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Collection last updated: | May 20 2024 |
Engine last updated: | Feb 18 2024 |
Finnegans Wake lines: | 38 |
Elucidations found: | 102 |
293.01 | Coss? Cossist? Your parn! You, you make |
---|---|
–293.01+ | {{Synopsis: II.2.8.E: [293.01-300.08] [293.F01-300.F02] [293.L01-299.L07] [293.R01-293.R03]: Dolph teaching Kev the geometry problem and other mathematical topics — the fig, or mother's genitals}} |
–293.01+ | (waking from doze with a start) |
–293.01+ | rule of Coss: early name for algebra (from Italian cosa: thing, being a translation of Arabic shai: unknown quantity (or x) of an equation) |
–293.01+ | Italian cosa?: what? |
–293.01+ | German was ist?: what is it? |
–293.01+ | I beg your pardon? |
–293.01+ | VI.B.46.025o (o): 'he make what name?' [240.26] |
–293.01+ | Beach-la-Mar you make what name?: what did you do?, what are you doing? (appears several times in Lynch: Isles of Illusion) |
293.02 | what name? (and in truth, as a poor soul is |
–293.02+ | |
293.03 | between shift and shift ere the death he has |
–293.03+ | Yeats: A Vision 231 (book III, sec. VII): 'The Spirit is still unsatisfied, until after the third state, which corresponds to Gemini, called the Shiftings where the spirit is purified of good and evil' (referring to the third state after death) |
–293.03+ | Yeats: A Vision 197 (book II, sec. VI): 'every month or phase when we take it as a whole is a double vortex moving from Phase 1 to Phase 28, or two periods, one solar and one lunar, which in the words of Heraclitus "live each other's death, die each other's life"' |
293.04 | lived through becomes the life he is to die |
–293.04+ | |
293.05 | into, he or he had albut — he was rickets as to |
–293.05+ | Yeats: A Vision 298 (book V, sec. V): 'Charles Ricketts, my education in so many things' |
293.06 | reasons but the balance of his minds was |
–293.06+ | verdict of suicide: 'when the balance of his mind was disturbed' |
293.07 | stables — lost himself or himself some som- |
–293.07+ | Latin Somnium Scipionis: The Dream of Scipio (the bulk of the sixth book of Cicero: all works: De Re Publica; referred to in several major medieval works, especially Chaucer's Parlement of Foules) |
293.08 | nione sciupiones, soswhitchoverswetch had |
–293.08+ | Italian sciupone: spendthrift |
–293.08+ | Scipio Maffei (found lost classical manuscripts in monastery at Verona) |
–293.08+ | so |
293.09 | he or he gazet, murphy come, murphy go, |
–293.09+ | gazed |
–293.09+ | Slang murphy: potato |
–293.09+ | Morpheus: the classical personification of sleep and dreams (Slang Murphy: sleep) |
–293.09+ | Mary |
293.10 | murphy plant, murphy grow, a maryamyria- |
–293.10+ | myriad |
–293.10+ | Anglo-Irish meila murder: great commotion (literally 'a thousand murders', from Irish míle marbhadh) |
293.11 | meliamurphies, in the lazily eye of his lapis, |
–293.11+ | lapis lazuli (Joyce had blue eyes) |
–293.11+ | Latin lapis: lead pencil; stone |
–293.11+ | Latin lapis via: philosophers' stone |
293.12 | |
–293.12+ | (diagram for Euclid's first problem, the construction of an equilateral triangle on a given finite line) |
–293.12+ | (the area enclosed by the arcs is a mystical figure called Vesica Piscis (literally Latin 'bladder of a fish'), a symbol of the womb and of Christ, often used in medieval and gothic architecture and art) |
–293.12+ | ('Amande Mystique'(French) or 'Mandorla' (Italian): almond-shaped iconographic symbol of the union of opposites represented by two intersection circles) |
–293.12+ | (delta of river) |
–293.12+ | (00: a sign indicating a public lavatory (especially in Europe)) |
–293.12+ | (*A*'s bottom and genitals seen from lavatory bowl, with the circles being the hips, the ellipse and triangles the vulva, pi the clitoris, P the anus) |
–293.12+ | (lower triangle reflection in water, or mirror, of upper one) |
–293.12+ | (ALP, alpha-lamba-pi (Motif: ALP)) |
–293.12+ | (alpha on left resembles *C*, lambda on right resembles *V*, pi on top resembles *E*, their triangle resembles *A*) |
293.13 | Vieus Von DVbLIn, 'twas one of dozedeams |
–293.13+ | Latin vieo: I twist together |
–293.13+ | Views of Dublin (German von: of) |
–293.13+ | chronogram: V + V + D + V + L + I = 566 [014.07] |
–293.13+ | Dublin Delineated in Twenty-Six Views (Thom's, 1831) |
–293.13+ | Thomas Moore: Irish Melodies: song 'Twas One of Those Dreams [air: The Song of the Woods] |
293.14 | a darkies ding in dewood) the Turnpike under |
–293.14+ | darkest |
–293.14+ | German Ding: thing |
–293.14+ | the wood |
–293.14+ | (the sentence makes more sense if the parenthesis on [.14] is treated as a comma and the parenthesis on [.15] is ignored) |
