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Collection last updated: | May 20 2024 |
Engine last updated: | Feb 18 2024 |
Finnegans Wake lines: | 36 |
Elucidations found: | 181 |
533.01 | such, particularly while savouring of their flavours at their most |
---|---|
–533.01+ | |
533.02 | perfect best when served with heliotrope ayelips, as this is, where |
–533.02+ | Best (Cluster: Lord-Mayors of Dublin) |
–533.02+ | Motif: heliotrope |
–533.02+ | eyelets |
–533.02+ | tulips |
–533.02+ | Cluster: As This Is |
533.03 | I do drench my jolly soul on the pu pure beauty of hers past. |
–533.03+ | (Motif: stuttering; twice) |
–533.03+ | Italian girasole: sunflower |
–533.03+ | Latin pura et pia bella: pure and pious wars (a phrase used by Vico to refer to religious wars of the heroic age; Italian bella: a beautiful woman, a beauty) |
–533.03+ | French pioupiou: soldier |
533.04 | She is my bestpreserved wholewife, sowell her as herafter, in |
–533.04+ | [[Speaker: Yawn as *E*]] |
–533.04+ | halfwife, wholewife [532.15] [534.29] |
–533.04+ | German sowohl: so much |
–533.04+ | Danish saavel her som herefter: now as well as hereafter |
–533.04+ | Dutch zowel... als: both... and |
–533.04+ | her after (followers) |
533.05 | Evans's eye, with incompatibly the smallest shoenumber outside |
–533.05+ | Mary Ann Evans: real name of George Eliot |
–533.05+ | Heaven's |
–533.05+ | incomparably |
–533.05+ | Pearce: Sims Reeves, Fifty Years of Music in England 45n: '"Miss Romer... had... the smallest foot ever possessed by a European lady"' |
–533.05+ | (Chinese women with bound feet) |
533.06 | chinatins. They are jolly dainty, spekin tluly. May we not recom- |
–533.06+ | Chinatown |
–533.06+ | Italian gialli denti: yellow teeth |
–533.06+ | VI.B.29.103a (k): 'tluly spak' |
–533.06+ | speaking |
–533.06+ | Peking |
–533.06+ | truly (imitating Chinese Pidgin pronunciation) |
533.07 | mend them? It was my proofpiece from my prenticeserving. |
–533.07+ | Danish prøvestykke: assay piece |
–533.07+ | (test of skill for apprentice shoemaker) |
533.08 | And, alas, our private chaplain of Lambeyth and Dolekey, bishop- |
–533.08+ | Lambeth Palace, residence of archbishop of Canterbury |
–533.08+ | Lambay: island off the coast of County Dublin |
–533.08+ | Dalkey: a suburban village and a mostly uninhabited island south of Dublin [.09] |
–533.08+ | VI.B.29.207d (o): 'Regionary Bishop' |
–533.08+ | Ferguson: The Confusion of Tongues 282: (of the Liberal Catholic Church) 'the distinguished theosophical teacher, Charles W. Leadbeater, of Krishnamurti fame... was consecrated as Regionary Bishop of Australia' |
533.09 | regionary, an always sadfaced man, in his lutestring pewcape with |
–533.09+ | VI.B.5.070a (r): 'always sadfaced' |
–533.09+ | John Dowland: 16th-17th century English composer and lute-player, best known for his melancholy songs, many written for the lute (believed by some Irish historians to have been born in Dalkey) [.08] |
–533.09+ | VI.B.29.063g-.064a (o): 'Dewcapes Lute string' (the 'D' looks quite like a 'P') |
–533.09+ | Peter: Dublin Fragments, Social and Historic 156: 'Damask, Tabbies, Ducapes, Lute String, Paduasoys, black calicoes, and russets for petticoats all could be seen at "The Blackamoor's Head", where the owner moved from Francis Street into Dame Street' |
–533.09+ | lutestring: a type of silk fabric |
–533.09+ | ducape: a type of silk fabric |
533.10 | tabinet band, who has visited our various hard hearts and reins |
–533.10+ | tabinet: Irish fabric, watered silk and wool |
–533.10+ | very hard |
–533.10+ | Psalms 7:9: 'For the righteous God trieth the heart and reins' |
–533.10+ | VI.B.5.139l (r): 'his reins *T* & *L*' |
–533.10+ | Chateaubriand: Œuvres Choisies Illustrées I.68, Atala: 'celui qui sonde les reins et les cœurs vous jugera sur vos intentions, qui étaient pures' (French 'he who tries loins and hearts will judge you by your intentions, that were pure') |
