My solving time for this was off the scale …and then some! I thought more than once that I may have to give up the fight and resort to aids at least to get me out of a ditch and back on the road, but I managed to resist tempation and came through in the end. For all that, there were only two words unknown to me and a couple of shades of meaning so I’m not entirely sure now where my problems lay.
As usual definitions are underlined in bold italics, {deletions are in curly brackets} and [anagrinds, containment, reversal and other indicators in square ones]
| Across | |
| 1 | Run in live game’s first for scorer (4) |
| BERG – BE (live), R (run), G{ame’s} [first]. The ‘scorer’ is the Austrian composer Alban Berg (1885-1935) | |
| 4 | Much ado about Republican as autocratic leader (3,7) |
| BIG BROTHER – BIG (much), BOTHER (ado) containing [about] R (Republican) | |
| 9 | Man eating cake with prisoner restrained (10) |
| CONTROLLED – CON (prisoner), TED (man) containing [eating] ROLL (cake). ‘Roll’ is not the first synonym for ‘cake’ that comes to mind but it’s in the dictionaries if you search for it. Perhaps ‘Swiss roll’ is the most common example. | |
| 10 | Short and flat sandwich needs new filling (4) |
| SNUB – SUB (sandwich) contains N [filling]. A second roll, this time a long thin bread roll resembling the shape of a submarine from which it takes its name. Once again I have a slight issue with the definition because if I ordered a sandwich and was served a roll (of any shape) I would not be best pleased. ‘Snub’ in this sense is perhaps most often used in the term ‘snub nose’. | |
| 11 | Junk written about one desktop game (6) |
| TIPCAT – TAT (junk) containing [written about] 1 (one) + PC (desktop). A game unknown to me in which “a short sharp-ended piece of wood (the cat) is tipped in the air with a stick”. | |
| 12 | One dreams about tucking into processed pasties (8) |
| ESCAPIST – C (about) contained by [tucking into] anagram [processed] of PASTIES. More snack food. Was the setter anticipating his lunch, I wonder? | |
| 14 | Tongue all but swallowed by lion? (4) |
| INCA – IN CA{t} (swallowed by lion?) [all but]. Dear, oh dear! My LOI. | |
| 15 | Painter to run to get climbing equipment (4,6) |
| ROPE LADDER – ROPE (painter), LADDER (run). I associate ‘ladder’ and ‘run’ with damage to nylon stockings, the UK and US words for it. | |
| 17 | One from skilled elite Cochrane demolished in Times (10) |
| TECHNOCRAT – Anagram [demolished] of COCHRANE contained by [in] TT (times). I knew the word but not its meaning. Collins defines this as “a scientist, engineer, or other expert who is one of a group of similar people who have political power as well as technical knowledge”. I’m not sure if that fits the defintion in the clue necessarily, but I was happy enough to bung in the answer and move on. | |
| 20 | Effort to retain old weight system (4) |
| TROY – TRY (effort) contains [to retain] O (old). I think its pounds and ounces, measures that instinctively mean something to me. | |
| 21 | Replacing fluids and salt is boost with nothing eaten (8) |
| ISOTONIC – IS + TONIC (boost) containing [with…eaten] 0 (nothing). Completely unknown to me, an isotonic drink is apparently one that is “designed to replace the fluid and salts lost from the body during strenuous exercise”. | |
| 23 | Asian support hotel welcomes back (6) |
| INDIAN – INN (hotel) contains [welcomes] AID (support) reversed [back] | |
| 24 | Dope accepts pound in depressed Scottish area (4) |
| GLEN – GEN (dope – information) contains [accepts] L (pound) | |
| 25 | Poet, one mostly accepted by Orwell, G (10) |
| BAUDELAIRE – AUDE{n} (one, i.e. poet) [mostly] is contained [accepted] by BLAIR E (Orwell G – Eric Blair being his real name) | |
