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Collection last updated: | May 20 2024 |
Engine last updated: | Feb 18 2024 |
Finnegans Wake lines: | 51 |
Elucidations found: | 131 |
272.01 | ing. Hoots fromm, we're globing. Why hidest |
---|---|
–272.01+ | VI.B.33.044b (r): 'hoots fromm (who it's from)' |
–272.01+ | Scottish hoot mon! (expressing impatience or dislike) |
–272.01+ | German fromm: pious |
–272.01+ | German wir glauben: we believe |
272.02 | thou hinder thy husband his name? Leda, Lada, |
–272.02+ | German hinter: behind |
–272.02+ | Leda was seduced by Zeus as a swan |
–272.02+ | nursery rhyme Mary, Mary, Quite Contrary: 'Mary, Mary, quite contrary, how does your garden grow?' |
272.03 | aflutter-afraida, so does your girdle grow! |
–272.03+ | (DESTINY) [271.R11] |
272.04 | Willed without witting, whorled without |
–272.04+ | hymn Glory Be: (ends) 'world without end. Amen' |
272.05 | aimed. Pappapassos, Mammamanet, warwhets- |
–272.05+ | (POLAR PRINCIPLES) [271.R12] |
–272.05+ | Browning: Pippa Passes |
–272.05+ | Latin mamma manet: mother remains |
–272.05+ | where what's what |
272.06 | wut and whowitswhy.1 But it's tails for |
–272.06+ | German Wut: rage, anger |
–272.06+ | (penises) |
–272.06+ | VI.B.33.050d (r): '— for men & titties for totties' |
272.07 | toughs and titties for totties and come |
–272.07+ | Taff (Motif: Butt/Taff) [.08] |
–272.07+ | Joyce: Ulysses.18.536: 'titties' (breasts) |
–272.07+ | Dublin Slang totties: girls; prostitutes |
–272.07+ | VI.B.33.116b (r): 'come buckets full' |
–272.07+ | song Come, Lasses and Lads |
272.08 | buckets come bats till deeleet.2 |
–272.08+ | combat |
–272.08+ | Butt [.07] |
–272.08+ | daylight |
272.09 | Dark ages clasp the daisy roots, Stop, if you |
–272.09+ | {{Synopsis: II.2.3.D: [272.09-275.02] [272.F03-275.F01] [272.L02-275.L02] [272.R01-272.R08]: addressing the boys — lessons learned from history}} |
–272.09+ | Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...Dark...} | {BMs (47478-197): ...From the fore of them till the yore of them. Coal and culm, shale and slack. Dark...} |
–272.09+ | Variants: elucidations for variant: Motif: The four of them (*X*) ^^^ culm: slack: small or refuse coal ^^^ shale: a type of rock, often overlying a coal formation (in geology, some specific strata or series of shale are also called culm) |
–272.09+ | VI.B.33.074b (r): 'asp' |
–272.09+ | (Cleopatra said to have committed suicide by having an asp bite her) [.11] |
–272.09+ | today's |
–272.09+ | VI.B.33.125b (r): 'daisy roots' |
–272.09+ | Rhyming Slang daisy roots: boots |
–272.09+ | Motif: Stop, please stop... [.09-.14] |
272.10 | are a sally of the allies, hot off Minnowaurs |
–272.10+ | VI.B.33.074e (r): 'a sally' |
–272.10+ | sally: a rush of troops from a besieged position upon an enemy |
–272.10+ | song Sally in Our Alley |
–272.10+ | hot on |
–272.10+ | VI.C.2.158b (o): 'Minoan' |
–272.10+ | Heard: Narcissus, An Anatomy of Clothes 36: 'with the rise of the Minoan culture we enter a world of vigorous fashion' |
–272.10+ | minotaurs |
–272.10+ | mini-wars [270.30-.31] |
–272.10+ | man-of-war: a naval vessel equipped for battle [.11] |
–272.10+ | manoeuvres |
272.11 | and naval actiums, picked engagements and |
–272.11+ | VI.B.33.067f (r): 'naval actum' |
