Enigmatic Variations No. 1556: Limitations by Jaques

Hi, intrepid EV-ers, and congratulations on securing access to the puzzle despite the LIMITATIONS those in charge at the paper have introduced.  (Not the EV or puzzles editors, I hasten to add – their skills and commitment to the series have steered it through this far.)  Before getting to the puzzle, I must give a big thank you to my fellow blogger mc_rapper for supplying me with a copy, complete with perfectly OCR-ed clues.

The two previous Jaques puzzles I’ve had the pleasure of blogging should have put me in a good frame of mind for this one but, perhaps because blogging the EV gets a smidge less fun with every attempt to kill it, I didn’t get around to starting this until Tuesday evening.  I was lucky that it wasn’t a monster!  Instead, it was all most enjoyable with a satisfying ending.

 

The preamble:

A letter has been omitted from each down clue and must be reinstated before solving. These letters, in clue order, give a line of verse (in ODQ). The remainder of the verse indicates what should be entered at 1 across and how two other entries must be changed to redefine LIMITATIONS. All entries in the final grid are proper nouns or words in Chambers Dictionary (2016), which is recommended.

 

After a pass across the acrosses, I had not much up top (so to speak) but a decent amount lower down.  I then worked my way up the downs, spelling out the message in reverse, which turned out to be:

I AM MASTER OF THIS COLLEGE

A little research led me to the Balliol rhyme:

First come I; my name is Jowett.
There’s no knowledge but I know it.
I am Master of this college:
What I don’t know isn’t knowledge.

It comes from The Masque of B–ll––l, a collection of forty verses created by undergraduates of Balliol College, Oxford, and published (then promptly suppressed by the college authorities) in 1880.  This rhyme is one of those attributed to Henry Charles Beeching, and the subject is Benjamin Jowett, the Master of Balliol.

It seems that in the original form the vowels are omitted from the names, thus Jowett is written as J–W–TT, just as in the initial grid.  A neat touch.

Filling in the missing vowels at 1a seemed the logical first thing to do.

J-W-TT -> JOWETT

As for the second, I was fortunate that the entry “I don’t know” had stuck in my mind.  This helped me to identify and locate the substitution to be made, taken from the last line of the verse …

WHAT I DON’T KNOW -> ISN’T KNOWLEDGE

… leaving real words in the grid.  Very nice.  Thanks Jaques!

 

 

Clue No ANSWER Clue with definition underlined  
Explanation, with quoted indicators in italics and ANSWER letters in bold caps
Across
6a CUBAGE Found content to be too young for Scouts? (6)  
To be of CUB AGE might mean being younger than Scout age (to be too young for Scouts)
10a APACHE Air Police distress Parisian hooligan (6)  
AP (Air Police) + ACHE (distress)
11a IODURET Ride out at sea for old salt (7)  
RIDE OUT anagrammed (at sea)
12a GERBIL Desert inhabitant in Mongolian tent with much humour (6)  
GER (Mongolian tent) + most of (much) BILe (humour)
13a RAGMAN Rough slate pillar having rock and totter (6)  
RAG (rough slate) + MAN (pillar having rock)
14a IMMINENCE Danger looming in diamond mine in Minnesota (9)  
In ICE (diamond) is MINE in MN (Minnesota)
16a BLAG Appropriate length in short trousers (4)  
L (length) in all but the last letter of (short) BAGs (trousers)
18a CHALICE Contemptuous individuals after tea cup (7)  
LICE (contemptuous individuals) after CHA (tea)
21a STRATUM Group standing all round café (7)  
SUM (all) round TRAT (café)
23a TRON Scales getting weight about right (4)  
TON (weight) around (about) R (right)
24a APART Acting role is out of consideration (5)  
A (acting) + PART (role)
26a BASE Short jacket without question is counterfeit (4)  
BAS[qu]E (short jacket) without QU (question)
28a CHEERIO Port pursuing reduction in vice element for so long (7)  
RIO (port) after (pursuing) CHEEk (vice element) without the last letter (reduction in …)
31a ACETONE To purge chemical engineer’s injected in organic compound (7)  
ATONE (to purge); CE (chemical engineer) is inserted (injected)
34a WHAT Pardon bowler maybe after wide (4)  
HAT (bowler maybe) after W (wide)
35a I DON’T KNOW I disagree – papers get guards not confused (9, three words)  
ID (papers) and KNOW (get) goes around (guards) an anagram of (… confused) NOT
37a ISOBAR In such a condition in one pub, indication of pressure? (6)  
SO (in such a condition) in I (one) and BAR (pub)
38a KABUKI Mikado’s core response to traditional medicine round country is entertainment for the Japanese (6)  
MiKAdo’s central letters (core) + BI (response to traditional medicine) round UK (country)
39a EVENING Late in the day, say, eating something poisonous (7)  
EG (say) around (eating) VENIN (something poisonous)
40a ETALON Measuring device certainly not recently returned (6)  
NO (certainly not) and LATE (recently) reversed (returned)
41a DIRECT Outspoken in portentous court (6)  
DIRE (portentous) + CT (court)
42a REBATE Cost with bill of exchange returned in refund (6)  
RATE (cost) containing (with … in) BE (bill of exchange) reversed (returned)
 
