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Collection last updated: May 20 2024
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Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 154

157.01     And they viterberated each other, canis et coluber with the
157.01+German weiter: further
157.01+vituperated
157.01+Viterbo: papal residence in Italy (Cluster: Popes)
157.01+reverberated
157.01+berated
157.01+The Prophecies of St. Malachy no. 98: 'Canis et coluber': 'Dog and serpent' (Leo XII) (Cluster: Popes)
157.02wildest ever wielded since Tarriestinus lashed Pissasphaltium.
157.02+Wyndham Lewis: Tarr (1918)
157.02+tarry: composed of or covered in tar
157.02+tarry: to delay, to linger
157.02+last
157.02+The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. II, 'Asphalt', 768a: 'The solid or semi-solid kinds of bitumen (q.v.) were termed asphaltos by the Greeks; and by some ancient writers the name of pissasphaltum (pissa, pitch) was also sometimes employed' (from Greek pissa: tar, pitch)
157.03    — Unuchorn!
157.03+[[Speaker: Mookse]]
157.03+unicorn [156.25]
157.03+Italian Slang un corno! (expletive; literally 'a horn')
157.03+eunuch
157.03+Irish chorn: horn
157.03+Italian cornuto: horned, cuckold [.06]
157.04    — Ungulant!
157.04+[[Speaker: Gripes]]
157.04+ungulate: hoofed (from Latin ungula: hoof, claw)
157.04+ungallant
157.05    — Uvuloid!
157.05+[[Speaker: Mookse]]
157.05+Irish ubh: Latin ovum: egg
157.05+Latin uvula: grape; grape-like growth hanging from the soft palate
157.06    — Uskybeak!
157.06+[[Speaker: Gripes]]
157.06+Anglo-Irish usquebaugh: whiskey
157.06+Italian becco: beak, cuckold [.03]
157.07     And bullfolly answered volleyball.
157.07+papal bull (Cluster: Popes)
157.07+bull, ball
157.07+wilfully
157.07+folly, volley
157.07+VI.B.6.191c (b): 'Volley ball'
157.07+volubly
157.08     Nuvoletta in her lightdress, spunn of sisteen shimmers, was
157.08+{{Synopsis: I.6.3.G: [157.08-158.05]: Nuvoletta is alone above them — she is unable to get their attention}}
157.08+(NUVOLETTA: *I* - squirrel - time/space - cloud - nightdress - Irish/Celtic - stream - Princess - Brittany - love-sick - atheist)
157.08+Italian nuvoletta: a little cloud (*I*) [.24]
157.08+French nouvelles lettres: new literature
157.08+(dress of) light
157.08+nightdress
157.08+sister
157.08+Sistine Chapel in the Vatican (Cluster: Popes)
157.08+sixteen summers
157.09looking down on them, leaning over the bannistars and listening
157.09+banns: public notice of an intended marriage given in church (to allow the opportunity of objection)
157.09+banisters [159.08]
157.09+stars
157.10all she childishly could. How she was brightened when Should-
157.10+brightened [.12]
157.10+frightened
157.10+(Mookse, *V*)
157.10+shoulders up [.12]
157.10+G.R. Schjelderup: pseudonym used by Wyndham Lewis in a 1935 radio broadcast
157.11rups in his glaubering hochskied his welkinstuck and how she
157.11+German Glaube: belief [.12]
157.11+Czech hoch: boy
157.11+German Hochzeit: wedding
157.11+(raised sky-high his walkingstick) [155.23-.24]
157.11+Archaic welkin: sky
157.12was overclused when Kneesknobs on his zwivvel was makeact-
157.12+overcast [.10]
157.12+(Gripes, *C*)
157.12+knees [.10]
157.12+German Zweifel: doubt [.11]
157.12+drivel
157.12+making such a fool of himself
157.12+Slang acting the mick: playing the fool
157.13ing such a paulse of himshelp! She was alone. All her nubied
157.13+applause
157.13+Paul
157.13+balls
157.13+Thomas Moore: Irish Melodies: song 'Tis the Last Rose of Summer: 'All her lovely companions'
