I solved this puzzle in a pub in Cheltenham the day before the championship, as a bit of limbering up (not that it did any good), enjoying a pint or two of 6X and the Heineken Cup rugby on the big screen at the same time. All three were very enjoyable…
As always, if a particular clue is not discussed, please feel free to raise it in comments.
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | BALDWIN – BAD WIN round L(iberal); if you were struggling with wordplay, you might have been helped if you knew that Baldwin was actually a Conservative rather than a Liberal, and that bit required a lift and separate. |
| 14 | TEMPERAMENTAL – TEMPERA (paint) + MENTAL (bats) |
| 15 | NEW FOREST – FORE (golfer’s warning) in NEWS (intelligence) + T(est). |
| 16 |
BESEECHING – ( |
| 17 | GUSTAV KLIMT – [(MILK VATS) in TUG] all rev. |
| 18 |
BISON – [NO SIB( |
| 21 | BRUNEI – BRUNEL, one of London’s various universities, with the L in Roman numbers cut down to an I. |
| 23 | APPLE TREE – APPLET + (E’ER)rev. I guess the really big OED will reveal when APPLET first appeared (probably longer ago than I think) but I don’t think a neologism has got proper currency until I’ve seen it in a Times puzzle… |
| 25 | EMAIL …and here’s another, backwards in parLIAMEntarian. |
| 26 | ENOUNCE – EN (printing measure) + OUNCE; always a cunning trick when the definition is a word commonly used to indicate a particular type of clue, in this case “say”, which had me looking for a cryptic definition which didn’t exist. |
| 38 |
TRING – TR( |
| 40 |
BED HOPPER – E( |
| 44 | ASAFOETIDA – (ASIATOFADE)*; my solving companion hadn’t heard of this, which suggests he doesn’t cook enough curries. If he did, he’d also have spotted this as an &lit, since the unpleasant odour of the plant does indeed disappear in cooking. Very clever. |
| 50 |
GRAND DUCHY – DU(t)CH in GRAND (piano) + ( |
| 52 | TOP BANANA – cryptic def. based around the slang term for being number one, and the fact that a bunch of bananas is a “hand”. |
| 53 | CARRIER PIGEON – CARRIER (such as Ark Royal) + PIGEON (as in “that’s your pigeon”). Made topical by the defence review which will see the Royal Navy do without the current Ark Royal (and will mean there are carriers without planes at some point in the future, though as has been pointed out, that’s better than having planes with nowhere to land…) |
| 55 | TREVELYAN – ELY (the see which is always used in crosswords) in (TAVERN)*. |
| 56 | AVERTED – AVER (=”say”) + TED (=”put out to dry”, an old farming word for spreading hay out to dry). |
| Down | |
| 1 | BUTT – double def. |
| 3 | WHERE ANGELS FEAR TO TREAD – where “fools rush in”, of course – the poem by Pope, and adopted as title of a novel by Forster. |
| 6 |
INTEGRATE =IN THE GRATE without the H( |
| 7 | OFLAG – O(ld) FLAG(stone); specifically Colditz, as this word refers to POW camps which held officers only. |
| 8 | ENNISKILLEN – (m)EN + (LINENSILK)*. |
| 9 | SO WHAT – i.e. SOW + HAT (as worn by Laurel & Hardy). |
| 11 |
IBERIAN – ( |
| 13 | WORKERS OF THE WORLD UNITE – (OKWHENFOURLETTERWORDIS)*. Work is definitely a four-letter word, of course. Lovely long anagram. |
| 27 | NAIVE – (EVIAN)rev. |
| 32 |
DEFORMS – D( |
| 34 | NOT A SAUSAGE – (SONATA)* + USAGE; for the derivation of the term Sweet Fanny Adams, see here. |
| 36 | IMBRICATION – (BITINAMICRO)*; I came to the conclusion from the anagram that the solution couldn’t be anything else, without knowing the word. |
| 39 |
GLENGARRY – GLEN + GARY with an extra R( |
| 41 | PATCH TEST – PATCH (=territory) + TEST (British river well-known for its trout fishing). |
| 43 | SCUPPER – double def. |
| 45 |
ANDORRA – AN + [ |
| 47 |
ASLANT – ASLAN + T( |
| 49 | EMCEE – i.e. M.C., which can be Master of Ceremonies or Military Cross, awarded for the GALLANTRY of 37dn. |
| 51 |
ENID – N( |
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