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Collection last updated: Apr 6 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 65
Elucidations found: 101

307.01Visit to Guinness' Brewery, Clubs, Advan-
307.01+Guinness's
307.02tages of the Penny Post, When is a Pun not a
307.02+Motif: pen/post
307.02+Motif: When is a man not a man... (first riddle of the universe)
307.02+When is a son not a son (Jacob as Esau before Isaac)
307.03Pun? Is the Co-Education of Animus and
307.03+co-education: the education of students of both sexes together
307.03+Henry Adams: The Education of Henry Adams
307.03+animus: Carl Jung's term for the masculine part of a woman's personality (often contrasted with anima)
307.04Anima Wholly Desirable?1 What Happened at
307.04+anima: Carl Jung's term for the feminine part of a man's personality (often contrasted with animus)
307.05Clontarf? Since our Brother Johnathan Signed
307.05+Battle of Clontarf, 1014 (Vikings driven from Dublin by Brian Boru)
307.05+phrase to consult Brother Jonathan
307.05+Brother Jonathan: 18th century personification of the United States (prohibition)
307.05+Jonathan Swift (wrote : A Tale of a Tub; Hebrew Jonathan: God has given) [.L05]
307.05+phrase sign the pledge: vow to abstain from alcohol [562.30]
307.06the Pledge or the Meditations of Two Young
307.06+both Swift's Stella and Swift's Vanessa were much younger than Swift and both never married, at least publicly
307.07Spinsters,2 Why we all Love our Little Lord
307.07+Alfie Byrne: Lord-Mayor of Dublin throughout the 1930s, popularly known as 'our little Lord-Mayor'
307.08Mayor, Hengler's Circus Entertainment, On
307.08+HCE (Motif: HCE)
307.08+Hengler's Circus, a well-known circus and variety show, came annually to Dublin in late 19th century [529.34]
307.09Thrift,3 The Kettle-Griffith-Moynihan Scheme
307.09+projected hydroelectric scheme for Dublin in 1920s involved chief engineer Kettle, consulting-engineer Griffith and borough-engineer Moynihan
307.09+Thomas Kettle advocated parliamentary solution to the Irish question
307.09+Arthur Griffith founded the Sinn Féin Irish nationalist movement
307.09+Moynihan, in Joyce: A Portrait V, signs the testimonial
307.10for a New Electricity Supply, Travelling in the
307.10+Motif: old/new
307.11Olden Times,4 American Lake Poetry, the
307.11+Motif: time/space [.F04]
307.11+ALP (Motif: ALP)
307.12Strangest Dream that was ever Halfdreamt.5
307.12+EHC (Motif: HCE)
307.12+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...Halfdreamt.5...} | {BMs (47478-177): ...Halfdreamt,5...}
307.13Circumspection, Our Allies the Hills, Are
307.13+'our allies the hills': saying of De Valera when 'on the run'
307.14Parnellites Just towards Henry Tudor? Tell a
307.14+in 1890, the Irish Parliamentary Party split into two factions over Parnell's leadership, the so-called Parnellites and anti-Parnellites
307.14+Henry Tudor Parnell: Parnell's brother
307.14+Sir Henry Hugh Tudor: 19th-20th century British military commander, who led the Royal Irish Constabulary (including the notorious Black and Tans) during the Irish War of Independence
307.14+Henry VIII (the first post-Medieval king of Ireland) was from the House of Tudor
307.15Friend in a Chatty Letter the Fable of the
307.15+
307.16Grasshopper and the Ant,6 Santa Claus, The
307.16+Motif: Ondt/Gracehoper
307.16+Santa Claus brings gifts to children on Christmas Eve [.L16]
307.17Shame of Slumdom, The Roman Pontiffs
307.17+Sodom
307.17+Roman Popes and (Greek) Orthodox Churches (Motif: Greek/Roman) [.L17-.L18]
307.18and the Orthodox Churches,7 The Thirty
307.18+
307.19Hour Week, Compare the Fistic Styles of
307.19+
307.20Jimmy Wilde and Jack Sharkey, How to
307.20+Jimmy Wilde and Jack Sharkey: boxers
307.20+Motif: Shem/Shaun (Jimmy: diminutive of James; Jack: diminutive of John)
307.21Understand the Deaf, Should Ladies learn
307.21+
307.22Music or Mathematics? Glory be to Saint
307.22+Saint Patrick spent forty days in retreat on Croagh Patrick, in imitation of Moses [301.30]
307.23Patrick! What is to be found in a Dustheap,
307.23+
307.24The Value of Circumstantial Evidence,
307.24+
307.25Should Spelling? Outcasts in India, Collecting
307.25+Hunt: India's Outcastes, A New Era
307.26Pewter, Eu,8 Proper and Regular Diet
307.26+Irish Obsolete eu: salmon
307.26+Saint Laurence O'Toole died and was buried at Eu, Normandy
307.27Necessity For,9 If You Do It Do It Now.
307.27+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, Png: ...Now. Delays...} | {BMs (47478-177): ...Now, Delays...}
307.F01     1 Jests and the Beastalk with a little rude hiding rod.
307.F01+pantomime Jack and the Beanstalk
307.F01+pantomime Beauty and the Beast
307.F01+pantomime Little Red Riding Hood
307.F01+VI.B.36.304c (g): 'rude hiding rod'
307.F02     2 Wherry like the whaled prophet in a spookeerie.