Down
1d JAGIR Neglected tax to land one’s load of liquor and [I]ran (5) I
JAG (one’s load of liquor) + IR (Iran)
2d WARMER We run round b[a]y fire perhaps (6) A
WE and R (run) round ARM (bay)
3d THINK [M]Use half of this printing material (5) M
Half of THis + INK (printing material)
4d TELEDU Indonesian inhabitant known to s[m]ell Dutch television to begin with (6) M
DU (Dutch) preceded by (… to begin with) TELE (television)
5d KIRN Spilt drink, dram’s initially gone, last chance for gr[a]in on Islay? (4) A
An anagram of (spilt) [d]RINK missing D (Dram’s initially gone)
6d COACHER Horse taking carriage to [s]mart’s slipped in corner (7) S
ACHE (to smart) is inserted into (slipped in) COR (corner)
7d BUMBLEBEE One maybe drinks in pinks, but[t] remain committed to old colour (9)  T
BUM (butt) + BE (remain) inserted into (committed to) BLEE (old colour)
8d ARALIA Clear a liar rob[e]s Ivy (6) E
CleAR A LIAr surrounds (robes) the answer
9d ÉTAGÈRE Place for objet d’art, French tie[r] rosette on the outside (7) R
ÉTAGE (French tier) + RosettE, outer letters (on the outside)
15d METRIC Master rice tang[o] cooked according to International standard (6) O
M (master) + an anagram of (… cooked) RICE and T (tango)
17d PANETTONE Fancy for Italian and French to per[f]use colour scheme (9) F
ET (and French) in (to perfuse) PANTONE (colour scheme)
19d ANTE Advance payment essentially wan[t]ed (4) T
The inner letters of (essentially) wANTEd
20d CASINO Betting [h]Ouse river base vanishes from churned up scenario (6) H
R (river) and E (base) leaves (vanishes from) an anagram of (churned up) SC[e]NA[r]IO
22d TARO I’m consumed by [i]slanders and hold forth endlessly for retraction (4) I
ORATe (hold forth) without the last letter (endlessly) reversed (for retraction)
23d TRAWLED Finally get green light having [s]wept for information (7) S
The last letter of (finally) geT + RAW (green) + LED (light)
25d PENDANT Long about to [c]lose – some hanging matter (7) C
PANT (long) around (about) END (to close)
27d TEASER Tr[o]y pain reliever tempting one (6) O
T (troy) + EASER (pain reliever)
29d HANKER Yearning fish ru[l]e having limited number (6) L
HAKE (fish) and R (rule) around (having limited) N (number)
30d RANULA When arising sing[l]e moonlike glandular cyst (6) L
On reversal (when arising) A (single) and LUNAR (moonlike)
32d STATE Stag[e]’s damaged antlers oddly round end of rut (5) E
An anagram of (damaged) AnTlErS, alternate letters (oddly), around (round) the last letter (end) of ruT
33d SWINE Pi[g] adding weight to function (5) G
We are inserting W into (adding weight to) SINE (function)
36d ORGY Gourd[e]’s dropped in bloody wine-fuelled revel (4) E
G (gourde) is moved downwards (dropped) in GORY (bloody)

 

5 comments on “Enigmatic Variations No. 1556: Limitations by Jaques”

  1. Hi Worworcrossol,

    If you have access to PressReader, either through your own account or via your library, you can access a facsimile of the paper through that. There is an option to print all or part of a page – I can’t remember the exact details, but will log in to check if needed.

    If you are happy for me to email you, I can help further.

  2. Hi Kitty
    As I am in Canada press reader is out so any kind of reply would be great, if it is not too much trouble.
    TIA
    Worworcrossol

  3. Enjoyed this lovely puzzle. I had no knowledge of the subject. I had *****T at 1 Across and this college from the letters. I assumed it was to do with Heriot Watt, but eventually got on the right track.

  4. Yes, very enjoyable; as is the setting blog that has appeared at Big Dave’s, where Jaques makes a salient point in a most entertaining way.

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