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Collection last updated: Apr 6 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 58
Elucidations found: 120

282.01     With sobs for his job, with tears
282.01+William Shakespeare: Julius Caesar III.2.26-28: 'There is tears for his love, joy for his fortune, honour for his valour, and death for his ambition'
282.02for his toil, with horror for his squalor
282.02+
282.03but with pep for his perdition,1 lo, the
282.03+VI.B.3.064d (o): 'Lo, the poor crieth'
282.03+The Book of Common Prayer: The Psalms: Psalms 34:6-11: 'Lo the poor crieth, and the Lord heareth him: yea, and saveth him out of all his troubles... Come ye children, and hearken unto me: I will teach you the fear of the Lord' (also used as the text for the 'Come, Ye Children' tenor aria from The Prodigal Son, an oratorio by Arthur Sullivan (of Gilbert and Sullivan fame), first performed in 1869 by Sims Reeves (of Pearce: Sims Reeves, Fifty Years of Music in England))
282.04boor plieth as the laird hireth him.
282.04+boor: ill-bred rustic, rude fellow (Obsolete peasant)
282.04+ply: (of a boatman, cabman, porter, etc.) to wait at a certain place for hire (Archaic ply: to work diligently)
282.04+Archaic plougheth: (he) ploughs, tills the ground
282.04+as the... hireth him [590.18-.19]
282.04+Scottish laird: a landowner, a landed noble
282.05     Boon on begyndelse.
282.05+{{Synopsis: II.2.8.A: [282.05-286.02] [282.F02-285.F09] [282.L02-285.L07] [282.R05-282.R14]: from counting — to arithmetic and algebra}}
282.05+Archaic boon: prayer
282.05+Danish begyndelse: beginning
282.05+Greek gyne: woman, female
282.06     At maturing daily gloryaims!2
282.06+Latin Ad Majorem Dei Gloriam: For the Greater Glory of God (Jesuit motto; at Belvedere College and other Jesuit schools, pupils put the letters A.M.D.G. at the head of essays) [.F02]
282.07     A flink dab for a freck dive and a stern poise
282.07+German flink: quick
282.07+Scottish freck: quick
282.07+Motif: Swift/Sterne
282.08for a swift pounce was frankily at the manual
282.08+Frank [302.31] [303.30]
282.08+(counting on fingers)
282.09arith sure enough which was the bekase he
282.09+arithmetic
282.09+Mark Twain: Huckleberry Finn 22: 'sure-enough queens'
282.09+Mark Twain: Huckleberry Finn 8: 'bekase' (five times in Mark Twain: Huckleberry Finn)
282.09+because
282.10knowed from his cradle, no bird better, why
282.10+knew
282.10+Rudyard Kipling: Captains Courageous, ch. IX: 'Steer he can — no boy better'
282.11his fingures were giving him whatfor to fife
282.11+fingers
282.11+figures
282.11+given
282.11+phrase giving him what for
282.11+fight
282.11+five (fingers to count with)
282.12with. First, by observation, there came boko
282.12+(naming fingers) [.12-.15]
282.12+Slang boko: nose
282.12+Danish buhko: moocow
282.13and nigh him wigworms and nigh him tittlies
282.13+
282.14and nigh him cheekadeekchimple and nigh
282.14+
282.15him pickpocket with pickpocketpumb, pick-
282.15+(five fingers) [.15-.17]
282.15+thumb
282.16pocketpoint, pickpocketprod, pickpocket-
282.16+(index finger)
282.17promise and upwithem. Holy Joe in lay
282.17+(ring finger)
282.18Eden.3 And anyhows always after them the
282.18+
282.19dimpler he weighed the fonder fell he of his
282.19+felt
282.20null four lovedroyd curdinals, his element cur-
282.20+lovetried
282.20+Motif: left/right
282.20+cardinals
282.20+Motif: 4-stage Viconian cycle (birth, marriage, death, ricorso)
282.20+(four cardinal points of compass)
282.20+(four cardinal virtues)
282.20+(cardinal numbers)
282.20+HEC (Motif: HCE)
282.20+Cardinal Newman: 19th century English theologian, famous for converting from Anglicanism to Catholicism
282.21dinal numen and his enement curdinal marryng
282.21+Latin numen: divine will
282.21+name (baptism)
282.21+HEC (Motif: HCE)
282.21+enemy
282.21+eminent
282.21+Cardinal Manning: second archbishop of Westminster (1865-1892)
282.21+marrying
282.22and his epulent curdinal weisswassh and his
282.22+HEC (Motif: HCE)
282.22+epulentic: epileptic
282.22+opulent
282.22+Cardinal Wiseman: first archbishop of Westminster (1850-1865)
282.22+German weiß: white (death)
282.22+German weiß was: know what
282.22+whitewash
282.22+HEC (Motif: HCE)
282.23eminent curdinal Kay O'Kay. Always would
282.23+Cardinal MacCabe: archbishop of Dublin
282.23+K, eleventh letter of alphabet
282.23+Colloquial okay: all right
282.24he be reciting of them, hoojahs koojahs, up by
282.24+(counting on his ten fingers)
282.24+(reciting The Ten Commandments)
282.24+Downing: Digger Dialects 28: 'HOOJAH — What's-his-name' (World War I Slang)
282.24+Downing: Digger Dialects 57: 'KOOJAH — Where' (World War I Slang)
282.24+Motif: up/down [.27]
