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Collection last updated: May 20 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 121

390.01Newslaters and the mossacre of Saint Brices, to forget the past,
390.01+The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. I, 'Æthelred II', 290d: (of the orders of Æthelred II, the Unready) 'Orders were issued commanding the slaughter on St Brice's day (2 December) of "all the Danish men who were in England"' (but Saint Brice's day is actually 13 November)
390.01+Cluster: Forget and Remember
390.02when the burglar he shoved the wretch in churneroil, and con-
390.02+Motif: How Buckley shot the Russian General
390.03tradicting all about Lally, the ballest master of Gosterstown, and
390.03+(*S*)
390.03+ballet master
390.03+ballast master
390.03+Goatstown: district of Dublin
390.03+Anglo-Irish goster: conversation (from Irish gasrán)
390.03+Booterstown: district of Dublin
390.04his old fellow, the Lagener, in the Locklane Lighthouse, earing his
390.04+VI.B.1.042d (r): 'Lagener' [385.13] [387.18] [392.04]
390.04+Latin Lagenia: Leinster
390.04+General
390.04+Anglo-Irish Lochlann: Scandinavian, Viking
390.04+Earwicker
390.05wick with a pierce of railing, and liggen hig with his ladder up, and
390.05+(wick of lighthouse lamp)
390.05+piece
390.05+Persse O'Reilly
390.05+Danish liggende: lying
390.05+high
390.05+(lighthouse closed)
390.06that oldtime turner and his sadderday erely cloudsing, the old
390.06+Saturday early closing (in Joyce's time pubs closed earlier on Saturday than on weekdays)
390.07croniony, Skelly, with the lether belly, full of neltts, full of keltts,
390.07+Greek kronios: old man
390.07+Dialect skelly: a type of fish
390.07+song Kelly with the Leather Belly
390.07+full of..., full of... [339.19-.21] [604.36-605.01]
390.07+kelt: a salmon in bad condition after spawning
390.07+Celts
390.08full of lightweight beltts and all the bald drakes or ever he had up
390.08+Italian Slang baldracche: prostitutes
390.08+baldric: a shoulder-to-hip belt supporting bugle or sword
390.08+bold
390.09in the bohereen, off Artsichekes Road, with Moels and Mahmullagh
390.09+Anglo-Irish bohereen: lane (from Irish bóthairín: little road)
390.09+Artichoke Road, old Dublin
390.09+Welsh moel: bald; hill
390.09+'the Mad Mullah': Mohammed bin Abdullah, Somali rebel, early 20th century
390.10Mullarty, the man in the Oran mosque, and the old folks at home
390.10+Alexandre Dumas: The Man in the Iron Mask
390.10+Oran: city, Algeria, has famous mosque
390.10+VI.B.2.179i (b): 'old folks at home'
390.10+song Old Folks at Home
390.11and Duignan and Lapole and the grand confarreation, as per the
390.11+Duignan: Dublin gun merchant
390.11+O'Duignan: surname of one of the major compilers of Annals of the Four Masters (*X*)
390.11+VI.B.1.117i (r): 'confarreation'
390.11+The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Roman Law', 530d: (of solemn ancient Roman marriage) 'The ceremony was a religious one, conducted by the chief pontiff and the flamen of Jupiter, in presence of ten witenesses... and was known as farreum or confarreatio'
390.12cabbangers richestore, of the filest archives, and he couldn't stop
390.12+cabbage
390.12+Coppinger's Register: chartulary of Saint Thomas's Abbey, Dublin (Archdeacon J.F.X.P. Coppinger)
390.12+vilest
390.13laughing over Tom Tim Tarpey, the Welshman, and the four
390.13+VI.B.3.064f (b): 'Tim Tom Tracy (whiskey Tracy)' (only first three words crayoned)
390.13+Motif: Tom/Tim
390.14middleaged widowers, all nangles, sangles, angles and wangles.
