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Collection last updated: May 20 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 49
Elucidations found: 133

300.01Want to join the police.1 You know, you were
300.01+Joyce: Letters III.188: postcard 18/04/29 to Harriet Shaw Weaver: 'Have you seen the new number of W.L.'s Enemy? A lot of it was read to me but I should prefer the book advertised in Pearson's W. 'Want to join the police?' That, at least is about something' [299.31]
300.02always one of the bright ones, since a foot
300.02+fault
300.03made you an unmentionable, fakes! You know,
300.03+Motif: faith, hope, charity [.06] [.08]
300.03+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...fakes! You...} | {Png: ...fakes. You...}
300.04you're the divver's own smart gossoon, aequal
300.04+Colloquial phrase the devil's own: a particularly intense, a particularly bad
300.04+devil (Motif: Mick/Nick) [.05]
300.04+Anglo-Irish gossoon: young lad, boy
300.04+Euclid: Elements, Axiom 1: 'Things which are equal to the same thing are equal to one another'
300.04+equal to yourself [032.20] [596.24]
300.04+Latin aequalis: equal
300.05to yoursell and wanigel to anglyother, so you
300.05+Hilda Wangel: a major character in Ibsen: all plays: The Master Builder
300.05+unequal to any other
300.05+Euclid: Elements, Axiom 2: 'All right angles are equal to one another'
300.05+angle
300.05+angel [.04]
300.06are, hoax! You know, you'll be dampned, so
300.06+hope [.03]
300.06+dampened
300.06+damned
300.07you will, one of these invernal days but you
300.07+Italian invernale: pertaining to winter
300.07+infernal
300.07+vernal: pertaining to spring
300.08will be, carrotty!2
300.08+charity [.03]
300.08+(I) guarantee!
300.08+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...carrotty!} | {Png: ...carrotty.}
300.09     Wherapool, gayet that when he stop look
300.09+{{Synopsis: II.2.8.F: [300.09-302.10] [300.F03-301.F07] [300.L01-302.L04] [300.R01-300.R08]: Kev embarassed — Kev devastated}}
300.09+whereupon
300.09+whirlpool
300.09+a pool
300.09+gayed
300.09+VI.B.46.025p (o): 'you stop time he been shoot'
300.09+Lynch: Isles of Illusion 329: 'You you stop time Mis Collins 'e bin shoot 'im Jack?' (i.e. 'Were you there when Collins shot Jack?' in Beach-la-Mar)
300.09+Beach-la-Mar stop: to be
300.09+Beach-la-Mar look: to see, to look at
300.10time he stop long ground who here hurry he
300.10+Beach-la-Mar time: when
300.10+VI.B.46.026i (o): 'he stop long ground'
300.10+Lynch: Isles of Illusion 332: 'Jack 'e stop long ground?' (i.e. 'Was Jack lying on the ground?' in Beach-la-Mar)
300.10+VI.B.46.025j (o): 'who here Harry?'
300.10+Lynch: Isles of Illusion 327: ''Oo 'ere Harry?' (i.e. 'Which Harry?, Which store-keeper?' in Beach-la-Mar) [028.03]
300.11would have ever the lothst word, with a sweet
300.11+VI.B.18.277d (o): 'the loth word'
300.11+Quiller Couch: Cornwall's Wonderland 215: 'The Story of Sir Tristram and La Belle Iseult': (Sir Blamor of Tristan) 'Yonder knight is a goodly man, but I swear I will never yield, nor say the loth word'
300.11+Obsolete loth: loathsome
300.11+last word
300.11+'Sweet Marie' biscuits from Jacobs', Dublin
300.12me ah err eye ear marie to reat from the jacob's3
300.12+(spells out MARIE)
300.12+Irish mí-ádh: bad luck
300.12+Motif: ear/eye
300.12+to eat
300.12+treat
300.13and a shypull for toothsake of his armjaws
300.13+toothache
300.13+armchair
300.14at the slidepage of de Vere Foster, would and
300.14+Vere Foster's handwriting books
300.15could candykissing P. Kevin to fress up the
300.15+candy kisses (sweets)
300.15+German auffressen: to eat up, to gobble
300.15+Dutch opfrissen: to freshen up, to refresh
300.16rinnerung and to ate by hart (leo I read, such a
300.16+German Rinne: gutter, trough
300.16+German Erinnerung: memory
300.16+eat
300.16+learn by heart
300.16+Kiswahili leo: today
300.16+Spanish leo: I read
300.16+such is Spanish [144.13]
300.17spanish, escribibis, all your mycoscoups) wont
300.17+Spanish escribir: to write
300.17+Latin scribebis: you will write
300.17+myco-: fungus-
300.17+microscopes
300.17+and
300.18to nibbleh ravenostonnoriously ihs mum to
300.18+nibble
300.18+nabla: a mathematical symbol in the shape of an upside-down or sideways equilateral triangle (*A*), introduced by William Rowan Hamilton [.27]
300.18+ravenously
300.18+Russian ravnostoronniy: equilateral
300.18+I.H.S.: abbreviation for Jesus
300.18+his
300.18+Colloquial mum: mother (*A*)
300.18+mumble
300.18+to the wonder of his tutor
300.19me in bewonderment of his chipper chuthor
300.19+German Bewunderung: admiration
