The grid is of course unusual and unfriendly with lots of double unches. Double unches combine really badly with poor hunches and I had, for a while, both FREE BELT at 3dn and TEXT BOOK at 7dn, neither of which did me any favours. (At least WHAT A NERVE was fairly quickly ruled out at 13dn.) In addition there are two clues at 19dn and 20dn that I’m still having trouble confidently parsing. Bit of a multi-clue pile-up, all told, and just to compound my utter despair at my solving abilities today’s Telegraph Toughie turns out to be the regularly scheduled intellectual humiliation at the hands of Elgar so the agony won’t be over for a few more hours yet.
On the plus side, though some of the clues were rather mystifying, there are definitely some doozies in there too. I really liked the ruthless economy of 6dn and how it sent me down a blind alley of searching for an anagram of (EARLIER SET*). But my clue of the day has to be 13dn, not parsed till long after – maybe I just like clues where the definition part is an almost invisible tiny word, but I thought this was very neat and smooth-surfaced indeed. My most masochistic thanks to the setter!
I’m off to Spain (well, Barcelona, at least one proper Spaniard has already told me rather heatedly that that doesn’t count) next week so I believe you will be getting a double dose of lovely pipkirby blogging. But you might all want to go on holiday for a week yourselves after that to avoid the resultant double dose of me. See you all in June!
1 I’ll tell you a secret: politician has got fired for corruption (8)
CONFIDER – CON [politician] has got (FIRED*) [“for corruption”]
9 Carriage, outwardly exquisite, with funny silver interior (8)
EQUIPAGE – E{xquisit}E, with QUIP AG [funny | silver] “interior”
10 Writer describes a king of Spanish region (8)
BALEARIC – BIC [writer] “describes” A LEAR [a | king]
11 Choke, a device that controls mixture of air and fuel (8)
THROTTLE – double def
12 Potentially embarrassing situation for woman working in Civil Service (3,2,5)
CAN OF WORMS – (FOR WOMAN*) [“working”] in CS [Civil Service]
14 Healthy exercises featuring regularly in my long day (4)
YOGA – “regularly” in {m}Y {l}O{n}G {d}A{y}
15 Creature kept scratching head in anger (7)
REPTILE – {k}EPT in RILE [anger]
17 In the flesh, RAF serviceman is a beast (7)
MEERKAT – ERK [RAF serviceman] in MEAT [the flesh]
21 Kilometre behind house, round bend (4)
HOOK – K [kilometre] behind HO O [house | round]
22 One Christmas filled with constant bustle? The complete opposite (10)
INACTIVITY – I NATIVITY [one | Christmas] “filled with” C [constant]
23 Workers’ food studied by the BBC (8)
BEEBREAD – READ [studied] by BEEB [the BBC]
25 Charges are to be reduced, rules stated (8)
ARRAIGNS – AR{e} + homophone of REIGNS [rules “stated”]
26 Casualty department in hospital needing help at first to nurse about a hundred (8)
ACCIDENT – ENT [department in hospital] needing AID [help] at first, “to nurse” C C [about | a hundred]
27 Crackers served with ends of Edam cheese (8)
EMMENTAL – MENTAL [crackers], “served with” E{da}M
Down
2 Love to sleep on, perhaps, needing to make little effort (2,1,5)
ON A PLATE – O [love] + NAP LATE [sleep on, perhaps]
3 Complimentary drink in trade zone (4,4)
FREE PORT – double def
4 Brave, turning up the radio a bit (4)
DARE – hidden reversed in {th}E RAD{io}
5 Cleric’s place with play area near to railway (7)
RECTORY – REC [play area] near TO RY [to | railway]
6 On track, having earlier set off (10)
PUTRESCENT – RE SCENT [on | track], having earlier PUT [set]
7 Publication having page with illustrations (4,4)
PART WORK – P [page] with ARTWORK [illustrations]
8 One’s back in French tavern, staggering about (8)
REVENANT – EN [in “French”], with (TAVERN*) [“staggering”] about
13 My wife gets call to wake up about noon (4,1,5)
WELL I NEVER – W [wife] gets REVEILLE reversed [call to wake “up”] about N [noon]
15 Bottle of wine rogue emptied with tramp before lunchtime? (8)
REHOBOAM – R{ogu}E with HOBO [tramp] + A.M. [before lunchtime]
16 Right-on company stocking pink wine (8)
PROSECCO – PC CO [right-on | company] “stocking” ROSE [pink]
18 Prerequisite for examination to do with eyesight? (8)
REVISION – splittable as RE VISION, [to do with | eyesight]
19 Lack of energy, say? So I start on antibiotics (8)
ASTHENIA – AS THEN I [say | so | I] + A{ntibiotics}. See kindly provided examples in the comments if you were as confused as I was initially about how “as” means “say”, but here it’s essentially short for “such as”.
