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Collection last updated: Apr 6 2024
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Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 138

426.01and oath by the awe of Shaun (and that's a howl of a name!) that
426.01+VI.B.16.081c (r): '*V* hell of a name'
426.02I will commission to the flames any incendiarist whosoever or
426.02+VI.B.16.093a (r): 'commission'
426.02+Rothschild: Histoire de la Poste aux Lettres 96: (quoting an ordinance of Louis XI) 'Le roy veut qu'il y ait un office intitulé: Conseiller Grand-Maistre des coureurs de France. Pour fair le dict établissement, lui sera baillé bonne commission' (French 'The king wishes that an office be created entitled: Grand-Master Counsellor of the Runners of France. For the establishment of the aforesaid, a good commision will be delivered to him')
426.03ahriman howsoclever who would endeavour to set ever annyma
426.03+Ahriman: Zoroastrian principle of evil [425.28] [425.34]
426.03+phrase set the Liffey on fire: achieve something outstanding, make a name for oneself in the world (usually in the negative)
426.03+song Little Annie Rooney
426.03+any
426.03+anima
426.04roner moother of mine on fire. Rock me julie but I will soho!
426.04+song Mother of Mine (Cluster: John McCormack's Repertoire)
426.04+duly
426.04+so
426.05     And, with that crickcrackcruck of his threelungged squool
426.05+{{Synopsis: III.1.1D.M: [426.05-427.16]: he breaks down, overpowered with emotion — he gazes up, falls backs and rolls down (or up) the river in his barrel}}
426.05+[[Speaker: the four's ass]]
426.05+Ku Klux Klan [.20]
426.05+Slang threelegged stool: gallows
426.06from which grief had usupped every smile, big hottempered
426.06+usurped
426.06+used up
426.06+VI.B.16.022i (r): '*V* hot tempered'
426.07husky fusky krenfy strenfy pugiliser, such as he was, he virtually
426.07+Breton krenf: strong
426.07+Dialect strengthy: physically strong
426.07+VI.B.16.078a (r): 'pugillise'
426.07+Rothschild: Histoire de la Poste aux Lettres 46: (of a stylus used for writing on waxen tablets) 'servait d'arme au besoin; on l'appelait quelquefois pugillus (petit poignard) et les tablettes pugillares' (French 'served as a weapon in times of need; it was sometimes called pugillus (little dagger) and the tablets pugillares')
426.07+pugilist
426.08broke down on the mooherhead, getting quite jerry over her,
426.08+VI.B.16.020c (r): '*V* broke down — into breakdown' (dash dittos 'broke'; only first three words crayoned)
426.08+John McCormack, at a concert in Sacramento, California, has been so moved by his once rendition of song Mother Machree [.09] that he broke down and could not continue
426.08+(cow's mooing)
426.08+in Egyptian mythology, Isis had her head, ripped off by her son Horus upon learning that she had let Set go free, replaced by Thoth with a cow's head
426.08+motherhood
426.08+Slang jerry: mournful
426.09overpowered by himself with the love of the tearsilver that
426.09+VI.B.16.092g (r): 'overpowered'
426.09+song Mother Machree: 'I love the dear silver that shines in your hair' (Cluster: John McCormack's Repertoire)
426.10he twined through her hair for, sure, he was the soft semplgawn
426.10+VI.B.16.050b (r): '*V* soft (y)'
426.10+Breton sempl: weak
426.10+simpleton
426.10+Breton gwan: weak
426.11slob of the world with a heart like Montgomery's in his showchest
426.11+VI.B.16.131l (r): 'slob'
426.11+heart, chest
426.12and harvey loads of feeling in him and as innocent and undesign-
426.12+William Harvey: 17th century English physician, famous for being the first to describe in detail the circulation of the blood in the body and the central role of the heart [.11] in it (he also performed the post-mortem examination on Old Parr [003.17])
426.12+Harley: hero of Mackenzie's Man of Feeling (dies when he is accepted in marriage)
426.12+heavy
426.12+Colloquial loads: a great quantity
426.12+VI.B.5.007f (r): '*V* innocent as fresh fallen calf'
426.12+Wyndham Lewis: The Caliph's Design, Architects! Where's Your Vortex?