293.15 | the Great Ulm (with Mearingstone in Fore |
–293.15+ | Albert Einstein was born at Ulm |
–293.15+ | German Ulme: elm (Motif: tree/stone) |
–293.15+ | (an elm in Chapelizod is mentioned in Le Fanu: The House by the Churchyard (left bank of the Liffey river)) |
–293.15+ | Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Ulm (with...} | {Png: ...Ulm with...} |
–293.15+ | Irish Ail na Míreann: Stone of Divisions (a rock on Hill of Uisneach, County Westmeath, considered in legend to be the centre of Ireland; more or less at the same latitude as Lambay Island) [.16] [294.02] |
–293.15+ | Mearing Stone: stone in a wall 100 yards south of Dublin Castle (right bank of the Liffey river) |
–293.15+ | Anglo-Irish mearing: boundary between two pieces of land |
–293.15+ | Irish méar: finger |
–293.15+ | foreground |
293.16 | ground).1 Given now ann linch you take enn |
–293.16+ | phrase give him an inch and he will take an ell: making concessions or doing favours will only result in more and more being expected (Archaic ell: an old unit of length equal, in England, to 45 inches; Mark Twain: Huckleberry Finn 16: 'Give a nigger an inch an' he'll take an ell') |
–293.16+ | AL (line on figure) |
–293.16+ | Anne Lynch's Dublin tea |
–293.16+ | (one inch to the mile) |
–293.16+ | in |
–293.16+ | Lough Ennell: lake in County Westmeath, just east of Hill of Uisneach [.15] |
293.17 | all. Allow me! And, heaving alljawbreakical |
–293.17+ | Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...me! And...} | {Png: ...me. And...} |
–293.17+ | algebraical |
–293.17+ | Colloquial jaw-breaking: hard to pronounce |
293.18 | expressions out of old Sare Isaac's2 universal |
–293.18+ | Sarah and her son Isaac [.F02] |
–293.18+ | Sir Isaac Newton's name for algebra was 'Universal Arithmetic' |
293.19 | of specious aristmystic unsaid, A is for Anna |
–293.19+ | mystic |
–293.19+ | aside |
–293.19+ | 'A is for... L is for' (a traditional formula for an alphabet nursery rhyme; Motif: X is for) |
293.20 | like L is for liv. Aha hahah, Ante Ann you're |
–293.20+ | Motif: Hohohoho, Mister Finn, you're... (often paired with Motif: X is for) |
293.21 | apt to ape aunty annalive! Dawn gives rise. |
–293.21+ | Motif: fall/rise (dawn rises, evening falls) [.22] |
293.22 | Lo, lo, lives love! Eve takes fall. La, la, laugh |
–293.22+ | Motif: A/O |
–293.22+ | Irish Archaic ló: day |
–293.22+ | (Adam and Eve's fall) |
–293.22+ | Irish lá: day |
293.23 | leaves alass! Aiaiaiai, Antiann, we're last to |
–293.23+ | alas |
–293.23+ | Chinese ai: to love |
–293.23+ | Portuguese aiaiaiai: alas |
293.24 | the lost, Loulou! Tis perfect. Now (lens |
–293.24+ | Colloquial 'tis: it is |
–293.24+ | lens (of the eye) [294.01] |
–293.24+ | lend us |
293.F01 | 1 Draumcondra's Dreamcountry where the betterlies blow. |
–293.F01+ | Drumcondra: district of Dublin |
–293.F01+ | German Traum: dream |
–293.F01+ | butterflies |
293.F02 | 2 O, Laughing Sally, are we going to be toadhauntered by that old Pantifox |
–293.F02+ | when God told Abraham that Sarah shall conceive Isaac, Sarah laughed in her heart, as she was ninety years old and already past menopause (Genesis 17:17 and 18:11-12) [.18] |
–293.F02+ | German Tod: death |
–293.F02+ | Isaac Todhunter's edition of Euclid [.18] |
–293.F02+ | Latin pontifex: high priest; pope |
293.F03 | Sir Somebody Something, Burtt, for the rest of our secret stripture? |
–293.F03+ | VI.C.7.173l (o): 'sir somebody something' (a note originally intended for Joyce: Ulysses) |
–293.F03+ | Sir Edwin Arthur Burtt: The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern Physical Science |
–293.F03+ | Bart: abbreviation for Baronet (hereditary title) |
–293.F03+ | Thomas Kettle: 'secret scripture of the poor' |
–293.F03+ | striptease |
–293.F03+ | Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...stripture?} | {Png: ...stripture.} |
293.L01 | Uteralterance or |
–293.L01+ | (marginal notes change sides) |
–293.L01+ | [[Speaker: *V*]] |
–293.L01+ | Latin uter: which of two |
–293.L01+ | uterus |
–293.L01+ | utter |
293.L02 | the Interplay of |
–293.L02+ | |
293.L03 | Bones in the |
–293.L03+ | pantomime Babes in the Wood [.14] |
293.L04 | Womb. |
–293.L04+ | |
293.L05 | The Vortex. |
–293.L05+ | Wyndham Lewis's 'Vorticism' |
–293.L05+ | vortex: a term used in Yeats: A Vision |
293.L06 | Spring of Sprung |
–293.L06+ | sprung rhythm: prosodic term used by Gerard Manley Hopkins |
293.L07 | Verse. The Ver- |
–293.L07+ | |
293.L08 | tex. |
–293.L08+ | |
293.R01 | WHY MY AS |
–293.R01+ | [[Speaker: *C*]] |
293.R02 | LIKEWISE |
–293.R02+ | |
293.R03 | WHIS HIS. |
–293.R03+ | why |
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