390.14+VI.B.1.115h (r): 'middleaged'
390.14+N, S, (E), W (Motif: 4 cardinal points)
390.14+Dr Wangel: old man married to younger woman in Ibsen: all plays: The Lady from the Sea
390.15And now, that reminds me, not to forget the four of the Welsh
390.15+Cluster: Forget and Remember
390.15+Motif: The four of them
390.15+The Four Waves of Ireland: four points on Irish coast
390.15+in Welsh legend, when the hero Dylan was killed, he was lamented by the Waves of Erin, Man, North and Britain
390.16waves, leaping laughing, in their Lumbag Walk, over old Battle-
390.16+lumbago
390.16+Lambeg drums in Ulster Protestant marches
390.16+song The Lambeth Walk
390.16+battledore and shuttlecock
390.17shore and Deaddleconche, in their half a Roman hat, with an an-
390.17+Variants: {FnF, JCM: ...Deaddleconche...} | {Vkg: ...Deaddleconch...} | {Png: ...Deaddleconchs...}
390.17+French Dialect conche: creek, cove
390.17+Motif: Greek/Roman
390.17+VI.B.3.095b (r): 'they knew Greek used Gr words in their Latin wrote verses in Greek (Scotus Erigena)' (Motif: Greek/Roman)
390.17+Flood: Ireland, Its Saints and Scholars 92: 'It was considered good taste amongst the Irish scholars... to scatter Greek words through the Latin text which they composed... John Scotus Erigena went even further than this, and wrote verses entirely in Greek' (Motif: Greek/Roman)
390.18cient Greek gloss on it, in Chichester College auction and, thank
390.18+VI.B.1.119e (r): 'gloss' (on a notebook page with several entries from Gibbon: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire, noted for his numerous footnote glosses)
390.18+cross
390.18+in 1700 the lands of Irish Jacobites (adherents of James II) publicly auctioned at Chichester House, College Green (subsequently replaced by Parliament building)
390.18+on Saint Brice's Day massacre [.01], the shibboleth used was 'Chichester Church' (which Danes pronounced 'shishester shursh')
390.19God, they were all summarily divorced, four years before, or so
390.19+
390.20they say, by their dear poor shehusbands, in dear byword days,
390.20+bygone days
390.21and never brought to mind, to see no more the rainwater on the
390.21+song Auld Lang Syne: 'and never brought to mind'
390.22floor but still they parted, raining water laughing, per Nupiter
390.22+song Water Parted from the Sea
390.22+Shelta nup: to micturate
390.22+Jupiter Pluvius
390.23Privius, only terpary, on the best of terms and be forgot, whilk was
390.23+privy: lavatory, water-closet
390.23+[.13]
390.23+Armenian terpay: impersonal verbal form (a grammatical category)
390.23+temporary
390.23+Cluster: Forget and Remember
390.23+Dialect whilk: which
390.23+whelk, cockle (molluscs)
390.24plainly foretolk by their old pilgrim cocklesong or they were sing-
390.24+foretold
390.24+pilgrims with cockleshells in their hats visited the shrine of Saint James the Greater
390.24+Armenian or: that
390.25ing through the wettest indies As I was going to Burrymecarott we
390.25+West Indies (Oliver Cromwell deported many Irish there)
390.25+Ballymacarret: district of Belfast [501.04]
390.26fell in with a lout by the name of Peebles as also in another place by
390.26+
390.27their orthodox proverb so there was said thus That old fellow
390.27+Cross & Slover: Ancient Irish Tales 359: 'The Cause of the Battle of Cnucha': 'So that hence was said this' (introducing a poem describing Finn's acquiring of Almu (Hill of Allen))
390.28knows milk though he's not used to it latterly. And so they parted.
390.28+Roberts: The Proverbs of Wales 18: 'I know milk though I am not used to it'
390.28+Italian latte: milk
390.29In Dalkymont nember to. Ay, ay. The good go and the wicked
390.29+Dalkey: a suburban village south of Dublin
390.29+Dollymount: a seaside district of Dublin
390.29+Document No. 2: De Valera's proposed (and rejected) alternative to the 1922 Anglo-Irish Treaty [386.20]
390.29+Motif: Ay, ay!
390.29+William Shakespeare: Julius Caesar III.2.84: 'The evil that men do lives after them; The good is oft interred with their bones'
390.30is left over. As evil flows so Ivel flows. Ay, ay. Ah, well sure,
390.30+Ivel river, England
390.30+Motif: Ay, ay!
390.31that's the way. As the holymaid of Kunut said to the haryman
390.31+The Holy Maid of Kent: Elizabeth Barton, who incited Catholics against Reformation and was hanged at Tyburn
390.31+Connacht
390.31+Ahriman: Zoroastrian principle of evil
390.32of Koombe. For his humple pesition in odvices. Woman. Squash.
390.32+The Coombe: street and area west of Saint Patrick's Cathedral, Dublin
390.32+humble petition
390.32+position
390.32+offices
390.32+advice
390.32+Ordovices: an ancient Celtic tribe in North Wales before the Roman invasion
390.32+lemon squash
390.33Part. Ay, ay. By decree absolute.
390.33+Tarpay (Motif: anagram) [.34]
390.33+Motif: Ay, ay!
390.33+Legalese decree absolute: final decree of divorce, as opposed to decree nisi (Latin nisi: unless), which is a conditional decree that will become absolute after a period of time unless cause to the contrary is shown (Joyce: Ulysses.16.1491: 'Then the decree nisi... was made absolute'; in the case of the O'Shea and Parnell divorce case, Captain O'Shea was initially given a decree nisi, which became absolute)
390.34     Lucas. And, O so well they could remembore at that time, when
390.34+{{Synopsis: II.4.1+2.E: [390.34-392.13]: the story associated with Lucas Tarpey — rambling reminiscences}}
390.34+Cluster: Forget and Remember
390.34+bore
390.34+Cross & Slover: Ancient Irish Tales 357: 'The Cause of the Battle of Cnucha': 'When Cathar Mor... was in the kingship of Tara'
390.35Carpery of the Goold Fins was in the kingship of Poolland, Mrs
390.35+goldfish is in the carp family
390.35+Cairpre: name of various legendary Irish kings
390.35+fish fins
390.35+Nuada of the Golden Hand: legendary Irish king
390.35+pool
390.35+Poland
390.35+(Ireland)
390.36Dowager Justice Squalchman, foorsitter, in her fullbottom wig
390.36+Dutch voorzitter: chairman
390.36+VI.B.25.155a (b): 'fullbottom wig'
390.36+full-bottom wig: a wig having a full or large bottom


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