426.13ful as the freshfallen calef. Still, grossly unselfish in sickself, he
426.13+Danish sig selv: itself, himself
426.14dished allarmes away and laughed it off with a wipe at his pud-
426.14+dashed
426.14+Italian allarme: alarm
426.14+French larme: tear
426.14+VI.B.16.105h (r): 'laughed it off'
426.14+Key: John McCormack, His Own Life Story 37: (after being asked by Maggy, the college cook, why he, McCormack, had sung only in foreign languages) 'I'd sung nothing save English... I laughed it off... but her query was a disturbing thorn'
426.15gies and a gulp apologetic, healing his tare be the smeyle of his
426.15+VI.B.16.133f (r): '& he gulped apologetically'
426.15+Key: John McCormack, His Own Life Story 352: 'And he gulped apologetically'
426.15+Thomas Moore: Irish Melodies: song Erin! The Tear and the Smile in Thine Eyes [air: Aileen Aroon]
426.15+Genesis 3:19: 'In the sweat of thy face shalt thou eat bread' (often quoted as 'By the sweat of your brow shall you earn your bread' and the like)
426.16oye, oogling around. Him belly no belong sollow mole pigeon.
426.16+Norwegian øye: eye
426.16+Dutch oog: eye
426.16+VI.C.5.147f (o): === VI.B.10.085i ( ): 'my belly no belong sick'
426.16+Townley: Indiscretions of Lady Susan 82: 'I was at tea once with a few chosen friends... when the door opened to admit Chang San, the blue-gowned butler... "Must send for daifoo (doctor), missy," he said, "belly sick, wantchee medicine!"... shocked at his intruding upon my guests with this allusion to a stomach trouble... I gently pushed him towards the door... "My belly no belong sick," he insisted. "Wall belly all wrong inside!" And he pointed to the electric bell, which I then realized was out of order... The Chinese have a curious trick of adding a particle to the end of every word in English... either an "e", as in the case of the word bell, which Chang San made into belly, or "kin"'
426.16+sorrow
426.17Ally bully. Fu Li's gulpa. Mind you, now, that he was in the
426.17+German Dialect alle balle: all gone
426.17+Chinese fu: happy
426.17+Motif: O felix culpa!
426.17+Chinese li: sin, crime
426.17+VI.B.1.073e (r): '*V* mind you, he —'
426.18dumpest of earnest orthough him jawr war hoo hleepy hor halk
426.18+deepest
426.18+depths of earth
426.18+although his jaw was too sleepy for talk
426.18+VI.B.1.173k (r): 'jaw too heavy to speak'
426.18+Heidelberg Man, with his heavy jaw, was thought unable to speak
426.19urthing hurther. Moe like that only he stopped short in looking
426.19+anything further
426.19+Samoan moe: to sleep
426.19+VI.B.10.029o (r): 'Like that only'
426.19+The Leader 11 Nov 1922, 326/2: 'Our Ladies' Letter': 'Like that, only the way the trains are, I'd be tempted to go up to ye'
426.20up up upfrom his tide shackled wrists through the ghost of an
426.20+up from
426.20+upon
426.20+tight
426.20+Motif: The ghost of a notion
426.20+The Birth of a Nation: a controversial film by D.W. Griffith, glorifying the Ku Klux Klan [.05]
426.21ocean's, the wieds of pansiful heathvens of joepeter's gaseytotum
426.21+weeds
426.21+the word 'pansy' derives from French pensée: thought
426.21+Wagner: Parsifal
426.21+fanciful
426.21+heathens
426.21+VI.B.10.066b (r): 'the heavens as they were'
426.21+Jupiter's
426.21+Samoan gasetoto: solar eclipse
426.22as they are telling not but were and will be, all told, scruting fore-
426.22+scrutinising
426.22+fore, back (Motif: back/front)
426.22+far back
426.22+foregone
426.23back into the fargoneahead to feel out what age in years tropical,
426.23+German Vergangenheit: past
426.23+(find out the time)
426.24ecclesiastic, civil or sidereal he might find by the sirious pointstand
426.24+sidereal year: the time needed for one apparent complete cycle of the sun
426.24+Sirius
426.24+standpoint