533.11 | by imposition of fufuf fingers, olso haddock's fumb, in that |
–533.11+ | (laying on of hands, in religious services, such as blessing, confirmation, ordination, etc.) |
–533.11+ | (Motif: stuttering) |
–533.11+ | five |
–533.11+ | Oslo |
–533.11+ | also |
–533.11+ | Joyce: Ulysses.15.3681: 'His criminal thumbprint on the haddock' (haddock is supposed to bear Saint Peter's fingerprints) |
533.12 | Upper Room can speak loud to you some quite complimentary |
–533.12+ | Luke 22:12: 'and he shall shew you a large upper room furnished' (Last Supper) |
–533.12+ | VI.B.14.193f (r): 'loud speakers' |
–533.12+ | Irish Times 29 Mar 1924, 7/6: 'Lr. Sean McGarry said that there were sets manufactured in Dublin by two or three people. Valves and loud speakers were the only things they imported' |
–533.12+ | VI.B.5.055i (r): 'some complimentary things' |
–533.12+ | The Times 27 May 1924, 23/3: 'Byfleet Poison Charge': (Vaquier's statement read in a trial of the murder by poison of Mr. Jones, an English hotel landlord, by Vaquier, a French tenant and lover of the landlord's wife) 'Mrs. Jones...insisted that I should return to her some complimentary things she has written to me' ('complimentary' may be a mistranscription, on the part of the newspaper, of 'compromising') |
533.13 | things about my clean charactering, even when detected in the |
–533.13+ | VI.B.1.152n (r): 'character what a man is in dark (Africa)' |
–533.13+ | Crawford: Back to the Long Grass 117: 'the geography of Africa is akin to its morality. And if you accept the crushing old certainty that "Character is what a man is in the dark," then you have only to modify your noun as an adjective and what do you get? Why, this, that Character is what a man is all alone in the Dark Continent' |
533.14 | dark, distressful though such recital prove to me, as this is, when |
–533.14+ | VI.B.3.161c (r): 'recital painful to him' |
–533.14+ | Cluster: As This Is |
533.15 | I introduced her (Frankfurters, numborines, why drive fear?) to |
–533.15+ | Frankfurt |
–533.15+ | numbers |
–533.15+ | tambourines |
–533.15+ | German eins, zwei, drei, vier: one, two, three, four |
–533.15+ | German fahren: to drive |
533.16 | our fourposter tunies chantreying under Castrucci Sinior and De |
–533.16+ | (bed) |
–533.16+ | VI.B.29.195a ( ): 'Tunis' |
–533.16+ | Middle English chantry: singing of Mass (in 16th century Dublin, guilds organised chantry by four priests) |
–533.16+ | Castrucci: 18th century conductor; visited Dublin, where he died in 1752 |
–533.16+ | de Mellos: 18th century conductor; followed Castrucci and established opera on Fishamble Street |
533.17 | Mellos, those whapping oldsteirs, with sycamode euphonium in |
–533.17+ | VI.B.29.202c (o): 'wapping' |
–533.17+ | Washington Irving: A History of New York, book VI, ch. V: 'the Van Higginbottoms, of Wapping's Creek... came armed with ferrules and birchen rods, being a race of schoolmasters, who first discovered the marvelous sympathy between the seat of honor and the seat of intellect' |
–533.17+ | Wapping Old Stairs, London's East End (leading down to Thames; once notorious for after-dark crimes) |
–533.17+ | Slang wapping: having sex with |
–533.17+ | whipping |
–533.17+ | VI.B.29.202d (o): 'old stairs' |
–533.17+ | oldsters [393.31] |
–533.17+ | VI.B.29.201d (o): 'sycamore' |
–533.17+ | Washington Irving: A History of New York, book V, ch. VII: (of redoubts fortifying the city) 'These... redoubts, in process of time, came to be pleasantly overrun by a carpet of grass and clover, and overshadowed by wide-spreading elms and sycamores, among the branches of which the birds would build their nests and rejoice the ear with their melodious notes' |
–533.17+ | mode (music) |
–533.17+ | euphonium: the bass instrument of the Saxhorn family |
–533.17+ | VI.B.29.168e (o): 'Singing from note in either notation' |
