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Collection last updated: May 20 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 66
Elucidations found: 128

262.01anyway, the decemt man? Easy, calm your
262.01+Latin decem: ten [261.23] [261.27] [261.31]
262.01+decent
262.01+ECH (Motif: HCE)
262.02haste! Approach to lead our passage!
262.02+ALP (Motif: ALP)
262.02+ATLOP (Motif: anagram of 'Plato')
262.02+VI.C.2.035b (g): === VI.B.2.035i ( ): 'passage = death'
262.02+Maitland: Life and Legends of St. Martin of Tours 72: 'One year, when the Festival of the Saint's "Passage" (or passing into eternity) fell on a Saturday'
262.03This bridge is upper.
262.03+{{Synopsis: II.2.1.C: [262.03-262.19] [262.F01-262.F07] [262.L01-262.L09] [262.R01-262.R06]: Chapelizod — at the tavern door}}
262.03+Thom's Directory of Ireland/Dublin, Chapelizod section: 'Chapelizod, a village partly in Palmerstown parish, Uppercross barony, but chiefly in the parish of the same name, Castleknock barony' (Chapelizod)
262.04Cross.
262.04+
262.05Thus come to castle.
262.05+
262.06Knock.1
262.06+
262.07A password, thanks.
262.07+
262.08Yes, pearse.
262.08+Patrick Pearse: 19th-20th century Irish nationalist, one of the leaders of the 1916 Easter Rising, executed shortly after
262.08+Persse (Persse O'Reilly) [.10]
262.08+please
262.09Well, all be dumbed!
262.09+I'll be damned!
262.10O really?2
262.10+O'Reilly [.08]
262.11Hoo cavedin earthwight
262.11+HCE (Motif: HCE)
262.11+who
262.12At furscht kracht of thunder.3
262.12+German Furcht: fear
262.12+first crash of thunder (according to Vico, Jove's thunderbolts terrified early giants and sent them in fear into caves, giving rise to civilisation)
262.12+German kracht: crashes
262.12+Dutch kracht: force, strength
262.13When shoo, his flutterby,
262.13+she
262.13+Jespersen: Language, its Nature, Development and Origin 150 (VIII.5): ''Marrowskying' or 'Hospital Greek' transfers the initial letters of words, as... flutterby for 'butterfly''
262.14Was netted and named.4
262.14+
262.15Erdnacrusha, requiestress, wake em!
262.15+Ardnacrusha, County Limerick: the site of the first hydro-electric station of the Shannon scheme grid (and subject of much boasting in the 1930s)
262.15+German Erde: earth
262.15+prayer Prayer for the Dead: 'Requiem aeternam dona eis Domine, et lux perpetua luceat eis' (Latin 'Eternal rest grant unto them, O Lord, and let perpetual light shine upon them') [.15-.17]
262.16And let luck's puresplutterall lucy at
262.16+ALP (Motif: ALP)
262.16+Saint Lucia: patron saint of eyesight [.L05]
262.17ease!5
262.17+
262.18To house as wise fool ages builded.
262.18+Nicholas of Cusa: Of Learned Ignorance (philosophical treatise)
262.19Sow byg eat.6
262.19+Motif: So be it
262.19+Joyce: A Portrait V: 'Ireland is the old sow that eats her farrow'
262.19+Danish byg!: build!
262.19+Danish byg: barley
262.20     Staplering to tether to, steppingstone to
262.20+{{Synopsis: II.2.1.D: [262.20-263.30] [262.F08-263.F08] [262.L10-263.L06] [262.R07-262.R14]: inside the tavern — the publican}}
262.20+(ring to thether horse, stone to stand on while mounting it)
262.21mount by, as the Boote's at Pickardstown.
