Search number: 005506512 (since the site opened, on Yom Kippur eve, Oct 12 2005)
Search duration: 0.003 seconds (cached)
Given search string: ^192 [Previous Page] [Next Page] [Random Page]
Options Turned On: [Regular Expression] [Beautified] [Highlight Matches] [Show FW Text] [Search in Fweet Elucidations]
Options Turned Off: [Ignore Case] [Ignore Accent] [Whole Words] [Natural] [Show Context] [Hide Elucidations] [Hide Summary] [Sort Alphabetically] [Sort Alphabetically from Search String] [Get Following] [Search in Finnegans Wake Text] [Also Search Related Shorthands] [Sans Serif]
Distances: [Text Search = 4 lines ] [NEAR Merge = 4 lines ]
Font Size:  60%  80%  100%  133%  166%  200%  250%  300%  400%  500%  600%  700%  800%  900%
Collection last updated: May 20 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 103

192.01the waters of his thought? Ever thought of that hereticalist Marcon
192.01+Chiniquy: The Priest, the Woman and the Confessional 234: 'Auricular confession originated with the early heretics, especially with Marcion... let us hear what the contemporary writers have to say on the question. "Certain women were in the habit of going to the heretic Marcion to confess their sins to him. But, as he was smitten with their beauty, and they loved him also, they abandoned themselves to sin, with him"'
192.01+mason
192.02and the two scissymaidies and how bulkily he shat the Ructions
192.02+Motif: Saucy sisters (*IJ*)
192.02+Colloquial sissy: sister
192.02+schism (heresy)
192.02+Motif: How Buckley shot the Russian General
192.02+Slang shot: poxed [.03]
192.03gunorrhal? Ever hear of that foxy, that lupo and that monkax
192.03+gonorrhoea
192.03+Aesop: The Fox, the Wolf and the Ape (fable)
192.03+Italian lupo: wolf
192.04and the virgin heir of the Morrisons, eh, blethering ape?
192.04+
192.05     Malingerer in luxury, collector general, what has Your Low-
192.05+VI.B.6.112j (r): 'luxury'
192.05+Lamy: Commentarium in Librum Geneseos I.258: (of Cain) 'Facultates autem domesticas magna pecuniarum vi ex rapinis et violentia amplificans, et ad luxuriam ac latrocinia familiares suos invitans, magister illis exstitit ad pravam vitæ institutionem' (Latin 'But as he enlarged the powers of his household by the great force of his money from looting and violence, and instigated his close comrades to extravagance and robberies, he set them up in a degenerate way of life' (Genesis 4:17))
192.05+Joyce's father worked for the Collector-General of Rates
192.05+Cluster: Lowness
192.06ness done in the mealtime with all the hamilkcars of cooked
192.06+meantime
192.06+Hamilcar: father of Hannibal
192.07vegetables, the hatfuls of stewed fruit, the suitcases of coddled
192.07+
192.08ales, the Parish funds, me schamer, man, that you kittycoaxed so
192.08+following the split in the Irish Parliamentary Party over Parnell's leadership, tensions arose between the two factions over the control of 'the Paris funds' (American support money held in trust in Paris), which continued even after Parnell's death, with Katharine O'Shea and the Parnellites blocking the release of the money to the anti-Parnellites
192.08+German schämen: be ashamed
192.08+schemer
192.08+Katharine O'Shea: Parnell's lover and later his wife (referred to as 'Kitty' by anti-Parnellites)
192.09flexibly out of charitable butteries by yowling heavy with a
192.09+VI.B.10.093k (r): 'buttery hatch' (only first word crayoned)
192.09+Daily Mail 5 Jan 1923, 6/5: 'Wayside Wines': 'Friends have travelled far to tase, with me, the nut-brown Audit, which flows from the buttery-hatch of Trinity, as precious as the learning that blossoms in her stately courts'
192.10hollow voice drop of your horrible awful poverty of mind so as
