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Collection last updated: Apr 6 2024
Engine last updated: Feb 18 2024
Finnegans Wake lines: 36
Elucidations found: 104

582.01     Yet he begottom.
582.01+{{Synopsis: III.4.4P.G: [582.01-582.27]: let us offer then some kind words — of sorts}}
582.01+begot 'em (Colloquial 'em: them)
582.01+bottom
582.02     Let us wherefore, tearing ages, presently preposterose a
582.02+therefore
582.02+Anglo-Irish phrase tare and ages! (expletive; a euphemism for (Christ's) 'tears and agues' or something similar)
582.02+preposterous
582.02+propose
582.03snatchvote of thanksalot to the huskiest coaxing experimenter
582.03+vote of thanks
582.03+HCE (Motif: HCE)
582.04that ever gave his best hand into chancerisk, wishing him with
582.04+EHC (Motif: HCE)
582.04+Chancery hand: the name of several different styles of handwriting used for business transactions from the middle ages onwards (for example, English Chancery hand)
582.05his famblings no end of slow poison and a mighty broad venue
582.05+Slang fambly: family
582.05+Slang fambles: hands
582.05+(alcohol)
582.06for themselves between the devil's punchbowl and the deep
582.06+phrase between the devil and the deep sea: facing two equally undesirable alternatives
582.06+Devil's Punchbowl: chasm near Killarney
582.06+Motif: Mick/Nick (devil, angel)
582.07angleseaboard, that they may gratefully turn a deaf ear clooshed
582.07+Anglesey: large island off the coast of Wales (its main town, Holyhead, is a major ferry port connecting Ireland and Britain)
582.07+seaboard: coastline, seashore
582.07+closed
582.07+Irish cluas: ear
582.08upon the desperanto of willynully, their shareholders from Taaffe
582.08+desperado
582.08+Esperanto: an artificial language (Esperanto)
582.08+willy-nilly: willingly or not
582.08+The Encyclopædia Britannica vol. XXVI, 'Taaffe, Eduard Franz Joseph von', 321d: (of the 19th century Austrian statesman's ancestors) 'From the 13th century the Taaffes had been one of the leading families in the north of Ireland. In 1628 Sir John Taaffe was raised to the peerage as Baron Ballymote and Viscount Taaffe of Corven'
582.08+the Hebrew alphabet runs from Aleph to Tav
582.09to Auliffe, that will curse them below par and mar with their
582.09+Aulaffe (or Amlave): Danish invader of Dublin
582.09+phrase below par: (of company shares) traded below their face value [.08]
582.09+Colloquial pa, ma: father, mother
582.10descendants, shame, humbug and profit, to greenmould upon
582.10+Motif: Shem, Ham and Japhet
582.10+green, mildew, jaundice (Motif: green, white, orange)
582.11mildew over jaundice as long as ever there's wagtail surtaxed to
582.11+wagtail: a type of small bird with a protruding tail
582.11+Slang wagtail: prostitute
582.11+(penis)
582.11+attached
582.12a testcase on enver a man.
582.12+(scrotum)
582.12+French envers: reverse side, wrong side
582.12+Danish enhver: every, any
582.12+never
582.13     We have to had them whether we'll like it or not. They'll have
582.13+
582.14to have us now then we're here on theirspot. Scant hope theirs
582.14+
582.15or ours to escape life's high carnage of semperidentity by sub-
582.15+EHC (Motif: HCE)
582.15+semper-identity: being always the same (often applied to the Catholic Church by Protestant texts)
582.15+insisting
582.16sisting peasemeal upon variables. Bloody certainly have we got
582.16+piecemeal
582.16+vegetables
582.17to see to it ere smellful demise surprends us on this concrete that
582.17+Obsolete surprend: to surprise (from French surprendre: to surprise)
582.17+(overtakes)
582.17+French sur: over
582.17+French prendre: to take
582.17+(road)
582.18down the gullies of the eras we may catch ourselves looking
582.18+
582.19forward to what will in no time be staring you larrikins on the
582.19+Australian larrikin: hooligan, ruffian
582.19+James Larkin: 20th century Irish labour leader
582.20postface in that multimirror megaron of returningties, whirled
582.20+Greek megaron: bedchamber
582.20+eternity
582.20+hymn Glory Be: (ends) 'world without end. Amen'
582.21without end to end. So there was a raughty . . . who in Dyfflins-
582.21+phrase end to end: in a row with the ends touching
582.21+(Ellmann: James Joyce 432: 'Budgen, who knew a great many sea chanties from his sailor days, delighted Joyce, by singing "The Raughty Tinker"')
582.21+song The Raughty Tinker: 'There was a raughty tinker Who in London town did dwell And when he had no work to do His meat ax he did sell. With me solderin' iron and taraway Hammer legs and saw. Brave old Donald we are off to Castlepool' [.23]
582.21+Haliday: The Scandinavian Kingdom of Dublin 23: (of Dublin) 'The Scandinavians called it "Dyflin"'
582.21+(Dublin Castle)
582.22borg did . . . With his soddering iron, spadeaway, hammerlegs
582.22+Danish borg: castle
582.23and . . . Where there was a fair young . . . Who was playing her
582.23+song The Raughty Tinker: 'Came up a gay old lady, Her age was one hundred and three. She said "You raughty tinker, Will you have a rasp at me?" With me solderin' iron and taraway Hammer legs and saw. Brave old Donald we are off to Castlepool' [.21]
582.24game of . . . And said she you rockaby . . . Will you peddle in
582.24+
582.25my bog . . . And he sod her in Iarland, paved her way from
582.25+Irish iar-: West-; remote-
582.26Maizenhead to Youghal. And that's how Humpfrey, champion
582.26+Maidenhead: town, Berkshire
582.26+Mizen Head to Youghal: entire southern coast of Cork
582.26+HCE (Motif: HCE)
582.27emir, holds his own. Shysweet, she rests.