262.21+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...by, as...} | {BMs (47478-159): ...by; and coach house entrance as...}
262.21+Variants: elucidations for variant: CHE (Motif: HCE)
262.21+Boot Inn, Pickardstown, County Dublin
262.21+Boötes: a constellation in the northern sky
262.21+skim-milk: milk with the cream skimmed off
262.22And that skimmelk steed still in the ground-
262.22+Danish skimmel: white-grey horse
262.22+throughout the 19th and early 20th century, having a white horse statuette (a symbol of King William III of Orange's victory at the Battle of the Boyne) in the fan-light above one's door was common in Dublin, initially among loyalists, but later also among those with no political affiliation (Motif: white horse) [.23]
262.22+elk
262.22+stood still
262.23loftfan. As over all. Or be these wingsets leaned
262.23+Obsolete loft: a floor in a house (hence, ground floor)
262.23+fan-light: a fan-shaped window over a door (especially the front door)
262.23+Dutch overal: everywhere
262.24to the outwalls, beastskin trophies of booth
262.24+outwards
262.24+VI.C.2.134a (o): 'skin of beast at tomb'
262.24+Schiller: Tantalus or The Future of Man 2: 'To consult the oracle of a dead hero, it was, I knew, only necessary to undergo the process of 'incubation,' a sort of camping out on his tomb, in the skin of a sacrificial beast'
262.24+both
262.25of Baws the balsamboards?7 Burials be bally-
262.25+Irish bás: death
262.25+Ballyhoura Mountains, County Cork
262.26houraised! So let Bacchus e'en call! Inn inn!
262.26+Motif: By the Magazine Wall, zinzin, zinzin
262.26+Dublin (double inn)
262.27Inn inn! Where. The babbers ply the pen.
262.27+children's game 'The farmer's in his den, The farmer's in his den, He I Hedy Ho, the farmer's in his den'
262.27+Dialect babbies: babies
262.27+(doing homework)
262.28The bibbers drang the den. The papplicom,
262.28+bibber: steady drinker
262.28+German drang: have entered, have come through
262.28+German Drang: urge, impulse
262.28+drink
262.28+Papli: Milly's nickname for Bloom in Joyce: Ulysses
262.29the pubblicam he's turning tin for ten. From
262.29+publican: tavern-keeper; toll-collector
262.29+Anglo-Irish Pronunciation tin: ten
262.29+(money)
262.F01     1 Yussive smirte and ye mermon answerth from his beelyingplace below
262.F01+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Yussive...} | {Png: ...yussive...}
262.F01+VI.B.45.148b (o): 'jussive'
262.F01+Lévy-Bruhl: L'Expérience Mystique et les Symboles chez les Primitifs 286: (of physical mimicry among the Nagas of India aimed at improving the upcoming harvest) 'Cette mimique est, si l'on peut dire, un indicatif en acte. Il tient la place d'un optatif-jussif, qui oblige le fait qu'il énonce à se réaliser' (French 'This mimicry is, so to speak, an indicative in action. It takes the place of an optative-jussive, which compels the deed it declares to come true')
262.F01+jussive: a grammatical mood of verbs for commanding or issuing orders
262.F01+Joseph Smith founded the Mormon religious movement [263.06]
262.F01+you're so smart
262.F01+merman
262.F01+Werner: Brigham Young 350: (of Mormon polygamy) 'Most of Brigham Young's wives lived together in two large houses, the Lion House and the Bee-Hive' (bee lying place (i.e. beehive); lying place (i.e. conjugal bed); lion's place (i.e. lion house); the beehive is a symbol strongly associated with Mormonism)
262.F01+VI.B.45.134d (o): 'bury below tidemark'
262.F01+Mawer: The Vikings 89: 'Among the settlers in Iceland who came from the West were many Christians, and Auðr herself gave orders at her death that she should be buried on the sea-shore below the tide-mark, rather than lie in unhallowed ground'
262.F01+beeline: direct route, straight line
262.F01+bellying: bulging out, swelling
262.F02the tightmark, Gotahelv!
262.F02+VI.B.45.134h (o): 'Gotaelv (3 Ks)'
262.F02+Mawer: The Vikings 96: 'an important market was held periodically at Bohuslän on the Götaelv, at a place were the boundaries of the three northern kingdoms met' (i.e. Denmark, Norway and Sweden)
262.F02+Göta älv: river, Sweden
262.F02+go to hell!
262.F02+God, help
262.F03     2 O Evol, kool in the salg and ees how Dozi pits what a drows er.
262.F03+O love, look in the glass and see who Izod tips with a sword (mirror-like; Motif: backwards)
262.F03+O love, look in the glass and see how Izod tips what words are (mirror-like; Motif: backwards)
262.F03+Danish salg: sale
262.F03+drawers
262.F03+trouser
262.F04     3 A goodrid croven in a tynwalled tub.
262.F04+VI.B.45.137i (o): 'a Godred crovan'
262.F04+Mawer: The Vikings 121: (of Dublin) 'From 1078-94 it was under the rule of the great conqueror Godred Crovan from Man' (i.e. Isle of Man)
262.F04+good riddance
262.F04+VI.B.45.137j (o): 'tynwalled'
262.F04+Mawer: The Vikings 115: (of the Isle of Man) 'The chief executive and legislative authority in the island (after the Governor) is the Tynwald Court'
262.F04+tin
262.F05     4 Apis amat aram. Luna legit librum. Pulla petit pascua.