192.10+VI.B.6.116e (r): 'poverty of mind'
192.10+Times Literary Supplement 10 Apr 1919, 189/4: 'Modern Novels' (anonymous review of Joyce: A Portrait and Joyce: Ulysses (by Virginia Woolf)): 'for what reason a work of such originality yet fails to compare... with Youth or Jude the Obscure. It fails, one might say simply because of the comparative poverty of the writer's mind' (Deming: The Critical Heritage 126)
192.11you couldn't even pledge a crown of Thorne's to pawn a coat
192.11+Christ's crown of thorns
192.12off Trevi's and as how you was bad no end, so you was, so whelp
192.12+Christ's robe is supposedly preserved in Trèves Cathedral
192.12+so help you
192.13you Sinner Pitre and Sinner Poule, with the chicken's gape and
192.13+Saint Peter and Saint Paul (Motif: Paul/Peter)
192.13+French pitre: clown
192.13+French poule: hen
192.13+cock crow (Peter betrays Christ; also in William Shakespeare: Hamlet)
192.13+gape: disease of poultry
192.14pas mal de siècle, which, by the by, Reynaldo, is the ordinary
192.14+French pas mal de: a fair amount of
192.14+French pas mal de siècle: not a bad century
192.14+French siècle: century, age
192.14+Reynaldo: servant to Polonius in William Shakespeare: Hamlet; also one of the twelve peers of France
192.14+VI.B.6.116n (r): 'ordinary emetic'
192.14+Sporting Times 1 Apr 1922, 4: 'The Scandal of Ulysses' (review of Joyce: Ulysses by Aramis): 'it would also have the very simple effect of an ordinary emetic' (Deming: The Critical Heritage 194)
192.15emetic French for grenadier's drip. To let you have your plank
192.15+demotic
192.16and your bonewash (O the hastroubles you lost!), to give you
192.16+Hungarian has: belly [.22]
192.16+Hasdrubal: son-in-law of Hamilcar
192.16+roubles
192.16+cost
192.17your pound of platinum and a thousand thongs a year (O, you
192.17+phrase pound of flesh: a rightful but merciless debt owed (from William Shakespeare: The Merchant of Venice)
192.18were excruciated, in honour bound to the cross of your own
192.18+VI.B.14.044l (r): 'excruciated'
192.18+Kinane: St. Patrick 211: (of Jesus) 'amid the most excruciating tortures, shed His Precious Blood'
192.18+EHC (Motif: HCE)
192.18+Sydney Grundy: In Honour Bound (play, 1880)
192.19cruelfiction!) to let you have your Sarday spree and holinight sleep
192.19+crucifiction
192.19+Saturday
192.19+French Saint-Esprit: Holy Ghost
192.19+VI.B.14.023d (r): 'Mon souper dans mon ventre Je voudrais qu'il fût nuit que dimanche vînt demain et fête après demain'
192.19+Sauvé: Proverbes et Dictons de la Basse-Bretagne no. 37: 'Mon souper dans mon ventre je voudrais qu'il fût nuit, Que dimanche vint demain et fête après demain' (French 'My supper in my belly I wish it would be night, tomorrow Sunday and the day after a holiday') [.19-.22]
192.19+holiday
192.20(fame would come to you twixt a sleep and a wake) and leave to
192.20+William Shakespeare: King Lear I.2.15: 'Got 'tween asleep and wake'
192.20+proverb There is many a slip twixt the cup and the lip: nothing is certain until completed
192.20+(between the sleep at the end of Joyce: Ulysses and Joyce: Finnegans Wake)
192.21lie till Paraskivee and the cockcock crows for Danmark. (O
192.21+Parasceve: day of preparation for Jewish Sabbath, especially Good Friday
192.21+J.H. Paasikivi: 20th century Finnish diplomat and prime minister
192.21+William Shakespeare: Hamlet I.1.157: (of the ghost of the King of Denmark) 'It faded on the crowing of the cock'
192.22Jonathan, your estomach!) The simian has no sentiment secre-
192.22+VI.B.14.032i (r): 'estomaqué'