–272.11+ | naval Battle of Actium (Octavius against Mark Antony and Cleopatra), 31 B.C. [.09-.12] |
–272.11+ | actions |
272.12 | banks of rowers. Please stop if you're a |
–272.12+ | VI.B.33.073e (r): 'banks of oars' |
–272.12+ | bank: a rank or tier of oars or oarsmen (in reference to ancient galleys) [.11] |
–272.12+ | flowers |
–272.12+ | absent-minded |
–272.12+ | Motif: alphabet sequence: ABC |
272.13 | B.C. minding missy, please do. But should |
–272.13+ | Before Christ |
272.14 | you prefer A.D. stepplease. And if you miss |
–272.14+ | Anno Domini |
–272.14+ | step at ease |
–272.14+ | mess |
–272.14+ | misadventure |
272.15 | with a venture it serves you girly well glad. |
–272.15+ | two of Joyce's poems were published in The Venture in 1904 |
–272.15+ | VI.B.33.126g (r): 'serves you glad' |
–272.15+ | Colloquial phrase serves you jolly well glad: you indeed got what you deserved for your misbehaviour (instensified) |
272.16 | But, holy Janus, I was forgetting the Blitzen- |
–272.16+ | Holy Jaysus! |
–272.16+ | Janus: two-faced Roman god of doors and beginnings |
–272.16+ | German blitzen: to have lightning |
272.17 | kopfs! Here, Hengegst and Horsesauce, take |
–272.17+ | German Kopf: head |
–272.17+ | Hengist and Horsa: 5th century brothers who led the Saxon invasion of England |
–272.17+ | Old English hengest: German Hengst: male horse, stallion |
–272.17+ | egg and sauce |
–272.17+ | VI.B.33.015f (r): 'put head in tub & take it out' |
–272.17+ | The Book of the Thousand Nights and a Night, Supplemental Nights, vol. VII, 121n: The Tale of the Warlock and the Young Cook of Baghdad: 'The Shaykh... showing... certain specious miracles... He then called for a tub, stripped the King to a zone girding his loins and made him dip his head into the water. Then came the adventures as in the following tale. When after a moment's space these ended, the infuriated Sultan gave orders to behead the Shaykh, who also plunged his head into the tub' |
272.18 | your heads3 out of that taletub! And leave |
–272.18+ | Swift: A Tale of a Tub |
–272.18+ | Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...taletub! And...} | {Png: ...taletub. And...} |
272.19 | your hinnyhennyhindyou! It's haunted. The |
–272.19+ | hinny: offspring of stallion and she-ass |
–272.19+ | Houyhnhnms: a race of intelligent horses in Swift: Gulliver's Travels |
–272.19+ | Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...hinnyhennyhindyou! It's...} | {Png: ...hinnyhennyhindyou. It's...} |
–272.19+ | HCE (Motif: HCE) |
272.20 | chamber. Of errings. Whoan, tug, trace, |
–272.20+ | German erringen: to win, to gain |
–272.20+ | one, two, three |
272.21 | stirrup! It is distinctly understouttered that, |
–272.21+ | start up |
–272.21+ | VI.B.3.090c (b): 'it is distinctly understood' |
–272.21+ | stuttered (Motif: stuttering) |
272.22 | sense you threehandshighs put your twofoot- |
–272.22+ | since |
–272.22+ | horse measured in hands |
–272.22+ | Motif: 2&3 |
–272.22+ | Motif: head/foot (foot, pate) |
272.23 | large timepates in that dead wash of Lough |
–272.23+ | (horses put heads in trough) |
–272.23+ | timepiece |
–272.23+ | templates |
–272.23+ | Archaic pate: head |
–272.23+ | [004.22] |