262.F05+ALP (Motif: ALP)
262.F05+Latin Apis amat aram. Luna legit librum. Pulla petit pascua.: Bee loves altar. Moon reads book. Chick seeks pastures.
262.F05+Apis: sacred bull of Memphis, begotten by ray of light from moon, and drowned when aged twenty-eight, in imitation of a lunar cycle (Motif: 28-29)
262.F05+VI.C.2.106a (o): === VI.B.2.157k ( ): 'Luna legit librum'
262.F05+Graves: Irish Literary and Musical Studies 167: 'Dr. Joyce's Irish Wonder Book': (comparing the unremarkable wonders of Wales to the exciting ones of Ireland) 'What are these and pellet-making partridges and a self-acting sickle and a book-reading moon and even a cart-loading pig to an island of red-hot animals'
262.F05+Spanish Pascua: Passover; Easter; Christmas; Twelfthday; Whitsun
262.F06     5 And after dinn to shoot the shades.
262.F06+after dinner
262.F06+shut
262.F07     6 Says blistered Mary Achinhead to beautifed Tummy Tullbutt.
262.F07+blessed
262.F07+Mary Akenhead founded Irish Sisters of Charity
262.F07+beatified
262.F07+Matt Talbot: 20th century Dublin ascetic; always entered churches on his 'tummy'
262.F08     7 Begge. To go to Begge. To go to Begge and to be sure to reminder
262.F08+[058.16-.17]
262.F08+Danish begge: both
262.F08+VI.C.2.051d (g): === VI.B.2.056h ( ): 'to go to Bigge' ('i' uncertain in the B notebook, may be an 'e')
262.F08+Jespersen: Language, its Nature, Development and Origin 300 (XV.14): 'There is also a peculiar class of roundabout expressions in which the speaker avoids the regular word, but hints at it in a covert way by using some other word, generally a proper name, which bears a resemblance to it... Instead of saying "I want to go to bed," he will say, "I am for Bedfordshire"'
262.F08+remain in bed
262.F09Begge. Goodbeg, buggey Begge.
262.F09+goodbye
262.L01Swing the banjo,
262.L01+Downing: Digger Dialects 10: 'BANJO — A shovel. SWING THE BANJO — Dig' (World War I Slang)
262.L01+Motif: alliteration (b)
262.L02bantams, bounce-
262.L02+Downing: Digger Dialects 10: 'BANTAM — A short man' (World War I Slang)
262.L02+Downing: Digger Dialects 13: 'BOUNCE THE BALL — To assert oneself' (World War I Slang)
262.L03the-baller's
262.L03+
262.L04blown to fook.
262.L04+Downing: Digger Dialects 12: 'BLOW-TO-FOOK — Shatter to fragments' (World War I Slang)
262.L05Thsight near
262.L05+
262.L06left me eyes when
262.L06+
262.L07I seen her put
262.L07+
262.L08thounce otay
262.L08+the ounce of tea in the pot
262.L08+Anglo-Irish tay: tea (reflecting pronunciation)
262.L09ithpot.
262.L09+
262.L10Quartandwds.
262.L10+
262.L11Tickets for the
262.L11+(publican makes money on raffles)
262.L12Tailwaggers
262.L12+Slang wagtail: prostitute
262.L13Terrierpuppy
262.L13+
262.L14Raffle.
262.L14+
262.R01PROBA-
262.R01+
262.R02POSSIBLE
262.R02+
262.R03PROLEGO-
262.R03+prolegomena: preliminary discourses
262.R04MENA TO
262.R04+
262.R05IDEAREAL
262.R05+ideal
262.R05+sidereal
262.R05+real
262.R06HISTORY.
262.R06+
262.R07GNOSIS OF
262.R07+gnosis: special knowledge of spiritual mysteries (from Greek gnosis: knowledge)
262.R08PRECREATE
262.R08+precreate [605.05]
262.R09DETERMINA-
262.R09+
262.R10TION.
262.R10+
262.R11AGNOSIS OF
262.R11+
262.R12POSTCREATE
262.R12+postcreate [605.08]
262.R13DETER-
262.R13+determinism: doctrine of necessary causal chain determining everything
262.R14MINISM.
262.R14+


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