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Collection last updated: Apr 6 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 114

392.01were faults on both sides) well, he attempted (or so they say)
392.01+VI.B.3.051f (b): 'faults on both sides (T & I)'
392.01+Cluster: Well
392.01+(an epicene professor of history from an Irish university college seated in a hospice for the dying after eating a bad crab in the red sea) [.01-.11]
392.02ah, now, forget and forgive (don't we all?) and, sure, he was only
392.02+Cluster: Forget and Remember
392.03funning with his andrewmartins and his old age coming over
392.03+Anglo-Irish Andrew Martins: pranks, tricks, shenanigans [393.05]
392.03+VI.B.2.148e (b): 'his old age coming on'
392.04him, well, he attempted or, the Connachy, he was tempted to
392.04+Cluster: Well
392.04+VI.B.1.042c (r): 'Conachy' [385.13] [387.18] [390.04]
392.04+(of Connacht)
392.05attempt some hunnish familiarities, after eten a bad carmp in the
392.05+Norwegian hunn: female
392.05+after eating a bad crab [397.25]
392.05+Dutch eten: to eat
392.05+Motif: alphabet sequence: ABC [.11]
392.05+VI.B.2.107k (r): 'cramps' [397.25]
392.05+carp
392.05+in the transcription of Modern Greek from the Greek alphabet to the Latin alphabet, 'mp' is usually transcribed as 'b', when occurring at the beginning of a word
392.06rude ocean and, hevantonoze sure, he was dead seasickabed (it was
392.06+Red Sea
392.06+heaven knows
392.06+Armenian hiuantanots: hospital
392.06+Dead Sea
392.06+seasick
392.06+VI.B.10.034o (b): 'sickabed'
392.06+Irish Times 17 Nov 1922, 2/4: 'Short negligées, for those who are sick-a-bed and inclined to be luxurious, can be fashioned of scraps of georgette and lace'
392.07really too bad!) her poor old divorced male, in the housepays for
392.07+Our Lady's Hospice for the Dying, Harold's Cross, Dublin
392.08the daying at the Martyr Mrs MacCawley's, where at the time
392.08+Mater Misericordiae Hospital, Dublin (established in 1861 by Sisters of Mercy, a nursing and teaching order founded in 1827 in a house on Lower Baggot Street by Catherine MacAuley (1787-1841))
392.09he was taying and toying, to hold the nursetendered hand, (ah,
392.09+Motif: A/O
392.09+Anglo-Irish tay: tea (reflecting pronunciation)
392.09+trying
392.09+nurse-tender: a sick-nurse
392.10the poor old coax!) and count the buttons and her hand and
392.10+VI.B.2.134h (b): 'coax OM' (probably 'Old Men', referring to this chapter)
392.10+Pascal: La Démence Précoce 114: (of oppositionism exhibited by the mentally ill) 'A chaque sollicitation, il y a renforcement de l'énergie négative, et plus la force de sollicitation agit, plus le négativisme devient opiniâtre' (French 'With each solicitation, there is reinforcement of the negative energy, and the more the force of solicitation takes effect, the more obstinate the negativism becomes')
392.10+(button counting) [393.18-.21] [396.35-.36]
392.11frown on a bad crab and doying to remembore what doed they
392.11+Motif: alphabet sequence: ABC [.05]
392.11+dying
392.11+Cluster: Forget and Remember
392.11+bore
392.11+Danish død: death
392.11+day
392.12were byorn and who made a who a snore. Ah dearo dearo
392.12+born
392.12+first question of Catechism: 'Who made the world?'
392.12+(doze off)
392.12+Motif: Adear, adear!
392.13dear!
392.13+
392.14     And where do you leave Matt Emeritus? The laychief of Ab-
392.14+{{Synopsis: II.4.1+2.F: [392.14-393.06]: the story associated with Matt Gregory — rambling reminiscences}}
392.14+live
392.14+Latin emeritus: retired soldier
392.14+Abbottabad, Pakistan
392.14+abbot and bishop
392.15botabishop? And exchullard of ffrench and gherman. Achoch!
392.15+scholar
392.15+ffrench: a fairly rare Irish surname, traceable back to the 12th century Norman invasion and spelled with a lowercase double 'f' (e.g. the author of ffrench: Prehistoric Faith and Worship)
392.15+French and German
392.15+Motif: A/O
392.15+Hebrew akhoth: sister
392.16They were all so sorgy for poorboir Matt in his saltwater hat,
392.16+German Sorge: worry, sorrow, care for
392.16+sorry
392.16+French pourboire: tip, gratuity
392.17with the Aran crown, or she grew that out of, too big for him, of
392.17+Aran Islands
392.17+Hungarian aran: gold
392.17+Armenian or: that
392.18or Mnepos and his overalls, all falling over her in folds — sure he
392.18+Armenian or: that
392.18+French or: gold
392.18+Cornelius Nepos: Roman historian and letter writer [389.28] [.24]
392.19hadn't the heart in her to pull them up — poor Matt, the old peri-
392.19+phrase hadn't the heart: felt unable (to do something, as it would be unkind)
392.19+peregrine: foreign
392.20grime matriarch, and a queenly man, (the porple blussing upon
392.20+the purple: the cardinalate
392.20+papal blessing
392.20+Danish blusse rød: flush crimson
392.21them!) sitting there, the sole of the settlement, below ground,
392.21+
392.22for an expiatory rite, in postulation of his cause, (who shall say?)
392.22+expiatory: obtaining remission of sins
392.23in her beaver bonnet, the king of the Caucuses, a family all to
392.23+beaver: a hat of beaver's fur
392.23+caucus: committee elected to secure political action
392.23+Caucasus
392.23+VI.B.1.117g (r): 'family all to himself'
392.23+The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXIII, 'Roman Law', 529d: 'if his wife had not passed in manum... she did not become a member of his family: she remained a member of the family in which she was born, or, if its head were deceased or she had been emancipated, she constituted a family in her own person'
392.24himself, under geasa, Themistletocles, on his multilingual tomb-
392.24+VI.B.1.046c (r): 'geasa — taboo'
392.24+VI.B.6.179b (g): 'geasa = taboo'
392.24+Gwynn: The History of Ireland 12: 'in this early period action is represented as enormously controlled by the tradition of Geasa — that is to say, what it is forbidden, or tabu, for a certain man to do'
392.24+(Grania placed Diarmuid under a geas to help her flee from Finn)
392.24+VI.B.2.167g (b): 'Themistletoceles'
392.24+Cornelius Nepos: Themistocles X.4: (of Themistocles, a 5th cenury BC Athenian statesman) 'An epitaph in several languages was written on his tomb' [389.28] [.18]
392.24+mistletoe
392.25stone, like Navellicky Kamen, and she due to kid by sweetpea
392.25+Czech na veliky kámen: Russian na vyeleki kamyen: on a big stone
392.26time, with her face to the wall, in view of the poorhouse, and
392.26+VI.B.3.050b (r): 'in sight of poor house'
392.27taking his rust in the oxsight of Iren, under all the auspices, amid
392.27+VI.B.41.196j (b): 'rust on the oxide of iron'
392.27+Roscoe: Chemistry 92: 'If we burn iron in the air... we get oxide of iron. The same thing is formed when any piece of bright iron is left exposed to air and wet; it becomes rusty, and at last will all change to rust'
392.27+Dutch rust: rest
392.27+song The Exile of Erin
392.27+phrase under the auspices of: under the patronage or protection of (Motif: auspices)
392.27+hospices
392.28the rattle of hailstorms, kalospintheochromatokreening, with her
392.28+VI.B.2.076k (b): 'hailstones'
392.28+Greek kalos: beautiful
392.28+Greek spinthêr: spark
392.28+Greek theos: God
392.28+Greek chrômato-: colour-
392.29ivyclad hood, and gripping an old pair of curling tongs, belong-
392.29+VI.B.2.076j (b): 'ivyclad boots'
392.30ing to Mrs Duna O'Cannell, to blow his brains with, till the
392.30+Dana: mother-goddess of Tuatha Dé Danann
392.30+Daniel O'Connell
392.31heights of Newhigherland heard the Bristolhut, with his can of
392.31+New Ireland: island in the southwestern Pacific Ocean, near New Guinea
392.31+in 1172, Henry II granted the city of Dublin as a colony to the citizens of Bristol, with the same liberties and charters they were entitled to in Bristol (this led to many Bristolians emigrating to Dublin)
392.31+(Bristol Tavern)
392.32tea and a purse of alfred cakes from Anne Lynch and two cuts of
392.32+King Alfred burned the cakes
392.32+Anne Lynch's Dublin tea
392.33Shackleton's brown loaf and dilisk, waiting for the end to come.
392.33+George Shackleton and Sons, Dublin flour millers and corn merchants, 35 James's Street (also owned the Anna Liffey mills in Lucan) [393.01]
392.33+Anglo-Irish dilisk: dulse, a type of edible seaweed
392.34Gordon Heighland, when you think of it! The merthe dirther!
392.34+Gordon Highlanders (regiment)
392.34+phrase God in heaven! (exclamation of astonishment or alarm)
392.34+German Gott und Heiland
392.34+French merde: shit
392.34+Sir Thomas Malory: Le Morte d'Arthur (about King Arthur)
392.35Ah ho! It was too bad entirely! All devoured by active parlour-
392.35+Motif: Ah, ho!
392.35+[096.21] [391.12-.13]
392.35+Slang Act of Parliament: a military term for small beer, five pints of which by an act of parliament a landlord was formerly obliged to give each soldier gratis
392.35+Variants: {FnF, Vkg, JCM: ...parlourmen, laudabiliter, of...} | {Png: ...parlourmen laudabiliter of...}
392.36men, laudabiliter, of woman squelch and all on account of the
392.36+VI.B.1.043j (r): 'Laudabiliter Adrian IV (to colonise)'
392.36+Laudabiliter: papal bull issued in 1155 by Pope Adrian IV, granting Ireland to Henry II
392.36+lemon squash


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