Enigmatic Variations No. 1257: Metaphor by Gaston

Normally, I try to paraphrase the essential elements of the preamble. This week, it seemed far easier to reprint it word for word!

Solvers must identify and highlight the five-letter keyword from a METAPHOR in the unclued perimeter of the grid. An incomplete thematic sequence runs clockwise around the rest of the perimeter, starting to the left of the keyword and finishing to its right. Solvers must also identify the final element of this sequence by dealing appropriately with 11 cells (including the two highlighted) and ignoring the answers to two clues. Six entries are clued normally; each generates a single-letter clash that must be resolved thematically by changing the entries to become six thematic surnames. Clues are given in the normal order; Chambers Dictionary (2014) is recommended, and one answer is an abbreviation.

ev-1257-gridI found this quite a tricky solve, probably because I was suffering from the excesses of the Christmas festivities. Having the two clues which didn’t contribute to the diagram was another hold-up, as was initially solving the clue to 42ac as just LACE, rather than ENLACE. Eventually, I could see STAGE in the middle of the bottom row, SCHOOLBOY in the perimeter and BRANDY becoming BRANDO at 14ac. The theme was Jaques’s monlogue from As You Like It beginning “All the world’s a stage…” and lists the seven ages of man:

INFANT, SCHOLBOY, LOVER, SOLDIER, JUSTICE, PANTALOON.

That was six, with the seventh being described by the last four lines of the speech:

…Last scene of all,
That ends this strange eventful history,
Is second childishness and mere oblivion,
Sans teeth, sans eyes, sans taste, sans everything.

Oblivion resulted in the TEETH, EYES (the two highlighted squares containing an O) and TASTE all being erased from the grid. EVERYTHING (the two clues to be ignored) had already effectively been erased. The six thematic entries all became actors:

Marlon BRANDO, David TENNANT, Patrick STEWART, Ronald COLMAN, Dame Edith EVANS and Jeremy IRONS

All in all, a very enjoyable puzzle. Thanks, Gaston.

Solving time: about 4 hours

Legend:
Definition in clue
ABC* = anagram
ABC< = reversal
abCDef = hidden

ACROSS
No Entry Clue and Explanation
11 VOODOO See pair accomplish nothing magic nowadays
V (see) OO (pair) DO (accomplish) O (nothing); the pair relates to a score of no runs in both innings of a cricket match — I think!
12 OBIA Alumnus rejected fantastic old witchcraft
OB (alumnus, old boy) AI< (fantastic, A1, backwards)
13 STOOPES Bends down to put earth in ancient buckets
STOOPS (bends down) containing E (earth)
14 BRANDY
becomes
BRANDO
Make unknown spirit
BRAND (make, n) Y (unknown)
15 PENNANT
becomes
TENNANT
Yank trophy girl back in small flat
ANN< (girl, back) in PENT (penthouse, abbr, flat)
16 STARE Cowards running west and then east? Watch closely!
RATS< (cowards, to the west/left) + E (east)
18 TWI Quaint-sounding West African dialect
Sounds like twee (quaint)
20 OVERSEAS On active service, holding lines far away
OAS (on active service) holding VERSE (lines)
23 LAIC A vast number surrounding one who isn’t a professional
LAC (vast number) surrounding A (one)
25 STANDOUTS The man questions aloud those of exceptional ability
STAN (the man) DOUTS (sounds like doubts)
26 HEEL Follow ne’er-do-well?
2 meanings
27 KINGSHIP Lost cause renounces evil, achieving royal status
SINKING SHIP (lost cause) – SIN (evil)
28 CIG Regularly clings to tab
regular letters in ClInGs
32 ROMEO City’s nothing as Quebec’s successor
ROME (city) O (nothing); reference to phonetic alphabet
EVERY See inside weird total
V (see) in EERY (weird)
35 STEWARD
becomes
STEWART
College caterer putting dish on plough
STEW (dish) + ARD (plough, n)
38 COLMAR
becomes
COLMAN
Defile and damage dilapidated fan
COL (defile) + MAR (damage)
40 TOTARAS Girl returns to count first trees
SARA< (girl, returned) with TOT (count) first
41 DENT Sour back has no rugby damage
TURNED< (sour, back) – RU (rugby)
42 ENLACE Tie the knot in the French church
EN LA (in the, French) CE (church)
DOWN
No Entry Clue and Explanation
1 OMBRE Game in which man goes topless
(h)OMBRE (man, topless)
2 EVANG
becomes
EVANS
Briefly campaigning earnestly to have grand part of church erected
(G (grand) NAVE (part of church))<
3 ROOD Cross threshold on the way up
DOOR< (threshhold, up)
4 SOSO Only average, and being included makes one an unpopular type
containing AND gives So-AND-SO (unpopular type)
5 LOTE See Consumers’ Association leaving out-of-date fruit
LOCATE (see) – CA (Consumers’ Association); out-of-date = archaic
6 DOONA Party happening with a duvet in Perth
DO (party) ON (happening) + A
7 TRONS
becomes
IRONS
King enters very many marketplaces in Scotland
R (king) in TONS (very many)
8 EXPAT School leave granted quietly for second English person living abroad
EXEAT (school leave granted) with P (quietly) for second E (English)
9 REEN Bath’s ditch a yard north
REE (yard) N (north)
10 SIAMESE Enough said about Gaston being a cat!
SESE (enough said) about I AM (Gaston being)
13 STRADIOTS Good men going back and forth outside to communicate with horsemen
ST ST< (saints, good men, back and forth) outside RADIO (to communicate with)
17 TSAR Sailor takes on board singular leader
TAR (sailor) holding S (singular)
19 WI-FI Means of transmitting poem in Caribbean nation
IF (poem by Rudyard Kipling) in WI (West Indies)
21 VLEI Live rough in American swamp
LIVE*
22 EUGE Announced “Solver is a goddess”? Bravo!
EU GE (sounds like “you Ge” (goddess))
24 ASHAMED Embarrassed when introducing amateur newspaperman
AS (when) + HAM (amateur) ED (newspaperman)
29 GET ON Agree to proceed?
2 meanings
30 SWAMI Religious instructor exercised before one
SWAM (exercised) + I (one)
31 CARES Alarms without special afflictions
SCARES (alarms) – S (special)
THING Bad night problem
NIGHT*
33 OLDEN Age that’s perfect, not good
GOLDEN (perfect) – G (good)
34 PANTO Move camera for Christmas highlight?
PAN (move camera) TO (for)
36 TOFF Bad time at first for snappy dresser
OFF (bad) with T (time) at first
37 RANT Artist books storm
RA (artist) NT (books, New Testament)
38 CRAG Daniel maybe loses current point
CRAIG (Daniel maybe, actor) – I (current)
39 ONCE Former Conservative is part of unit
C (Conservative) in ONE (unit)

 

2 comments on “Enigmatic Variations No. 1257: <em>Metaphor</em> by Gaston”

  1. Thanks, Dave. I always like a crossword such as this that makes me revisit a poem or a piece of literature. My problems were that I had never heard of the actor Colman and it was a while before I got PANTO because I hate it and it’s anything but a highlight for me.

  2. I enjoyed this and was lucky enough to pick up on the theme without too much gnashing of teeth, with memories of the BBC’s 400th anniversary Shakespeare celebrations still fresh in the mind. I was in two minds whether to highlight or remove the items, and ended up removing as per Dave, thus taking ‘sans’ literally. I’d never heard of Ronald Colman until reading the blog, I was thinking Olivia!

    Thanks to Gaston for the fun and Dave for the blog

Comments are closed.