1
1What ⸢1[course]courseparallel coursesparallel courses 1⸣ [course]courseparallel coursesparallel courses did Bloom and Stephen follow returning?
2
2Starting united
both⸢1both1⸣
at normal walking pace from Beresford place
3they
3followed in the order named⸢(B)
2
2Starting united
both⸢1both1⸣
at normal walking pace from Beresford place
3they
3followed in the order named(B)⸣
Lower and Middle Gardiner streets and
4
4 Mountjoy square, ⸢(B)[west. Then,]west. Then, west: then, at reduced pace, west: then, at reduced pace,
(B)⸣ [west. Then,]west. Then, west: then, at reduced pace, west: then, at reduced pace,
each⸢1each1⸣
5 bearing left, ⧼they⧽they Gardiner's
5 place by an inadvertence
as far as the farther
6 corner of Temple ⸢(B)[street. Then,]street. Then,
street:
then,
6at reduced pace with
7interruptions of halt,
street:
then,
6at reduced pace with
7interruptions of halt,
(B)⸣ [street. Then,]street. Then,
street:
then,
6at reduced pace with
7interruptions of halt,
street:
then,
6at reduced pace with
7interruptions of halt,
bearing right,
Temple street,
7 north,
as far as
8 Hardwicke place. ⸢B[They]They Approaching, disparate, at relaxed
8walking
9pace they Approaching, disparate, at relaxed
8walking
9pace they
B⸣ [They]They Approaching, disparate, at relaxed
8walking
9pace they Approaching, disparate, at relaxed
8walking
9pace they
crossed
both⸢1both1⸣
the circus before George's church
9 diametrically,
10 the chord in any circle being less than the arc which it
10 subtends.
11
11
Of what did ⸢3[they speak]they speak the duumvirate deliberate the duumvirate deliberate 3⸣ [they speak]they speak the duumvirate deliberate the duumvirate deliberate during their
12
itinerary?
12
13Music, literature, Ireland, Dublin, Paris, friendship, woman,
14prostitution,⸢(B)
14prostitution,(B)⸣
13 diet, the influence of gaslight or the light of arc and
15glowlamps∧or the light of arc and
15glowlamps∧
on the
14 growth of adjoining∧adjoining∧
paraheliotropic⸢2paraheliotropic2⸣
trees,
exposed
16corporation emergency
15dustbuckets,⸢(B)exposed
16corporation emergency
15dustbuckets,(B)⸣
the Roman catholic church,
17ecclesiastical celibacy,⸢2
17ecclesiastical celibacy,2⸣
the Irish
16nation,⸢1the Irish
16nation,1⸣
jesuit education, careers, the
18 study of medicine, the past day,
∧the past day,
∧
the
17maleficent
influence of the
19presabbath,⸢3the
17maleficent
influence of the
19presabbath,3⸣
Stephen's ⸢1[breakdown.]breakdown.collapse.collapse.
1⸣ [breakdown.]breakdown.collapse.collapse.
11
11
Of what did ