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Collection last updated: Apr 6 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 117

391.01and beard, (Erminia Reginia!) in or aring or around about the
391.01+in Tasso's Gerusalemme Liberata, Erminia disguises herself to enter enemy camp and rescue her beloved
391.01+(ermine worn by chairman)
391.01+Armenia
391.01+Latin regina: queen
391.02year of buy in disgrace 1132 or 1169 or 1768 Y.W.C.A., at the
391.02+Archaic phrase year of grace: year since the birth of Jesus, Anno Domini
391.02+grace (Cluster: Graces)
391.02+Motif: 1132
391.02+the Anglo-Norman invasion of Ireland began in 1169 [388.10] [391.02]
391.02+Y.W.C.A.: Young Women's Christian Association
391.03Married Male Familyman's Auctioneer's court in Arrahnacuddle.
391.03+Slang familyman: thief
391.03+Boucicault: Arrah-na-Pogue (Anglo-Irish pogue: kiss)
391.03+Irish ara na: one given to
391.04Poor Johnny of the clan of the Dougals, the poor Scuitsman,
391.04+Scotsman
391.04+Irish scuit: excitement
391.04+Dutch schuit: boat, barge
391.05(Hohannes!) nothing if not amorous, dinna forget, so frightened
391.05+Armenian Hovhannes: German Johannes: John
391.05+German Hohn: mockery, scorn
391.05+Scottish dinna: do not
391.05+Cluster: Forget and Remember
391.06(Zweep! Zweep!) on account of her full bottom, (undullable
391.06+Dutch zweep: whip
391.06+untellable
391.06+indelible
391.07attraxity!) that put the yearl of mercies on him, and the four
391.07+attraction
391.07+atrocity
391.07+ataxy
391.07+phrase put years on him
391.07+Annals of the Four Masters (*X*) + the four's ass = Motif: four fifths [.07-.08]
391.08maasters, in chors, with a hing behangd them, because he was
391.08+Joseph Maas: 19th century English tenor (once played Shaun the Post in Boucicault: Arrah-na-Pogue in Dublin)
391.08+chorus
391.08+Armenian tchors, hink: four, five (Motif: four fifths)
391.08+Hengist and Horsa: 5th century brothers who led the Saxon invasion of England
391.08+hing: asafoetida (an odorous gum, used as a drug or flavouring)
391.08+behind
391.09so slow to borstel her schoon for her, when he was grooming her
391.09+Dutch borstelen: to brush
391.09+Dutch schoon: clean, beautiful
391.09+Dutch schoen: shoe
391.10ladyship, instead of backscratching her materfamilias proper, like
391.10+backscratching: flattering servilely
391.10+Latin materfamilias: female head of household, matriarch (literally 'mother of the family') [386.13] [389.15]
391.11any old methodist, and all divorced and innasense interdict, in
391.11+innocence
391.11+in a sense
391.11+Pope Innocent III put England under interdict and excommunicated King John for refusing to allow the papal appointee to the archbishopric of Canterbury, Stephen Langton, to enter the country (John submitted in 1213)
391.12the middle of the temple, according to their dear faithful. Ah, now,
391.12+Middle Temple (law), London
391.12+[096.21] [392.35]
391.13it was too bad, too bad and stout entirely, all the missoccurs; and
391.13+Dutch stout: bad, naughty
391.13+massacres
391.14poor Mark or Marcus Bowandcoat, from the brownesberrow in
391.14+Marquis of Powerscourt [386.18]
391.14+phrase brown as a berry
391.14+Motif: Browne/Nolan
391.15nolandsland, the poor old chronometer, all persecuted with ally
391.15+no man's land
391.15+VI.B.1.093i (r): 'chronometers'
391.15+chronometer: an instrument for measuring time, especially one more accurate than a regular watch
391.15+Thomas Moore: Irish Melodies: song Oh the Shamrock: 'Through Erin's Isle' [air: Alley Croker] [.16]
391.16croaker by everybody, by decree absolute, through Herrinsilde,
391.16+CEH (Motif: HCE)
391.16+[390.33]
391.16+German Herrin: mistress
391.16+Danish silde: herrings
391.17because he forgot himself, making wind and water, and made
391.17+VI.B.2.169g (b): 'oubli de soi' (French 'forgetting of oneself')
391.17+Pascal: La Démence Précoce 221: (of the mentally ill) 'L'oubli total du passé, de son identité, l'oubli des sentiments, de soi-même, c'est la plus grave lésion de la dissolution mentale' (French 'The total forgetting of the past, of one's identity, the forgetting of feelings, of oneself, this is the most serious lesion of the mental dissolution')
391.17+Cluster: Forget and Remember
391.17+phrase making water: urinating
391.17+phrase between wind and water
391.18a Neptune's mess of all of himself, sculling over the giamond's
391.18+Neptune: Dublin rowing club
391.18+(urination)
391.18+Diamond Sculls, Henley, London (rowing)
391.18+Giant's Causeway: a columnar basalt promontory, Country Antrim, Northern Ireland
391.19courseway, and because he forgot to remember to sign an old
391.19+causeway: a raised road across a boggy or watery place
391.19+Irving Berlin: song Remember (1925): 'you forgot to remember' (popular song of the 1920s, recorded, among many others, by John McCormack)
391.19+Cluster: Forget and Remember
391.20morning proxy paper, a writing in request to hersute herself, on
391.20+VI.B.1.116j (r): 'proxy very late paper'
391.20+hirsute (wig and beard) [390.36-391.01]
391.20+suit
391.21stamped bronnanoleum, from Roneo to Giliette, before saying
391.21+Motif: Browne/Nolan
391.21+(writing paper)
391.21+linoleum
391.21+Roneo copying machines
391.21+William Shakespeare: Romeo and Juliet
391.21+Japanese to: and
391.21+Gillette razor blades
391.22his grace before fish and then and there and too there was
391.22+phrase grace before meat; the saying of a short prayer (grace) before a meal (Motif: Grace before/after fish; Cluster: Graces)
391.23poor Dion Cassius Poosycomb, all drowned too, before the
391.23+VI.B.1.098d (r): 'Dion Cassius'
391.23+Dion Cassius: Roman historian (referred to constantly in Gibbon: The Decline and Fall of the Roman Empire)
391.23+Dionysius Boucicault: famous 19th century Irish playwright (author of Boucicault: Arrah-na-Pogue, Boucicault: The Colleen Bawn, and Boucicault: other plays)
391.23+Colloquial phrase the world and his wife: everybody, a large number of people
391.24world and her husband, because it was most improper and most
391.24+
391.25wrong, when he attempted to (well, he was shocking poor in
391.25+Cluster: Well
391.25+VI.B.2.107e (r): 'bad in his health'
391.26his health, he said, with the shingles falling off him), because
391.26+VI.B.10.092c (r): 'shingles'
391.26+shingles: an eruptive disease, herpes zoster
391.26+phrase to have a shingle short: to be mentally deficient
391.27he (ah, well now, peaces pea to Wedmore and let not the song go
391.27+Cluster: Well
391.27+praises be
391.27+Peace of Wedmore between King Alfred and the Danes restricted latter to northeast England
391.27+VI.C.13.247g (g): === VI.B.22.173a ( ): 'let not the sun go down upon yr. Ire' ('Ire' underlined in the B notebook)
391.27+Fraser-Harris: Morpheus or The Future of Sleep 49: 'As to removing the causes of emotional insomnia, one cannot do better than quote the ancient exhortation — "Let not the sun go down upon your wrath"'
391.27+Ephesians 4:26: 'let not the sun go down upon your wrath' (Archaic ire: wrath)
391.28dumb upon your Ire, as we say in the Spasms of Davies, and we
391.28+ear
391.28+lyre
391.28+Ireland
391.28+VI.C.13.248d (g): === VI.B.22.173f ( ): 'spasms of David'
391.28+Fraser-Harris: Morpheus or The Future of Sleep 62: (of medical causes for dreams) 'The lungs, too, are sometimes oneirogenetic, especially when their bronchial muscle goes into the state of spasm (asthma)'
391.28+Psalms of David (Psalms)
391.28+Thomas Davis: Irish nationalist poet and songwriter, published a request in The Nation for constant supply of Irish patriotic songs
391.29won't be too hard on him as an old Manx presbyterian) and after
391.29+
391.30that, as red as a Rosse is, he made his last will and went to con-
391.30+Coleridge: The Rime of the Ancient Mariner I.34: 'Red as a rose is she'
391.30+French Slang rosse: rotter
391.30+Italian rosse: red (feminine plural)
391.31fession, like the general of the Berkeleyites, at the rim of the rom,
391.31+Motif: How Buckley shot the Russian General
391.31+Berkeley
391.31+Motif: Tom/Tim
391.31+room
391.32on his two bare marrowbones, to Her Worship his Mother and
391.32+Slang marrowbones: knees
391.33Sister Evangelist Sweainey, on Cailcainnin widnight and he was
391.33+Anglo-Irish colcannon: potatoes mashed with butter and milk and chopped cabbage and chopped scallions, a traditional Irish dish for Halloween
391.33+midnight
391.34so sorry, he was really, because he left the bootybutton in the
391.34+beauty
391.35handsome cab and now, tell the truth, unfriends never, (she was
391.35+hansom
391.35+Danish uvenner: enemies (literally 'unfriends')
391.36his first messes dogess and it was a very pretty peltry and there
391.36+Browning: My Last Duchess (poem)
391.36+Mrs
391.36+doge: the title of the ruler of the Republic of Venice (7th to 18th century; one of his duties was to ceremonially marry the sea every year by throwing a golden ring into the Adriatic)


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