192.22+Dupont: Les Légendes du Mont-Saint-Michel 178: 'Guillaume Ridel exploitant, lui-même, l'hôtellerie de La Licorne, fut tout estomaqué quand il vit pénétrer chez lui la force publique' (French 'William Ridel, he himself making use of the services of the hotel La Licorne, was all flabbergasted when he saw the police enter his house')
192.22+French estomac: stomach [.16]
192.22+simian: apelike
192.22+(monkeys don't cry)
192.23tions but weep cataracts for all me, Pain the Shamman! Oft in
192.23+Shem the Penman
192.23+sham man
192.23+shaman
192.23+Thomas Moore: other works: National Airs: song Oft, in the Stilly Night
192.24the smelly night will they wallow for a clutch of the famished
192.24+Tennyson: other works: 'Break, Break, Break': 'But O for the touch of a vanish'd hand'
192.25hand, I say, them bearded jezabelles you hired to rob you, while
192.25+jezebel: a wicked, impudent woman (after Ahab's wife, Jezebel (I Kings 16-21, II Kings 9); called Jezabel in Douay-Rheims)
192.26on your sodden straw impolitely you encored (Airish and naw-
192.26+Irish arís: again
192.26+Irish na bac leis: Anglo-Irish naboclesh: pay no attention to him/it
192.27boggaleesh!) those hornmade ivory dreams you reved of the
192.27+Slang horn-mad: lecherous
192.27+according to ancient Greek belief, there were two gates of sleep, with true dreams passing through the gate of horn, false through the gate of ivory (Motif: true/false)
192.27+French rêve: dream
192.28Ruth you called your companionate, a beauty from the bible, of
192.28+obedience of Ruth (Ruth)
192.28+Joyce: Chamber Music XXI: 'His love is his companion'
192.29the flushpots of Euston and the hanging garments of Maryle-
192.29+the fleshpots of Egypt and the hanging gardens of Babylon [347.11]
192.29+Euston, Marylebone: London railway stations
192.30bone. But the dormer moonshee smiled selene and the light-
192.30+dormer: bedroom
192.30+moonshee: interpreter, secretary
192.30+Irish sídhe: Anglo-Irish shee: fairy
192.30+Greek Selene: moon-goddess
192.30+serene
192.30+German Scheinwerfer: headlamps, searchlights (literally 'light-thrower')
192.31throwers knickered: who's whinging we? Comport yourself,
192.31+snickered
192.32you inconsistency! Where is that little alimony nestegg against
192.32+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...Where is...} | {BMs (47474-57): ...Where are the little apples we lock up in the little saltbox? Where is...}
192.32+nest egg: money laid by
192.33our predictable rainy day? Is it not the fact (gainsay me, cake-
192.33+(previously taken cake) [170.22] [175.19]
192.33+phrase have one's cake and eat it
192.34eater!) that, while whistlewhirling your crazy elegies around
192.34+Macpherson: The Poems of Ossian II.302: Temora VIII: 'in the moss of years, then shall the traveller come, and whistling pass away' (by Cathmor's tomb)
192.34+Macpherson: The Poems of Ossian II.188: Temora II: 'the souls of the dead could not be happy, till their elegies were sung by a bard'
192.34+Gray's Elegy (Written in a Country Churchyard)
192.35Templetombmount joyntstone, (let him pass, pleasegood-
192.35+Temple Mount: Mount Zion in Jerusalem, site of David's tomb
192.35+Mountjoy
192.36jesusalem, in a bundle of straw, he was balbettised after hay-
192.36+Jesus
192.36+Jerusalem
192.36+Italian balbettare: to stutter (Motif: stuttering)
192.36+baptised
192.36+French bêtise: silliness; foolish act
192.36+Macpherson: The Poems of Ossian II.195n: Temora II:'Before the introduction of Christianity a name was not imposed upon any person, till he had distinguished himself by some remarkable action, from which his name should be derived'
192.36+proverb Make hay while the sun shines: make the most of a favourable situation while it lasts


  [Previous Page] [Next Page] [Random Page]



[Site Map] [Search Engine] search and display duration: 0.005 seconds