–272.23+ | VI.C.2.019j (g): 'Lough Murph : Dead Sea' === VI.B.2.017i ( ): 'Lough Neagh = Dead Sea' (i.e. the result of a mistranscription; according to legend, there is a submerged city at the bottom of Lough Neagh) |
–272.23+ | Foote: Bible Romances 89: Lot's Wife: 'beneath the waters of the Dead Sea are thought to lie the Cities of the Plain' |
272.24 | Murph and until such time pace one and the |
–272.24+ | Latin pace: by leave of |
272.25 | same Messherrn the grinning statesmen, Brock |
–272.25+ | German Herrn: gentlemen |
–272.25+ | German Brocken: crumb |
–272.25+ | Joyce's father was the secretary of the United Liberal Club in Dublin during the 1880 general election, when the Liberal candidates, Maurice Brookes and Dr Robert Dyer Lyons, ousted the Conservatives, Sir Arthur Guinness and James Stirling (mentioned in Ellmann: James Joyce 16-17) |
272.26 | and Leon, have shunted the grumbling |
–272.26+ | Leon Trotsky [.27] |
272.27 | coundedtouts, Starlin and Ser Artur Ghinis. |
–272.27+ | counted-outs (losers) |
–272.27+ | candidates |
–272.27+ | Joseph Stalin [.26] |
–272.27+ | Welsh ser: stars |
–272.27+ | Guinness Brewery |
272.28 | Foamous homely brew, bebattled by bottle, |
–272.28+ | foam (on ale) |
–272.28+ | famous |
–272.28+ | home brew |
–272.28+ | bottled by |
272.29 | gageure de guegerre.4 Bull igien bear and |
–272.29+ | French gageure: wager |
–272.29+ | daguerreotype |
–272.29+ | French guerre: war |
–272.29+ | Motif: bear/bull (twice) |
–272.29+ | against |
272.30 | then bearagain bulligan. Gringrin gringrin. |
–272.30+ | against |
–272.30+ | again |
–272.30+ | (Motif: By the Magazine Wall, zinzin, zinzin) |
272.31 | Staffs varsus herds and bucks vursus barks. |
–272.31+ | Staffordshire versus Hertfordshire |
–272.31+ | varsal: universal |
–272.31+ | Buckinghamshire versus Berkshire |
272.F01 | 1 What's that, ma'am? says I. |
–272.F01+ | song The Goat: '"What's that, ma'm?", says I' |
–272.F01+ | Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...that, ma'am? says...} | {Png: ...that ma'am, says...} |
272.F02 | 2 As you say yourself. |
–272.F02+ | |
272.F03 | 3 That's the lethemuse but it washes off. |
–272.F03+ | Lethe river |
–272.F03+ | litmus |
272.F04 | 4 Where he fought the shessock of his stimmstammer and we caught the |
–272.F04+ | shellshock |
–272.F04+ | German Stimme: voice; vote |
–272.F04+ | stammer (Motif: stuttering) |
272.F05 | pepettes of our lovelives. |
–272.F05+ | Swift: Ppt |
272.L01 | Pige pas. |
–272.L01+ | French Slang pige pas: I don't understand |
272.L02 | |
–272.L02+ | notes: B, C, A, D [.13-.14] |
272.L03 | Seidlitz powther |
–272.L03+ | Seidlitz powder: a laxative |
272.L04 | for slogan |
–272.L04+ | |
272.L05 | plumpers. |
–272.L05+ | |
272.L06 | Hoploits and |
–272.L06+ | hoplite: heavily armed foot soldier of ancient Greece |
–272.L06+ | Motif: Up, guards, and at them! |
272.L07 | atthems. |
–272.L07+ | |
272.R01 | PANOPTICAL |
–272.R01+ | panoptical: pertaining to everything at once |
272.R02 | PURVIEW OF |
–272.R02+ | purview: scope of a scheme |
272.R03 | POLITICAL |
–272.R03+ | |
272.R04 | PROGRESS |
–272.R04+ | |
272.R05 | AND THE |
–272.R05+ | |
272.R06 | FUTURE PRE- |
–272.R06+ | future, present, past (Motif: tenses) |
272.R07 | SENTATION |
–272.R07+ | |
272.R08 | OF THE PAST. |
–272.R08+ | |
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