157.13+Italian nubi: clouds
157.13+nubile: (of a young woman) marriageable, of marriageable age
157.13+new bed
157.14companions were asleeping with the squirrels. Their mivver,
157.14+(ground squirrels hibernate five to six months of the year)
157.14+Slang mivvy: woman (derogatory); the landlady of a boarding-house
157.14+mother
157.15Mrs Moonan, was off in the Fuerst quarter scrubbing the back-
157.15+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Mrs Moonan...} | {Png: ...Mrs. Moonan...}
157.15+moon
157.15+German Fürst: prince
157.15+first quarter (of moon cycle)
157.15+German erst: first
157.16steps of Number 28. Fuvver, that Skand, he was up in Norwood's
157.16+(*Q*)
157.16+French février: February (has 28 days, normally; Motif: 28-29)
157.16+father
157.16+Danish skandinav: Scandinavian
157.16+Danish skandale: scandal
157.16+Norwood: district of London
157.17sokaparlour, eating oceans of Voking's Blemish. Nuvoletta lis-
157.17+soda parlour
157.17+Viking's blancmange
157.17+relish
157.18tened as she reflected herself, though the heavenly one with his
157.18+HCE (Motif: HCE)
157.19constellatria and his emanations stood between, and she tried all
157.19+constellations
157.19+Latria: the supreme worship due to God alone (from Greek latria: adoration)
157.19+Greek tria: three
157.19+in Kabbalah, the ten Sephiroth are referred to as emanations of Ain-Soph (or God) [261.23]
157.20she tried to make the Mookse look up at her (but he was fore too
157.20+Motif: ear/eye (look, seeing, hear, auricular, heed) [.20-.23]
157.20+far
157.21adiaptotously farseeing) and to make the Gripes hear how coy
157.21+Greek adiaptôtos: infallible (Cluster: Popes)
157.21+far-sighted
157.22she could be (though he was much too schystimatically auricular
157.22+The Prophecies of St. Malachy no. 36: 'Corvus schismaticus': 'Schismatical crow' (Nicholas V, antipope) (Cluster: Popes)
157.22+schismatically: in a manner promoting or taking part in a schism (a split within a group, especially within a Christian church); divisively
157.22+systematically
157.22+Old Catholics changed doctrine on auricular confession
157.23about his ens to heed her) but it was all mild's vapour moist. Not
157.23+Latin ens: a being
157.23+The Prophecies of St. Malachy no. 12: 'Ensis laurentii': 'Sword of Lawrence' (Gregory VIII) (Cluster: Popes)
157.23+William Shakespeare: Love's Labour's Lost
157.24even her feignt reflection, Nuvoluccia, could they toke their
157.24+feigned
157.24+faint
157.24+(reflection of cloud in water)
157.24+Italian nuvoluccia: a little cloud (*J*) [.08]
157.24+(a cloud of white smoke indicates the election of a new pope) (Cluster: Popes) [.26-.28] [.32]
157.24+Lucia Joyce: Joyce's daughter
157.24+Greek Theotokos: Mother of God (the Virgin Mary)
157.24+take
157.25gnoses off for their minds with intrepifide fate and bungless
157.25+Greek gnosis: knowledge
157.25+noses
157.25+The Prophecies of St. Malachy no. 105: 'Fides intrepida': 'Intrepid faith' (Piux XI, pope 1922-1939) (Cluster: Popes)
157.25+boundless curiosity
157.26curiasity, were conclaved with Heliogobbleus and Commodus
157.26+curia: Papal court (Cluster: Popes)
157.26+a papal electoral conclave of cardinals elects a new pope (Cluster: Popes) [.24] [.26-.28] [.32]
157.26+HCE (Motif: HCE)
157.26+Elagabalus: 3rd century Roman emperor
157.26+Commodus: 2nd century Roman emperor
157.27and Enobarbarus and whatever the coordinal dickens they did
157.27+Enobarbus: one of the names of Nero, 1st century Roman emperor