282.25rota, in his Fanden's catachysm from fursed to
282.25+Rota: supreme court of the Roman Catholic Church (in full, Sacra Romana Rota)
282.25+rote
282.25+Danish fanden: the devil
282.25+Joseph Deharbe: A Full Catechism of the Catholic Religion, 1863 (translated from German in 1875 by Rev. John Fander; used at Clongowes)
282.25+cataclysm
282.25+from first to last
282.25+from furs to lace
282.26laced, quickmarch to decemvers, so as to pin the
282.26+the Calendar Act of 1751 moved England from the Julian to the Gregorian calendar and changed the beginning of the year from 25 March to 1 January, resulting in 1751 being a short year (25 March to 31 December)
282.26+Decemvirs: council or ruling body of ten
282.26+Latin Decemviri: ten magistrates of Rome
282.27tenners, thumbs down. And anon and aldays,
282.27+Colloquial tenner: ten pound note
282.27+phrase thumbs down (indicating disapproval or rejection)
282.27+phrase hands down: easily, effortlessly
282.27+down [.24]
282.27+Obsolete alday: every day, always
282.28strues yerthere, would he wile arecreating em
282.28+Obsolete strue: to destroy
282.28+'s true as you're there
282.28+while
282.28+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...em om...} | {Tr11: ...em a rightleft by and ingreasing om and moultipiecing om...}
282.29om lumerous ways, caiuscounting in the
282.29+Sanskrit om: a sacred syllable of solemn affirmation, used in prayer and meditation
282.29+luminous
282.29+numerous
282.29+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...caiuscounting...} | {Png: ...caius-counting...}
282.29+William Shakespeare: The Merry Wives of Windsor: (Dr. Caius counting) 'Vat be all you, one, two, tree, four, come for?' (II.3.20) and 'If there be one or two, I shall make-a the turd' (III.3.208)
282.30scale of pin puff pive piff, piff puff pive poo,
282.30+
282.31poo puff pive pree, pree puff pive pfoor, pfoor
282.31+assuming four = *X* = Roman X = ten, then ten + five = fifteen (one-five)
282.32puff pive pippive, poopive,4 Niall Dhu,
282.32+pippive (one-five, 15) + poopive (two-five, 25) + Niall Dhu (nil-two, -2) + Foughty Unn (41) + Enoch Thortig (31) + endso one (1) = 111 (Motif: 111) [283.F01]
282.F01     1 While I'll wind the wildwoods' bluckbells among my window's weeds.
282.F01+bluebells
282.F01+widow's weeds
282.F02     2 Lawdy Dawdy Simpers.
282.F02+Latin Laus Deo Semper: Praise to God Forever (at Belvedere College and other Jesuit schools, pupils put the letters L.D.S. at the end of essays) [.F04] [.06]
282.F02+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Simpers.} | {Png: ...simpers.}
282.F03     3 But where, O where, is me lickle dig done?
282.F03+VI.C.7.181b (o): 'where O where is my little dog gone' (a note originally intended for Joyce: Ulysses)
282.F03+song Where, O Where Has My Little Dog Gone?
282.F04     4 That's his whisper waltz I like from Pigott's with that Lancydancy step.
282.F04+VI.C.7.176h (o): 'whisper waltz' (a note originally intended for Joyce: Ulysses)
282.F04+Piggot and Company: music warehouse, Grafton Street, Dublin
282.F04+Lancers (dance)
282.F04+Latin Laus Deo Semper: Praise to God Forever (at Belvedere College and other Jesuit schools, pupils put the letters L.D.S. at the end of essays) [.F02]
282.F05Stop.
282.F05+Motif: Full stop
282.L01Tricks stunts.
282.L01+
282.L02Truckeys' cant
282.L02+truckers'
282.L02+trochee: a metrical foot (long-short; according to BMs (47473-137), Joyce apparently associated trochees with *I*)
282.L03for dactyl and
282.L03+dactyl: a metrical foot (long-short-short)
282.L03+Greek daktylos: finger
282.L04spondee.
282.L04+spondee: a metrical foot (long-long; according to BMs (47473-137), Joyce apparently associated spondees with *V*)
282.L05Panoplous pere-
282.L05+Motif: alliteration (p)
282.L05+panoplied: fully armoured
282.L05+peregrine: exotic, foreign
282.L06grine pifflicative
282.L06+Slang piffle: feeble talk, foolish nonsense
282.L07pomposity.
282.L07+
282.R01ANTITHESIS OF AMBI-
282.R01+
282.R02DUAL ANTICIPATION.
282.R02+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...ANTICIPATION.} | {Png: ...ANTICIPATION}
282.R03THE MIND FACTORY,
282.R03+
282.R04ITS GIVE AND TAKE.
282.R04+
282.R05AUSPICIUM.
282.R05+Latin auspicium: divination by the observation of birds (auspices are discussed extensively throughout Vico: Principj di una Scienza Nuova; Motif: auspices)
282.R06AUGURIA.
282.R06+Latin auguria: auguries, divinations, predictions
282.R07DIVINITY
282.R07+
282.R08NOT DEITY
282.R08+
282.R09THE UNCER-
282.R09+(is)
282.R10TAINTY JUS-
282.R10+
282.R11TIFIED BY
282.R11+
282.R12OUR CERTI-
282.R12+
282.R13TUDE.
282.R13+
282.R14EXAMPLES.
282.R14+


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