Solving time: 63 minutes
I managed to do most of this in about 20 minutes before getting alarmingly stuck. After nearly an hour, I still had two I couldn’t get and was beginning to worry I wouldn’t be able to finish. Eventually, I tossed away my wrong assumptions, and then of course I saw the answer at once.
Music: Purcell, Dido and Aeneas, Leppard/Troyanos/Palmer/Stillwell
| Across | |
|---|---|
| 1 | PASSER BY, PASSE R[akishl](B)Y My last in. I got into terrible difficulty because I thought the bishop was ‘Usher’, and the answer was ‘pusher-in’ or ‘pusher-on’, but I just could not make it fit the cryptic. Only my re-evaluation of 4 down enabled me to see it. |
| 5 | Omitted. |
| 9 | GALLIWASP, sounds like GALLEY + WASP. I was a little uncertain what sort of creature this is, and just put it in on instinct, hoping for the right sort of fauna. |
| 11 | LITHE, [Hail, b]LITHE [spirit, bird thou never wert!]. Now for some choruses from Prometheus Unbound….. |
| 12 | TWISTED, TWIST + ED. When this corner was completely blank, I put in ‘oddball’, and then erased it, on the grounds that ‘fellow’ is not sufficient to clue ‘odd’ as a DBE. |
| 13 | ORGANZA, ORGAN + Z + A. I needed a few crossing letters for this, wanting to put the extreme characters at the beginning. |
| 14 | INCONSIDERATE, IN(CON)SIDE + RATE, where ‘without’ is an enclosure indicator and does not go with ‘charge’!. |
| 16 | HORSE CHESTNUT. I believe this is a cryptic definition referring to conkers. |
| 20 | WATTEAU, sounds like WHAT ‘O!. Outrageous, but fun. |
| 21 | ABSOLVE, AB + SOLVE. |
| 23 | ORBIT, O(R)BIT. |
| 24 | EPIDERMAL, anagram of MALE PRIDE. Rather easy since the anagram is nearly a wrap-around of the original. |
| 25 | THEORY, T(HE)ORY. I was briefly held up by thinking ‘governor’ = ‘Pa’, but here a real governor is used, H[is] E[cellency]. |
| 26 | AGITPROP, hidden word, and one I didn’t see until after putting in the answer. |
| Down | |
| 1 | PIGSTY, PI(G[ilt]S[een])TY. A clever &lit clue that gave me a lot of trouble, as I tried ‘ca’ and ‘re’ for ‘about’, which turns out to be a containment indicator. |
| 2 | SALMI, anagram of ISLAM. I knew it was an anagram, and put this in on instinct, rejecting ‘malsi’. Maybe I was helped by ‘salmagundi’, which is an entirely different thing, of course. |
| 3 | ERISTIC, ER(IST)IC, where IST is an anagram of IT’S. Put in just from the literal by me, since I only vaguely heard of Eric Morecambe. I expect many solvers will be in the opposite case. |
| 4 | BOARDING HOUSE, BOARDING + HO(U)SE. My second to last in. I saw ‘house’ readily enough, but for a long time had only tried the ‘aging’ or ‘agreeing’ meanings of ‘getting on’. Then I re-examined the clue and found the correct interpretation. |
| 6 | COLOGNE, CO LOG + N[ew] E[nergy]. Take ‘firm’s record’ together for best parsing. |
| 7 | INTENDANT, INTEN(DAN)T. I couldn’t remember the tribe for the longest time, although I knew ‘intent’ must be the enclosing word. |
| 8 | GREY AREA, double definition, one a jocular reference to the author of a famous elegy. |
| 10 | PROFIT-SHARING, PROF + IT’S + HARING. Strangely elusive for me, I needed quite a few checking letters to get this one. |
| 14 | IRRITABLE. IR[ish] + RITA + B[a]L[l]E[t]. It is safe to say that most solvers will get this from the literal. |
| 15 | SHOWBOAT, S(HOW BOA)T. |
| 17 | ERECTOR, E + RECTOR. More risible clues can easily be imagined, but will not be appearing in The Times. |
| 18 | NASCENT, SAN back wards + C + ENT. A compendium of the usual ‘hospital’ cryptics in one clue. |
| 19 | DEWLAP, PAL WED upside down. A word I had heard of without knowing its meaning, but the cryptic is most helpful. |
| 22 | Omitted. |
Couple of queries:
1. Otolaryngology = ear and throat. For the nose to be in there, we need “otorhinolaryngology”.
2. Watteau was French. So his W is pronounced, strictly, as a V.
ilt} and S{een} inside PITY (shame). And the whole is an &lit.Edited at 2011-07-25 05:06 am (UTC)
I managed to complete it in just over the hour but I succumbed to temptation several times along the way by looking a few words up to confirm my guesswork.
The RH seemed a little easier than the LH and the NW corner proved almost impenetrable, containing as it did three intersecting words that I have either never met before or had forgotten: SALMA, ERISTIC and GALLIWASP (what is ‘contemplating doing in this clue?). I take some comfort that as I write this the Firefox spell checker is querying the existence of all three.
Carelessness compounded my problems elsewhere as having noted that 14dn probably ended ABLE, I pencilled these letters in the grid as the last four of 14ac. The resulting B checker didn’t help when trying to solve 7dn where I convinced myself I was looking for the name of an opera. Incidentally, neither Collins nor my edition of Chambers recognises the meaning of INTENDANT required here, so once again I don’t feel too bad about not knowing it myself.
Not a good start to my week, but if this is the worst things get I shan’t be complaining.
Of course today’s puzzle had the usual spate of new and surprising words like GALLIWASP and ERISTIC, but I was a bit cleverer than usual at deciphering the wordplay. No really outstanding clues, but COD perhaps to PIGSTY and SHOWBOAT.
The site was unresponsive for most of the day, and I found a couple of external resources that might be useful if/when it happens again:
http://status.livejournal.org
http://downrightnow.com/livejournal
http://twitter.com/#!/livejournal
I agree that this was a tough puzzle, especially for a Monday. No doubt it was deliberately scheduled to confound our expectations. i approve of such unpredictability. It took me a full hour to complete, with some clues not understood at the end – 14, 15, 25, though I worked out 14 and 15 subsequently. The validity of ‘governor’ for HE eluded me until I came here.