–533.17+ | Rowntree: Poverty: A Study of Town Life 339: 'The following is a list of the subjects taught in one of the Board Schools... (8) Singing from note in either notation' [.16] |
533.18 | either notation in our altogether cagehaused duckyheim on |
–533.18+ | cage-work timber houses built in 16th century Dublin |
–533.18+ | German Haus: house |
–533.18+ | Ibsen: all plays: The Wild Duck |
–533.18+ | Ibsen: all plays: Et Dukkehjem (A Doll's House) |
–533.18+ | German Heim: home |
533.19 | Goosna Greene, that cabinteeny homesweetened through affec- |
–533.19+ | Goose Green Avenue, Drumcondra, Dublin |
–533.19+ | Gretna Green: the first village north of the England-Scotland border on the old London-Edinburgh road, and thus famously a destination for eloping couples under the age of 21 wishing to marry without their parents' consent, which was impossible from 1754 onwards in England and Wales, but legal in Scotland (many such weddings were officiated by local blacksmiths over their anvils) |
–533.19+ | VI.B.29.134f (k): 'Cabinteely' |
–533.19+ | Cabinteely: village, County Dublin |
–533.19+ | John Howard Payne: song Home Sweet Home (1823) [.20] [.22] |
533.20 | tion's hoardpayns (First Murkiss, or so they sankeyed. Dodo! O |
–533.20+ | John Howard Payne [.19] [.22] |
–533.20+ | heart pains |
–533.20+ | (Mark, Luke, Matthew, John; Motif: 4 evangelists (Mamalujo) (*X*)) [.20-.21] |
–533.20+ | marquis |
–533.20+ | Sankey and Moody: 19th century American revivalists and hymn writers [060.19] |
–533.20+ | Sankey (Cluster: Lord-Mayors of Dublin) |
–533.20+ | said |
–533.20+ | key (music) |
–533.20+ | O'Clery: surname of two of the major compilers of Annals of the Four Masters (*X*) |
533.21 | Clearly! And Gregorio at front with Johannes far in back. Aw, |
–533.21+ | Italian Gregorio: Gregory |
–533.21+ | Gregorian chant: the major musical tradition for singing hymns in the Catholic Church |
–533.21+ | Motif: back/front |
–533.21+ | Johannes Sebastian Bach |
–533.21+ | hee-haw (representing the bray of an ass; the four's ass) |
533.22 | aw!), gleeglom there's gnome sweepplaces like theresweep No- |
–533.22+ | John Howard Payne: song Home Sweet Home: 'There's no place like home' [.19-.20] |
–533.22+ | there's no such place |
–533.22+ | VI.B.6.162k (r): 'no place like Norway' |
–533.22+ | nowhere |
533.23 | whergs. By whom, as my Kerk Findlater's, ye litel chuch rond |
–533.23+ | Dutch kerk: church |
–533.23+ | Findlater's Church: the popular name of Abbey Presbyterian Church, Rutland (now Parnell) Square, Dublin (as it was financed by Alexander Findlater) [619.03-.04] |
–533.23+ | The Little Church around the Corner, New York City (a church just off Broadway, where theatrical performers used to marry) |
533.24 | ye coner, and K. K. Katakasm enjoineth in the Belief and, as you |
–533.24+ | Sir Oliver Lodge: Raymond (in which appears 'K.K.' (p.205), a medium) [535.36] |
–533.24+ | VI.B.29.207b (o): 'K.K.K. Katekism.' |
–533.24+ | Ferguson: The Confusion of Tongues 275: (of the Ku Klux Klan) 'the little booklet called K.K.K. Katechism' |
–533.24+ | catechism |
–533.24+ | VI.B.7.059h (b): 'the Belief' |
–533.24+ | Archaic the Belief: the Apostles' Creed (a traditional statement of basic Christian doctrine (and prayer) attributed to the Apostles, but probably early medieval in origin) |
–533.24+ | VI.B.25.149l (r): 'as you all know' |
533.25 | all know, of a child, dear Humans, one of my life's ambitions of |
–533.25+ | (as a child) |
–533.25+ | VI.B.25.149m (r): 'one of the ambitions of my early youth (SP) I was confirmed in bed' [.28] |
533.26 | my youngend from an early peepee period while still to hedje- |
–533.26+ | German Jugend: youth |
–533.26+ | (Motif: stuttering) |
–533.26+ | Anglo-Irish hedge-school: a makeshift, open-air school, for teaching Catholics surreptitiously during the period when this was made illegal by the English (17th to 19th century) |