| 26 | Vehicle in escape vacated with trail disappearing (10) |
| EVANESCENT – VAN (vehicle) contained by [in] E{scap}E [vacated], SCENT (trail). Another piece of vocabulary I was only vaguely aware of and had no idea what it meant. | |
| 27 | Pack present for landlord (4) |
| HOST – Triple definition. Landlords of inns are (or used to be) often referred to jovially as ‘mine host’. | |
| Down | |
| 2 | English still cool, calm and collected (11) |
| EMOTIONLESS – E (Engliash), MOTIONLESS (still) | |
| 3 | Upset at charges? Get in free! (9) |
| GATECRASH – Anagram [upset] of AT CHARGES | |
| 4 | Fish in lake one in vessel catches (7) |
| BLOATER – BOATER (one in vessel) contains [catches] L (lake) | |
| 5 | What’s received, following dismissal, from much-admired opener? (6,9) |
| GOLDEN PARACHUTE – GOLDEN (much-admired – as in ‘golden boy’), PARACHUTE (opener – at least one hopes so!). This is “an agreement to pay a large amount of money to a senior executive of a company if they are forced to leave”. | |
| 6 | Complete artist left bitter upset (7) |
| RADICAL – RA (artist), ACID (bitter) reversed [upset], L (left). E.g. A complete / radical change may be required. | |
| 7 | Hotel on island raised capital out East (5) |
| HANOI – H (hotel), IONA (island) reversed [raised] | |
| 8 | Base installing British machine (5) |
| ROBOT – ROOT (base) containing [installing] B (British) | |
| 13 | Beast that was lively goes inside small house (11) |
| STEGOSAURUS – S (small), anagram [lively] of GOES contained by [goes inside] TAURUS (house). Any sign of the zodiac may be called a house. | |
| 16 | Butcher and fox dine on hearts after shindig (2,2,5) |
| DO TO DEATH – DO (shindig), TOD (fox – an old word worth remembering), EAT (dine), H (hearts) | |
| 18 | Sharp point seized in wrestling over transport (7) |
| OMNIBUS – NIB (sharp point) contained by [seized in] SUMO (wrestling) reversed [over]. An excuse to post a link to A Transport of Delight a song in tribute to the red London bus written and performed by Michael Flanders and Donald Swann. | |
| 19 | Don’t start raucous jabber! (7) |
| TRIDENT – {s}TRIDENT (raucous) [don’t start] | |
| 21 | One’s put out second fire in room (5) |
| INGLE – {s}INGLE (one) [put out second] | |
| 22 | Last symbol of resistance? (5) |
| OMEGA – Two meanings. The last letter of the Greeek alphabet also used figuratively for the last in a sequence, and the symbol Ω used in physics for ohm, the SI unit of resistance. | |
‘Berg’ was my FOI, and as I entered it, I thought ‘this is going to be a toughie’. I wasn’t wrong. The literals such as ‘beast that was’ and ‘depressed Scottish area’ are masterpieces of indirection.
Orwellian undertones with BIG BROTHER, CONTROLLED, TECHNOCRAT, EMOTIONLESS, maybe ROBOT and the 25a wordplay.
I think ‘roll’ for ‘sandwich’ would fit with the American idea of a sandwich including more than just 2 slices of bread (+filling). eg From the New York State Department of Taxation and Finance Tax Bulletin ST-835 (TB-ST-835):
“Sandwiches include cold and hot sandwiches of every kind that are prepared and ready to be eaten, whether made on bread, on bagels, on rolls, in pitas, in wraps, or otherwise, and regardless of the filling or number of layers. A sandwich can be as simple as a buttered bagel or roll, or as elaborate as a six-foot, toasted submarine sandwich”.
Where would we be without the internet?
I loved INCA.
Thanks to blogger (including for the F&S reminder) and setter.
In NY, if you buy a bagel and put the butter on it yourself, it is not taxed, but if you purchase it with the butter already applied, it is.
A) Fancy a roll?
B) (looking around) Not enough room.