426.25of Charley's Wain (what betune the spheres sledding along the
426.25+VI.B.16.034i (r): 'Charles' Wain' (near other notebook entries dealing with wagons)
426.25+Charles's Wain: a prominent pattern of seven stars in the Ursa Major constellation (also known as Big Dipper or The Plough or The Wagon; possibly named after Charlemagne)
426.25+Anglo-Irish betune: between
426.25+phrase music of the spheres
426.26lacteal and the mansions of the blest turning on old times) as ere-
426.26+Latin Via Lactea: Milky Way
426.26+(astrological houses)
426.26+Fitzball and Wallace: Maritana: song 'Alas, those chimes so sweetly stealing': 'Oh! that angels might waft him To the mansions of the blest. Yes, yes those chimes, so sweetly swelling, As from some holy sphere' [.25]
426.26+Fitzball and Wallace: Maritana: song Turn On, Old Time
426.27while had he craved of thus, the dreamskhwindel necklassoed him,
426.27+Danish drømskvindel: dreamy spiral
426.27+swindle
426.27+spindle
426.27+German Windel: diaper
426.27+necklace
426.27+(lynched)
426.27+lassoed
426.28his thumbs fell into his fists and, lusosing the harmonical balance
426.28+VI.B.14.060h (r): 'his thumbs fell into his fists'
426.28+Sauvé: Proverbes et Dictons de la Basse-Bretagne no. 613: 'Il a le pouce tombé dans la main. (Il est découragé)' (French 'He has the thumb fallen into the hand. (He is discouraged)')
426.28+Latin lusus: a playing
426.28+Russian losos: salmon (Finn burnt his thumb while cooking the Salmon of Knowledge)
426.28+losing (his balance)
426.28+(Motif: coincidence of contraries)
426.29of his ballbearing extremities, by the holy kettle, like a flask of
426.29+VI.B.3.127c (b): 'flask of lightning'
426.29+Slang flash of lightning: glass of gin
426.30lightning over he careened (O the sons of the fathers!) by the
426.30+Luke 10:18: 'I beheld Satan as lightning fall from heaven'
426.30+Lucifer in Meredith's sonnet 'careened'
426.30+sins
426.31mightyfine weight of his barrel (all that prevented the happering
426.31+VI.B.6.036a (r): 'mighty fine'
426.32of who if not the asterisks betwink themselves shall ever?) and,
426.32+VI.C.1.068i (r): === VI.B.16.139f ( ): 'who was he, if not,'
426.32+Crawford: Thinking Black 50: 'Horace, too, who was he if not a slave's son?'
426.32+Latin aster: star
426.32+between
426.33as the wisest postlude course he could playact, collaspsed in en-
426.33+postlude: piece or movement played at end of oratorio
426.33+French ensemble: together; whole
426.34semble and rolled buoyantly backwards in less than a twink-
426.34+VI.B.16.102c (r): 'buoyancy'
426.34+Key: John McCormack, His Own Life Story 22: '"I think they must have liked it," he buoyantly announced'
426.34+VI.B.1.076j (r): '*V* walks backwards' [202.22]
426.34+twinkling: a very short period of time (the time it takes to blink one's eyes; Motif: ear/eye) [.35]
426.35ling via Rattigan's corner out of farther earshot with his highly
426.35+VI.B.16.031j (r): 'position via' (only last word crayoned (and underlined))
426.35+Gallois: La Poste et les Moyens de Communication 29: 'On appelait Veredi les chevaux de poste, dont il y avait des relais ou stations (positiones), disposées sur les grandes routes ou voies (via), admirablement bien entretenues' (French 'The horses of the post were called Veredi, for whom there were admirably well-maintained relays or stations (positiones), laid out on the large roads or routes (via)')
426.35+VI.B.6.046c (r): 'out of earshot of the sick room' (last word not crayoned)
426.35+ear [.34]
426.36curious mode of slipashod motion, surefoot, sorefoot, slickfoot,
426.36+VI.B.1.169j (r): 'mode of motion'
426.36+VI.B.16.017a (r): 'Slipshod'
426.36+phrase Hayfoot! Strawfoot! (Left! Right!, in marching)


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