300.19+Slang chipper; lively, fit
300.20for, while that Other by the halp of his creac-
300.20+Yeats: A Vision 68 (book I, part I, sec. II): 'The first gyres clearly described by philosophy are those described in the Timaeus which are made by the circuits of "the Other" (creators of all particular things), of the planets as they ascend or descend above or below the equator. They are opposite in nature to that circle of the fixed stars which constitutes "the Same" and confers upon us the knowledge of Universals'
300.20+brother
300.20+Yeats: A Vision 91 (book I, part II, sec. VI): 'In an antithetical phase the being seeks by the help of the Creative Mind to deliver the Mask from Body of Fate. In a primary phase the being seeks by the help of the Body of Fate to deliver the Creative Mind from the Mask'
300.20+creative, reactive (near opposites)
300.21tive mind offered to deleberate the mass from
300.21+liberate the masses
300.22the booty of fight our Same with the holp
300.22+
300.23of the bounty of food sought to delubberate
300.23+liberate
300.24the mess from his corructive mund, with his
300.24+corrupted
300.24+corrective
300.24+German Mund: mouth
300.25muffetee cuffes ownconsciously grafficking
300.25+muffetee: a wool or fur cuff worn on the wrist (by women)
300.25+cuffs
300.25+unconsciously trafficking
300.25+Yeats's wife's automatic writing led to Yeats: A Vision (related in the introduction)
300.25+Italian graffi: scratches
300.26with his sinister cyclopes after trigamies and
300.26+Latin sinister: left
300.26+trigonometry
300.27spirals' wobbles pursuiting their rovinghamil-
300.27+Yeats: A Vision 70 (book I, part I, sec. II): 'Flaubert... talked much of writing a story called "La Spirale"... It would have described a man whose dreams during sleep grew in magnificence as his life grew more and more unlucky'
300.27+Sir William Rowan Hamilton: a 19th century Irish mathematician and physicist (invented quaternions, a number system that extends the complex numbers, a defining feature of which is that the product of two quaternions is non-commutative)
300.28ton selves and godolphing in fairlove to see
300.28+Slang god-awful: especially awful [555.20] [563.26]
300.28+Dolph
300.29around the waste of noland's browne jesus4
300.29+T.S. Eliot: The Waste Land
300.29+West
300.29+Motif: Browne/Nolan
300.29+(paper)
300.30(thur him no quartos!) till that on him poorin
300.30+Irish tabhair: give
300.30+quarter
300.30+pouring
300.31sweat the juggaleer's veins (quench his quill!)
300.31+Gipsy juggal: dog (Borrow: Romano Lavo-Lil 38)
300.31+jugular veins
300.31+Slang juggler: fornicator
300.31+French Slang quille: penis
300.32in his napier scrag stud out bursthright tam-
300.32+Napier invented logarithms
300.32+nape
300.32+Slang scrag: neck
300.32+stood out
300.32+Esau sold his birthright to Jacob for a pottage of lentils (Genesis 25:29-34)
300.32+Latin tamquam: as it were
300.F01     1 Picking on Nickagain, Pikey Mikey?
300.F01+picnics
300.F01+Motif: Mick/Nick
300.F01+Slang pikey: a tramp
300.F01+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Mikey?} | {Png: ...Mikey.}
300.F02     2 Early morning, sir Dav Stephens, said the First Gentleman in youreups.
300.F02+Davy Stephens sold newspapers on Kingstown Pier and met Edward VII when he visited Dublin
300.F02+Kingstown was named after George IV, the 'First Gentleman of Europe', who knighted the Lord-Mayor when visiting Dublin
300.F03     3 Bag bag blockcheap, have you any will?
300.F03+nursery rhyme 'Baa Baa Black Sheep, Have you any wool?'
300.F03+Motif: dark/fair (black, white) [.F04]
300.F04     4 What a lubberly whide elephant for the men-in-the straits!
300.F04+lovely
300.F04+phrase white elephant: a financially burdensome possession
300.F04+wide
300.F04+man in the street
300.L01Primanouriture
300.L01+primogeniture: a system of inheritance in which the right of succession belongs to the eldest son
300.L01+French nourriture: food, nourishment
300.L02and Ultimo-
300.L02+ultimogeniture: a system of inheritance in which the right of succession belongs to the youngest son
300.L03geniture.
300.L03+
300.L04No Sturm. No
300.L04+German Sturm und Drang: Storm and Stress (18th century literary movement carrying to furthest consequences doctrine of rights of individual)
300.L05Drang.
300.L05+
300.R01SICK US A
300.R01+sing us a song
300.R02SOCK WITH
300.R02+
300.R03SOME SEDI-
300.R03+sentiment
300.R04MENT IN IT
300.R04+
300.R05FOR THE
300.R05+
300.R06SAKE OF OUR
300.R06+
300.R07DARNING
300.R07+darling
300.R08WIVES.
300.R08+


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