20 Order separate ingredients for wife? (7)
MANDATE – if she has a MAN and a DATE a woman can get married, er, I guess? M AND ATE = MATE = wife. Thanks galspray!
24 Play shortened a bit (4)
DRAM – DRAM{a} [play “shortened”]
But then I had EGTHENIA in there at one point, so don’t listen to me.
“19. Introducing instances exemplifying or illustrating a general designation: like and including, such as, of the kind of; for instance, for example. Also occas. in specifying use: namely, to wit. Now chiefly elliptical for such as.”
Incidentally the whole entry is a lexicographical tour de force, identifying 30 different uses.
Dereklam
1841 Penny Mag. Oct. 2 386/1 The plumage consists of an undervest of down (remarkable in some species, as the wild swan and the eider duck, for its softness and delicacy).
1862 M. R. Barnard tr. F. C. Schübeler Synopsis Veg. Products i. 11 Finer varieties, as for instance the Cob nut, the Red and White Filbert &c., I have only met with in the south of Norway.
Edited at 2017-05-26 09:15 am (UTC)
Have fun in Catalonia, V.
Got BEEBREAD easily enough, only because a near identical clue occurred in a Jumbo from three years ago, which I happened to solve last night.
Phew, what a workout. Great puzzle. Thanks setter and V.
In a near-parallel universe I can imagine pressing submit with that one filled in and everything else still blank.
I thought the “throttle” was a straight def, but played for the nice surface reading. (I also took a good thirty seconds trying to crab something to do with “carburettor” in there. Sigh.)
Not so. I was missing only CAN OF WORMS only from the acrosses, not really associating it with embarrassment, and not having clocked the anagram or thinking of the obvious abbreviation for Civil Service. The few downs I had left were similar; I’d got ON A P___E, FREE ___T, and most of 6d, but just couldn’t wrestle my brain into the right gear.
Bah. Is there a word for having got through the tough ones on a puzzle, only to be defeated by clues that seem a lot easier in retrospect?
Unfortunately I also needed help with DRAMA as it was my last one standing after an exhausting solve and a quick trawl through the alphabet had failed to identify a likely candidate.
It kept me reasonably entertained though and I was quite pleased with what I managed to achieve before it became apparent that I was not going to finish unaided.
LOI by a very long way was Putrescent. I had quite the wrong idea about this clue for 15mins. Thanks setter and V.
Curiously, the ones that gave our honorable blogger difficulty, I understood and plugged in without a second thought. Between the two of us, we could have solved this puzzle easily.
Perhaps they are trying out levels of difficulty for the championships. If this were a puzzle in the finals, it would be interesting to see how are leading solvers would do there.
Edited at 2017-05-26 11:46 am (UTC)
Back in the 90s, I used to solve with my buddy Stan. I’d borrow a NY Post from one of our less intellectual co-workers, make two copies of whatever Times puzzle they were reprinting that day, and Stan and I would buy our lunches and stake out a conference room.
It would often happen that one of us would almost understand a clue, and propose a theory, and then the other one would offer an instant correction and make it work – or show why it couldn’t possibly be correct. This allowed us to solve the average Times puzzle in about 20 minutes, when either one of us would have struggled to finish alone.
Edited at 2017-05-26 01:38 pm (UTC)
Annoying because I seem to have been on the wavelength for this one, and I really enjoyed it. Lots of nice chewy unbiffable clues.
Edited at 2017-05-27 08:49 am (UTC)
PART WORK didn’t pose too much of a problem.