Favourite Flanders quote: ‘If God had intended us to fly, he’d never have given us the railways.’
Edited at 2018-05-29 10:57 am (UTC)
It’s not the roll but the sub that is the sandwich; original US usage was a “submarine sandwich” I believe. Had my first “sub” in 1981 from American franchise 7-11.
Were subs discussed here recently? Or was it the original US usage of “hamburger sandwich” for what is now known as a hamburger?
Quite liked gatecrash, trident as jabber, stegosaurus and Baudelaire – knew his name but not that he was a poet.
Transports of Delight was a surreal and very funny Spike Milligan book. Great memory, thank-you.
Edited at 2018-05-29 03:32 am (UTC)
COD INCA. I also liked TRIDENT.
Thanks to BoltonWanderer, philip jordan, z8b8d8k and ulaca for recent supportive comments re my team’s defeat at Wembley on Saturday.
johninterred. I did see grestyman on these pages a week or so back but he does appear to be a less frequent visitor recently.
INCAt produced something between an arrgh and a snarl.
Much to make this tough but enjoyable in a slightly masochistic way: the word order for CONTROLLED was ungenerous, and the beast that was was brilliantly deceptive. “Orwell, G” was cleverly done
It didn’t help that GOLDEN HANDSHAKE fitted everything except the wordplay.
Since “done to death” is familiar enough, I suppose DO TO DEATH, but it didn’t feel right
Fine crossword, manfully and impressively unravelled.
Found it very tricky to get a foothold and some MERs (of the minor variety) at: cake=roll and ‘in cat’.
Mostly I liked Rope Ladder.
Thanks setter and Jack.
Altogether now. Close friends get to call him T.C. Providing it’s with dig-nit-eey!
Well blogged Jack – not an easy one by any means
Thanks jackkt for a great blog, and setter for a proper tough Times puzzle.
Threw in the towel on this one at 37 minutes, with ENYA for 14 ac (maybe thinking of Tolkien’s Quenya?), and a desperate HASH for 27 ac…
There’s always tomorrow’s one.
The rest of the puzzle was rather tough but quite enjoyable, I thought. I liked the OMEGA clue – very neat, if not too challenging. I appreciated the chewy ones like STEGOSAURUS and EVANESCENT, too.
Thanks for the blog, jackkt.
I biffed three others – CONTROLLED, STEGOSAURUS*, and DO TO DEATH – and DNK the scientific reference in OMEGA. Many thanks to Jack for interpreting all of those.
* I saw the ” small Taurus” part immediately, but failed to parse “goes”. And if you don’t parse go you don’t collect £200 !
FOI BERG
LOI INCA
Loved “jabber” for TRIDENT, but COD BAUDELAIRE.
On the sandwich front, Subway’s foot-long meatball marinara was a delicious but unhealthy lunch that I sometimes indulged in between taxi hirings. No wonder I’m overweight…..
The correct definition of ISOTONIC is ‘meaningless word used to persuade the unwary that a drink full of sugar is somehow healthy’.
TIPCAT was as obscure to me as it seems to have been to everyone else, but seemed the most plausible option from wordplay. BAUDELAIRE was my LOI, after I finally realised that ‘one’ was a poet rather than a synonym for single, united etc.
4a is COD for me.
I’ve always wondered about stickball; not a West Coast sport.
Well, at least there’s the cryptic bit still to appal!
Edited at 2018-05-29 11:29 am (UTC)
Edited at 2018-05-29 01:13 pm (UTC)
It seems to me that whatever is in the dictionaries is fair game to the setters, and I would imagine in any case that such things are always thoroughly checked before being presented to the skilled practitioners here.
As for the IN CAT experience, I’m fully with you too: it was a drop of fun in a veritable sea of quality.
BAUDELAIRE went in unparsed (thanks, Jack, for explaining), but everything else was clear enough, I thought.
Edited at 2018-05-29 02:45 pm (UTC)
Edited at 2018-05-29 03:39 pm (UTC)