582.27+MacMahon, a French general in the Crimean War, asked to leave the Malakoff fortification, replied 'J'y suis, j'y reste' (French 'Here I am, here I stay')
582.28     Or show pon him now, will you! Derg rudd face should take
582.28+{{Synopsis: III.4.4P.H: [582.28-584.25]: a man and a woman having sex, or cricket — as seen from Luke's point of view}}
582.28+(Luke's view, from the front) [.28-.31] [559.20-.22] [564.01-.04] [590.22-.24]
582.28+show upon [056.15]
582.28+German schau an!: look at!
582.28+Lough Derg: a lake in County Donegal, site of Saint Patrick's Purgatory [.29]
582.28+Irish dearg: red
582.28+ruddy: reddish (Slang bloody, damn)
582.29patrick's purge. Hokoway, in his hiphigh bearserk! Third posi-
582.29+Saint Patrick's Purgatory: a small cave on an island in Lough Derg, County Donegal, said to have been revealed to Saint Patrick as an entrance to purgatory (a major pilgrimage site since at least the 12th century and possibly much earlier)
582.29+purgative
582.29+Dialect sark: nightshirt
582.29+third position of concord [559.21] [564.01-.02] [590.22-.23]
582.30tion of concord! Excellent view from front. Sidome. Female
582.30+(erroneously missing 'Luke!' or equivalent) [559.22] [564.02] [590.23]
582.30+in the fixed-do method of the sol-fa system of musical note representation, si = B (or H in German terminology), do = C, mi = E; therefore, si-do-mi = HCE (Motif: HCE; first letter shifted to the end from [564.04]) [559.21] [564.04] [590.24]
582.30+sodomy: anal sex, especially homosexual [584.19]
582.30+female masking male [559.22]
582.31imperfectly masking male. Redspot his browbrand. Woman's
582.31+VI.B.13.001f (g): 'mask' [559.22]
582.31+red spot on planet Jupiter (Cluster: Astronomy)
582.31+respect
582.31+Motif: Brand on brow
582.32the prey! Thon's the dullakeykongsbyogblagroggerswagginline
582.32+Dialect thon: that, yon
582.32+Dalkey: a suburban village south of Dublin
582.32+Danish Kongeby: Kingstown
582.32+Danish og: and
582.32+Blackrock
582.32+waggon line
582.33(private judgers, change here for Lootherstown! Onlyromans,
582.33+P.W. Joyce: English as We Speak It in Ireland 64: 'The train was skelping away like mad along the main line to hell... till at last it pulled up at the junction. Whereupon the porters ran round shouting out, 'Catholics change here for purgatory: Protestants keep your places!'' [.35]
582.33+(protestants)
582.33+Luther
582.33+Dalkey, Kingstown and Blackrock Tram Line passes Booterstown
582.33+Holy Romans
582.34keep your seats!) that drew all ladies please to our great mettroll-
582.34+ALP (Motif: ALP)
582.34+metropolis
582.34+Trollope
582.34+troll (said to live under bridges, from the Norwegian folktale 'Three Billy Goats Gruff') [583.01]
582.35ops. Leary, leary, twentytun nearly, he's plotting kings down
582.35+P.W. Joyce: English as We Speak It in Ireland 64: 'This reminds us of Father O'Leary, a Cork priest of the end of the eighteenth century, celebrated as a controversialist and a wit' [.33]
582.35+Dún Laoghaire, a suburban town south of Dublin (pronounced and often spelled 'Dunleary'), was named Kingstown in honour of George IV's visit to Ireland in 1821 (the original name was restored after the Irish independence)
582.35+Larry Twentyman: character in Trollope's The American Senator
582.35+twenty-ten nearly (Motif: 28-29)
582.36for his villa's extension! Gaze at him now in momentum! As his
582.36+


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