157.27+Enobarbus: traitorous character in William Shakespeare: Antony and Cleopatra
157.27+barbarous
157.27+Colloquial phrase whatever the dickens: whatever (intensified)
157.27+cardinal deacons preside over various functions in a papal electoral conclave (Cluster: Popes) [.24] [.26-.28] [.32]
157.28as their damprauch of papyrs and buchstubs said. As if that was
157.28+inconclusive ballots failing to establish a two-thirds majority in a papal electoral conclave are burned in damp straw to produce dark smoke (Cluster: Popes) [.24] [.26-.28] [.32]
157.28+Budge: The Book of the Dead, introduction, p. xxii: 'both prayers and ceremonies must have been traditional and were, no doubt, primarily designed to protect the dead from the attacks of wild animals, damp-rot, dry-rot, and decay'
157.28+German Dampf: steam
157.28+German Rauch: smoke
157.28+papyrus (mentioned many times in Budge: The Book of the Dead)
157.28+papers and books
157.28+German Buchstaben: letters (of the alphabet)
157.29their spiration! As if theirs could duiparate her queendim! As if
157.29+Latin spiratio: breath
157.29+aspiration
157.29+duplicate
157.29+separate
157.29+queendom
157.30she would be third perty to search on search proceedings! She
157.30+phrase be party to: be involved in
157.30+third party
157.30+Anglo-Irish perty: pretty (often spelled 'purty')
157.30+pert: (of young people) forward in speech or behaviour, saucy, cheeky
157.30+search party
157.30+such and such (Motif: So and so)
157.31tried all the winsome wonsome ways her four winds had taught
157.31+four winds: the four cardinal points of the compass (*X*; Motif: 4 cardinal points)
157.32her. She tossed her sfumastelliacinous hair like la princesse de la
157.32+Vatican Italian sfumata: the dark smoke indication an inconclusive ballot in a papal electoral conclave (from Italian sfumato: hazy) (Cluster: Popes) [.24] [.26-.28]
157.32+Italian stella: star
157.32+French la princesse de la Petite Bretagne: the princess of Brittany (Iseult of Brittany, Tristan's wife, was one)
157.33Petite Bretagne and she rounded her mignons arms like Mrs
157.33+French mignon: dainty
157.33+Iseult of the White Hands: another name for Iseult of Brittany
157.33+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Mrs Cornwallis-West...} | {Png: ...Mrs. Cornwallis-West...}
157.33+VI.B.18.277l (b): 'Mr Cornwallis West' (on a page containing material from Quiller Couch: Cornwall's Wonderland: 'The Story of Sir Tristram and La Belle Iseult')
157.33+(Iseult of Brittany, since Tristan was from Lyonesse in West Cornwall)
157.33+Mrs Cornwallis-West (Mary 'Patsy' Fitzpatrick, wife of William Cornwallis-West and mother of George Cornwallis-West): 19th-20th century Irish-born British socialite and a beauty whose portrait was often painted (also, the mistress of the future King Edward VII when she was sixteen and he thirty-one)
157.33+Mrs Cornwallis-West (Lady Randolph Churchill, first wife of George Cornwallis-West): 19th-20th century British lady and the mother of Winston Churchill
157.33+Mrs Cornwallis-West (Mrs Patrick Campbell, second wife of George Cornwallis-West): 19th-20th century British actress and the author of Campbell (Cornwallis-West): My Life and Some Letters
157.34Cornwallis-West and she smiled over herself like the beauty of
157.34+
157.35the image of the pose of the daughter of the queen of the Em-
157.35+Iseult came from Ireland
157.36perour of Irelande and she sighed after herself as were she born
157.36+


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