you construct this: T(ime) first, then L(eft) inside USA. Otherwise you get USTLA, Paul Newman in a Cockney remake.
24 TENSE What could be future
A number, in this case TEN, on a prosperous region, the S(outh) E(ast). Accuracy might depend on South East of what.
25 CONE A solid figure
Just C(onservative) ONE for individual, It’s the solid figure for mathematicians, I believe.
Re 21ac: I suspect that “over there” signals THAT. “In THIS case” would be “The way things are boxed HERE” … or words to that effect.
My entry for the “word which looks almost exactly what it isn’t” would be “pulchritude”.
Edited at 2015-01-08 03:27 am (UTC)
Edited at 2015-01-08 03:20 am (UTC)
Edited at 2015-01-08 08:19 am (UTC)
Finally worked it all out, and signed off at 32 mins.
Blinded by the Light? Manfred Mann? Ca 1980
Beaten in the end by CENT and TENSE, embarrassingly. The rest in a very speedy 16 mins.
Rob
My entry for ‘word that looks like what it isn’t’ is ‘sick’, innit.
As to my conversion, that may be some way off.
Has anyone noticed a bug with the timer on the ipad? If I solve two of the crosswords then the time given for the second one is actually the cumulative time for the two crosswords.
It was knowing the word “teg” that enabled me to solve 17 quickly; I can still hear my elderly father berating the long-suffering local butcher: “That ay lamb yo’m sellin’ theer: that’s teg, that is.”
He was right, of course: all sheep meat now seems to be sold as “lamb”.
“Completely agreeable” seemed to me an unacceptably loose def for SAPID, which more exactly means having a strong and satisfying taste. I had never heard of “calliope” as the name for a set of steam-driven organ pipes (thanks for the pic, Z8). I assumed that the clue was a reference to Calliope, the muse of music, on the basis that more than one Calliope could reasonably be described as “makers (in the sense of inspirers) of music”, an interpretation which seems to work just as well.
But, even if it did, I think I would still find “agreeable”, a possible synonym for dozens of words, unacceptably loose. The point about SAPID is that it relates essentially to taste. Personally, I always think it a bit of a cop-out when a setter relies on imprecision of definition rather than ingenuity of word-play to impart difficulty to a clue. But that’s just my view. That said, I agree with Keriothe that even if you accept “agreeable”=SAPID as reasonable, it’s difficult to justify “completely”.
You are quite right that the steam-organ def of “calliope” works better than Calliope herself does. Not knowing the instrument, I was merely grateful that the muse provided me with an alternative route into the correct solution, albeit almost certainly not the one intended by the setter!
Only official as it’s the default dictionary for the Times (used to be Chambers). No idea why I didn’t see it in the online version.
Incidentally I don’t think there is an ‘official’ dictionary for the Times. I think there’s an expectation that words will be in Collins or one of the Oxfords (Concise? Shorter?) but not a formal requirement. Not sure where I got that from either.
The best comment I can find is from Lord Peter Biddlecombe: “Collins English Dictionary: The Times uses this as a standard.” Mind you, that was in 2005. I believe at the Championship, if your challenge isn’t in Collins, it ain’t right (which it isn’t anyway, nor never will be).
Edited at 2015-01-08 10:33 pm (UTC)
On the subject of calliopes, does anyone know why the one in Blinded by the Light (penned by Springsteen and a hit for Manfred Mann’s Earth Band) crashed to the ground? On the basis of that lyric I’d always imagined it to be a sort of steam helicopter.
Quickie..10mins
Superfiendish sudoku..9mins
I only knew calliope from a Frank Zappa song “nasal retentive calliope music” which for once doesn’t look like a rude song. I wasn’t too keen on his stuff back then and having listened to some again it must be too genius for me.
I’ve never known why PI means holy, so if someone could explain that one.
I also thought 15 dn must begin with AC, so is the A there because it would be a poor surface reading without it?
Cheers Alpinecol
It saves the setter having to clue pi as 3.14159265359, which might be a bit obvious.
Edited at 2015-01-09 03:59 am (UTC)