–533.26+ | Hejaz: province, Saudi Arabia |
533.27 | skool, intended for broadchurch, I, being fully alive to it, was |
–533.27+ | (for priesthood) |
–533.27+ | VI.B.7.210a (b): 'fully alive to —' |
–533.27+ | Kennedy-Fraser & Macleod: Songs of the Hebrides II.ix: 'The fisher-crofters, who get their living from the sea... are yet fully alive alike to its seduction and to its cruelty' |
533.28 | parruchially confirmed in Caulofat's bed by our bujibuji beloved |
–533.28+ | parochially |
–533.28+ | various stories of child saints suffering from debilitating diseases and given the sacrament of confirmation at lower ages and in their sickbeds |
–533.28+ | caliphate: the domain ruled by a caliph (a political-religious Muslim leader, considered a successor of the prophet Mohammed) |
–533.28+ | (Motif: stuttering) |
–533.28+ | Persian baji: sister |
533.29 | curate-author. Michael Engels is your man. Let Michael relay |
–533.29+ | Italian curatutto: cure-all |
–533.29+ | Motif: Mick/Nick (Archangel Michael, Satan) [.30] |
–533.29+ | German Engel: angel |
533.30 | Sutton and tell you people here who have the phoney habit (it |
–533.30+ | Sutton (Cluster: Lord-Mayors of Dublin) |
–533.30+ | Satan [.29] |
–533.30+ | isthmus of Sutton, joining Howth Head and the mainland |
–533.30+ | VI.B.11.136d (r): 'you people here' |
–533.30+ | telephone |
–533.30+ | clairvoyance |
533.31 | was remarketable) in his clairaudience, as this is, as only our own |
–533.31+ | remarkable |
–533.31+ | Cluster: As This Is |
533.32 | Michael can, when reicherout at superstation, to bring ruptures |
–533.32+ | German reicher: richer |
–533.32+ | reacher-out |
–533.32+ | superstition |
–533.32+ | VI.B.10.020f (g): 'ruptures (raptures)' (seems to suggest that someone, possibly Nora, was reading to Joyce and mispronounced 'raptures') |
–533.32+ | Monahan: Adventures in Life and Letters 235: (as if addressing the ghost of Charles Lamb) 'The factitious raptures of spiritists were not for thee' |
533.33 | to our roars how I am amp amp amplify. Hiemlancollin. Pim- |
–533.33+ | ears |
–533.33+ | (Motif: stuttering) |
–533.33+ | Danish hjem: home |
–533.33+ | homeland calling |
–533.33+ | Holmenkollen: hill near Oslo |
533.34 | pim's Ornery forninehalf. Shaun Shemsen saywhen saywhen. |
–533.34+ | (ordinary shares) |
–533.34+ | four shillings and ninepence halfpenny |
–533.34+ | Motif: Shem/Shaun |
–533.34+ | John Jameson whiskey |
–533.34+ | say when (to stop pouring, to sell stocks) [.35] |
533.35 | Holmstock unsteaden. Livpoomark lloyrge hoggs one four tupps |
–533.35+ | VI.B.29.001a (o): 'holm' |
–533.35+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXV, 'Stockholm', 935b: 'Riddarholmen (nobles' island), lying immediately west of Stadholmen' |
–533.35+ | VI.B.29.005g ( ): 'holmstock' |
–533.35+ | Stockholm |
–533.35+ | stocks [.34] |
–533.35+ | unsteady (stock market) |
–533.35+ | VI.B.29.ffvd (o): 'staden' |
–533.35+ | The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXV, 'Stockholm', 935b: 'Staden is the commercial centre of the city' |
–533.35+ | Liverpool |
–533.35+ | Swift first met Swift's Stella at Moor Park, Surrey |
–533.35+ | David Lloyd George: 20th century British politician (prime minister from 1916 to 1922) |
–533.35+ | large hogs |
–533.35+ | James Hogg: 19th century Scottish writer |
–533.35+ | hogg: young sheep (from weaning to first shearing) |
–533.35+ | one pound, four shillings and two pence |
–533.35+ | tup: male sheep, ram |
533.36 | noying. Big Butter Boost! Sorry! Thnkyou! Thatll beall for- |
–533.36+ | annoying |
–533.36+ | Big-butter-lane in medieval Dublin |
–533.36+ | good, better, best (positive, comparative, superlative) [106.33] [165.28] |
–533.36+ | thank you |
–533.36+ | that'll be all for today (radio broadcast signing off) [342.29] |
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