There's always more, apparently, to be seen going round the still (12)
I believe the answer is:
nevertheless
'the still' is the definition.
(I've seen this before)
'there's always more apparently to be seen going round' is the wordplay.
I cannot quite understand how this works, but
'there's' could be 'n' (I've seen this in other clues) and 'n' is present in the answer.
'always' could be 'ever' ('ever' can be a synonym of 'always') and 'ever' is found in the answer.
This explanation may well be incorrect...
Can you help me to learn more?
(Other definitions for nevertheless that I've seen before include "But always" , "at any rate" , "Notwithstanding" , "Still" , "However" .)