I have to admit partial defeat. While I was able to get about three-quarters of the puzzle without reference books, in the end I got most thoroughly stuck, and had to pull out all the stops to be able to finish and post a blog. Even so, I ended up with one or two answers which were highly plausible, but wrong. There were just a few things I didn’t know, that prevented me from finishing, or even attempting to finish.
On the other hand, I was pleased to be able to figure out some very tricky ones unaided, that turned out to be quite correct. I could still use another two hundred thousand words in my vocabulary, but I can’t say where I would find the space to store them. I have the same problem with my record collection.
There are one or two things I’m still not quite sure of, so feel free to chime in.
Across | |
1 | Old crock struggling with Mephisto? Not me! (6) |
PITHOS – anagram of [me]PHISTO, the stock storage jar of the ancient Mediterranean kingdoms. | |
7 | Baldrick stokes remains of fire (4) |
SASH – S + ASH. The stoke here is evidently a unit of kinematic viscosity that can be abbreviated as S. | |
10 | Quality of dwelling within unopened semi men can supply (9) |
IMMANENCE – anagram of [s]EMI MEN CAN. | |
11 | Juveniles with yen for a little room in dwelling (4) |
YOOF – (-r,+Y)OOF. A UK term, in Jamaican they would say yoot. | |
13 | Indian clerk about to get annual return (6) |
CIRCAR – CIRC + A + R, more usually spelt SIRCAR. | |
14 | Dull person, sort one rebuffed (6) |
NUDNIK – KIND + ‘UN backwards, a common Yiddish word around here. | |
16 | Chooses old points (4) |
OPTS – O + PTS, a starter clue. | |
18 | Chance missed by inside left on the wing (6) |
LETOFF – |
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20 | Jumping Jack, an Irish Catholic (9) |
SALTATORY – SALT, A TORY. It may be helpful to understand the 17th-century origins of ‘Tory’, as applied by Titus Oates to his opponents. | |
21 | Number missing exploding golden rain firework (9) |
GIRANDOLE – Anagram of GOLDE[n] RAIN, and a ‘firework’ in the sense of a pre-electric light fixture. | |
24 | Muslim students in strain without lecturer (6) |
SENUSI – The right answer, but not the one I had. I still don’t see the cryptic, so feel free. Here we go, NUS inside SEI[l], and the definition is simply ‘Muslim’, in this case a particular sort of Muslim, more often spelt ‘Senussi’. | |
25 | Nothing’s accepted in supplements, causing dispute (4) |
ODDS – (-a,+O)DDS), as when you are at odds. | |
28 | Old dukes finished with party, Times put out (6) |
NEAFES – NEA[t] FES[t], I believe, where the old word for fists is more often spelt nieves. | |
30 | High official abroad accepted bill, for example (6) |
ATABEG – A + TAB + E.G, an easy cryptic if you don’t know this position. | |
31 | Drive miles into remote parts of Asia for this tree? (4) |
AMLA – A(ML)A, I think, although I can’t find that abbreviation of miles. The Indian gooseberry. | |
32 | A lot of civility shown by adjutant and one Balkan guerilla (9) |
COMITADJI – COMIT[y] + ADJ + I. If you wasted time with ‘polite’, join the club. This word is a Turkish version of committeeman, although it appears the Bulgarians had a rather different idea of committee work than we do. | |
33 | Buffalo’s belly uncovered (4) |
ARNA – [c]ARNA[l]….I think. A Biblical or 17th-century usage? | |
34 | Always stick around for Indian millet (6) |
BAJREE – EER JAB backwards, more often spelt BAJRI. Mephisto constructors apparently need a lot of words ending in -EE. |
Down | |
1 | Complaint hits Posy badly (8) |
PHYTOSIS – anagram of HITS POSY, a rather easy clue to a fungal disease. | |
2 | Tipped number agreed with tabloid image (4) |
IKON – N + OK + I, all upside down. I’m 40 years out of grad school, and I still thought of Robert Adams’ book. | |
3 | Fish: tons turning up around lake (9) |
TROUTLING – T + ROUT(L)ING, avoiding the two fish into one clue. | |
4 | Body folds and ladies headed to another primarily (6) |
OMENTA – 0 MEN + T[o] A[nother]. | |
5 | With stuff on board for return, area block dead silly (10) |
BACKLOADED – Anagram of A BLOCK DEAD. | |
6 | Attacker up on legs (6) |
SNIPER – RE PINS upside-down. | |
7 | Scottish shirt is on one in the RAF (4) |
SERK – ‘S ERK, more usually sark. | |
8 | Opening of station eatery on former platform (8) |
SCAFFOLD – S + CAFF + OLD. | |
9 | Fly after having left for day in harbour (4) |
HERL – HER(-d,+L), a very specific type of fly for fly-fishing. | |
12 | Row about boring Norfolk town almost leads to writ as before (10) |
DISTRINGAS – DI(STRING, A)S[s]. A writ directing a sheriff to distrain. | |
15 | Person who is promising to protect cypher is a nut (9) |
COCODEMER – CO(CODE)MER, often written as a COCO DE MER. | |
17 | Nothing in new-fangled pattern? I would assess that (8) |
PATENTOR – Anagram oif PATTERN around O. | |
19 | Frank carries a lot for a cool walk (8) |
FRESCADE – FRE(SCAD)E. Nowadays, we usually use more than one scad. | |
22 | Rising hostel singers not entirely in minor keys (6) |
ISLETS – backwards hidden in [ho]STEL SI[ngers]. | |
23 | African one’s seen in two neighbouring US states close to Canada (6) |
NYANJA – NY(A)NY + [canad]A. Fortunately, I tried nearby states first. This group is also known as the Chewa, watch out for that. | |
26 | Rodent picked up a toadstool top (4) |
PACA – A CAP upside down. | |
27 | Charm previously Poles missed in bustling Bosnia (4) |
OBIA – anagram of BO[sn]IA. It will help with the variant spelling if you know how obeah is pronounced. | |
29 | Black and slack by the sound of it (4) |
SLOE -Sounds like SLOW. The fruit of the blackthorn, hence black, as in sloe-eyed. |
I hope everyone is well.
24 ac: NUS for students inside SEI(L) – Ch. gives the latter as an alternate spelling for sile = to strain (dialect)
33 ac: belly has carnal as a synonym in Ch.
Many thanks to both the setter and the blogger.
31A C does indeed have ml. = miles
32A “any Balkan guerrilla” is one C def
15D C has it as “coco-de-mer” rather than just a 9-letter word
18ac Chambers has “let-off: a failure to take advantage…,” so the def. is “Chance missed.” The wordplay is OF in *(LEFT)
31ac ml is in Chambers as an abbr. for miles
12dn Sherriff is not in Chambers, but sheriff is 🙂
I have started doing these again and try not to use references, like you, so far without any conspicuous success!
I am in awe of your ability to solve any of these things without Chambers. I would get nowhere without it.
Even by Mephisto standards, a very tough puzzle.
All to no avail though because having parsed 9dn perfectly I still managed to put in HERD.