307.F02+William Shakespeare: Hamlet III.2.367: 'Very like a whale' (Joyce: Ulysses.3.144)
307.F02+(Jonah in whale (Jonah))
307.F02+Thomas Moore: other works: Lalla Rookh: The Veiled Prophet of Khorassan
307.F02+Dutch spookerij: walking of ghosts, eerie noise
307.F02+speakeasy
307.F03     3 What sins is pim money sans Paris?
307.F03+sense
307.F03+pin money
307.F03+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Paris?} | {Png: ...Paris.}
307.F04     4 I've lost the place, where was I?
307.F04+[.11]
307.F05     5 Something happened that time I was asleep, torn letters or was there
307.F05+
307.F06snow?
307.F06+
307.F07     6 Mich for his pain, Nick in his past.
307.F07+Motif: Mick/Nick
307.F07+Motif: pen/post
307.F08     7 He has toglieresti in brodo all over his agrammatical parts of face and as for
307.F08+Italian toglieresti: would remove (second person singular)
307.F08+Italian taglierini in brodo: noodle soup
307.F08+parts of speech
307.F09that hippofoxphiz, unlucky number, late for the christening!
307.F09+Colloquial phiz: countenance, face, expression
307.F10     8 Eh, Monsieur? Où, Monsieur? Eu, Monsieur? Nenni No, Monsieur!
307.F10+French monsieur: sir, gentleman
307.F10+French où?: where?
307.F10+you
307.F10+phrase hey nonny no (a nonsense jingling refrain popular in Elizabethan verse) [203.14]
307.F10+Portuguese eu: I
307.F10+French Archaic Colloquial nenni: no, not at all
307.F10+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...Monsieur!} | {Png: ...Monsieur.}
307.F11     9 Ere we hit the hay, brothers, let's have that response to prayer!
307.F11+phrase hit the hay: go to bed
307.F11+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...prayer!} | {Png: ...prayer.}
307.L01Noah. Plato.
307.L01+Genesis 9:20: 'Noah... was drunken'
307.L01+Plato: The Symposium
307.L02Horace. Isaac.
307.L02+Horace: other works: Epistles (personal letters to friends)
307.L02+the name Isaac means 'he laughed' or 'he will laugh' in Hebrew
307.L03Tiresias.
307.L03+Tiresias lived both as man and woman
307.L04Marius.
307.L04+Marius drove barbarians from Rome
307.L05Diogenes.
307.L05+Diogenes: ancient Greek philosopher (famous for living in a tub and for searching with a lantern for an honest man; Greek Diogenes: born of Zeus) [.05]
307.L06Procne, Philo-
307.L06+Procne and Philomela, embroiderers in Ovid [248.02]
307.L07mela. Abraham.
307.L07+Abraham Bradley King: 19th century Lord-Mayor of Dublin, who officially welcomed George IV to Dublin in 1821 and was knighted for it (possibly on the spot during the visit)
307.L08Nestor. Cincin-
307.L08+Nestor: horse trainer
307.L08+Cincinnatus [030.13]
307.L09natus. Leonidas.
307.L09+Leonidas (Thermopylae)
307.L10Jacob.
307.L10+Jacob's travels (Genesis 28-32)
307.L11Theocritus.
307.L11+Theocritus supposed inventor of pastoral poetry
307.L12Joseph.
307.L12+Joseph interpreted dreams
307.L13Fabius. Samson.
307.L13+Fabius Maximus was called 'Cunctator' (delayer)
307.L13+Samson: powerful biblical hero
307.L14Cain.
307.L14+
307.L15Esop.
307.L15+Aesop: famous 6th century BC Greek fabulist, said to have invented talking-beast fables (including 'The Grasshopper and the Ant')
307.L16Prometheus.
307.L16+Prometheus brought the gift of fire to mankind [.16]
307.L17Lot. Pompeius Magnus,
307.L17+Pompeius Magnus, Miltiades Strategos: famous Roman and Greek generals, respectively (Motif: Greek/Roman) [.17-.18]
307.L18Miltiades Strategos.
307.L18+
307.L19Solon.
307.L19+Solon: legislator who tried to pacify unprivileged classes
307.L20Castor, Pollux.
307.L20+
307.L21Dionysius.
307.L21+Ear of Dionysius: amplifying prison chamber in Dionysius's palace in Sicily
307.L22Sappho.
307.L22+Sappho's book III.63 condemns an uneducated woman
307.L23Moses. Job.
307.L23+Job, when smitten with boils 'sat among the ashes' (Job 2:8)
307.L24Catilina.
307.L24+Cicero was able to denounce Catilina, a Roman conspirator, with the help of written evidence from Allobrogan envoys (Catilina is the subject of Ibsen: all plays: Catilina (Catiline))
307.L25Cadmus. Ezekiel.
307.L25+Cadmus: legendary introducer of the alphabet into Greece
307.L25+Ezekiel
307.L26Solomon. Themistocles.
307.L26+King Solomon's tin mines
307.L26+Themistocles: Athenian, ostracised, died in Asia
307.L27Vitellius. Darius.
307.L27+Vitellius: 1st century Roman emperor (said to have been a glutton, taking emetics so as to be able to eat more)
307.L27+Darius: Persian king defeated at Marathon because Greeks attacked immediately


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