After a difficult week, we are back to normal. I solved this one in a single two-hour session, and only had to check something in Chambers a few times. Writing up the blog, I only had to parse needed, which was an obvious biff during my solve. Most of the answers were known words, which certainly makes things easier.
The only thing I couldn’t figure out was the pun – I would imagine it’s absolutely dreadful.
| 1 | Obstinate duchess distressed when divorced from husband (6) |
| CUSSED – Anagram of DUC[h]ESS. | |
| 6 | Victor behind one in grip of strong hint (6) |
| SAVOUR – S(A,V)OUR. I can’t find V for victor in Chambers, but strong for sour is there. | |
| 11 | Colouring toon art in a new way (7) |
| ARNOTTO – Anagram of TOON ART – an orange colour. | |
| 12 | From the right, hence a monster (4) |
| OGRE – ERGO reversed. | |
| 13 | Jack leans here to face banter (8) |
| HEADRAIL – HEAD + RAIL. Head and face as verbs, rail and banter as verbs. | |
| 14 | Supply person with bucket for quarried material (12, two words) |
| PURBECK STONE – Anagram of PERSON + BUCKET. | |
| 15 | Excess food storage? Fine to be ripped off (4) |
| LAKE – [f]LAKE. This is flake(2), a place for drying or storing food. | |
| 17 | Frame longshoremen concealing shared issue (5) |
| MELON – Hidden in [fra]ME LON[gshoremen]. Melon defined as profits to be divided among shareholders. | |
| 19 | European goody-goody, god, accepted bottom feeders? (8) |
| EPIFAUNA – E + PI + FAUN + A. A faun is a very minor god indeed. | |
| 22 | Complex NT tongue not learned? (8) |
| UNGOTTEN – Anagram of NT TONGUE. | |
| 24 | Waffle about central heating being dry (5) |
| PARCH – RAP backwards + C.H. Dry and parch as verbs. Both rap and waffle can mean to talk aimlessly. | |
| 26 | Take on viva voce exam for Scots (4) |
| HIRE – Sounds like higher, a school exam in Scotland. | |
| 27 | Insect is bound to scuttle (12, two words) |
| SPRING BEETLE – SPRING + BEETLE as a verb. | |
| 30 | Anthony Eden’s first to stir up a socialist worker (8, two words) |
| HONEY ANT – Anagram of ANTHONY E. | |
| 31 | Flipping eye of God (4) |
| ODIN – NID O’ backwards. | |
| 32 | Pâté, say, is mistake in point (7) |
| TERRINE – T(ERR)INE. | |
| 33 | Fly one replaced by northern escorts in Unite (6) |
| TSETSE – T(-i,+SETS)E, a very clever substitutions clue. I’m not sure about escort and set being equivalent – to start along a course or direction? | |
| 34 | Crib near one’s own bed that’s pressed in service? (6) |
| KEYPAD – KEY + PAD, crib in the sense of a cheat sheet. | |
| Down | |
| 1 | Old dispute affected Labour’s leader over symbolic field strength? (6) |
| CAMPLE – CAMP + L + E. From an obsolete form of football. | |
| 2 | Plonker dismissing new upper-class language (4) |
| URDU – [n]URD + U. | |
| 3 | Fabulous beast that is right to be comparatively short (8) |
| SNARKIER – SNARK + I.E. + R, Short is probably used metaphorically, in the sense of rude or sarcastic. | |
| 4 | This would soak up cans of beer I spilt over time (12) |
| SORBEFACIENT – Anagram of CANS OF BEER I + T. | |
| 5 | Under British Left this gas could make you a sweetie-wife (5) |
| ETHER – [b.l.]ETHER, a rare middle literal, with a sort of reversed clue. A sweetie-wife and a blether are both scandal-mongers. | |
| 6 | Dips of a similar sort in goss that’s upsetting (8) |
| SOAKINGS – SO(AKIN)GS, where the outer letters are an anagram of GOSS. | |
| 7 | Trailers carrying current benefits (4) |
| AIDS – A(I)DS, an escapee from the Quickie, not unwelcome. | |
| 8 | Early atomic idea is farcically extrovert and, oh, unknown (12, two words) |
| VORTEX THEORY – Anagram of EXTROVERT + OH + X. | |
| 9 | Like wee hot iron in service (7) |
| URINOSE – U(anagram of IRON)SE. | |
| 10 | Soften school scripture fast (6) |
| RELENT – R.E. + LENT. Religious education is explicitly defined here. | |
| 16 | Spoke about getting accepted annoyed apostate (8) |
| RUNAGATE – RUN(A)G + ATE. An alternate spelling from the 16th century. | |
| 18 | Check one on run? OK, go on recklessly (8, three words) |
| LET IT RIP – LET + I + TRIP. | |
| 20 | Cases of pedestrians bagging apparently nothing (7) |
| PEAPODS – PE(AP,O)DS. A concatenation of obscure abbreviations, all found in Chambers. | |
| 21 | Quietly claim university raised result (6) |
| UPSHOT – P + SHOUT, with U moved to the front. | |
| 23 | Called for northern adult section to disappear (6) |
| NEEDED – N + [s]EEDED. Adult as in a mature plant, with S as a valid abbreviation for section. | |
| 25 | In general, poetry primarily made to be used by the French (5) |
| METRE – M[ade] + ETRE. We don’t often get French infinitives, but there you go. | |
| 28 | Last of tradesmen roughly hoisted an old form of hawk (4) |
| NYAS – [tradesme]N + SAY upside-down. An eyas was originally a nyas – both referring to unfledged hawks. | |
| 29 | Heartless cashier set up American flier? (4) |
| LUNA – AN[n]UL upside-down. I didn’t know the luna moth was found only in North America. | |
Thanks Vynil1. I see now that Chambers has “escort” as the 41st meaning of “set”.
And qualified as ‘Scot and N Eng dialect’, hence ‘northern’ in the clue. The parsing of this one defeated me so thanks vinyl.
Couldn’t parse 23d so got it wrong. Otherwise all good.
As for the pun, the best I could come up with is cost-saver…
That’s as close as I could get.
Thanks Vinyl1 and Paul- a relief after last week’s puzzle. V for Victor is from the phonetic alphabet.
34A
Does key equate to bed
And crib equate to pad
Other way round, as Chambers will verify.
Many thanks dcrooks
A blessed relief after last week’s!
I’m a bit puzzled by ‘OK’ in 18dn. I think it must be part of the definition, which is an instruction.
“In general, poetry” seemed a bit lacking as a definition for METRE, but there wasn’t room for “metric”! (And this is scarcely true anymore.)
The second definition in Chambers is ‘verse, or poetry generally’!
Interesting. Never thought (obviously) about looking that one up.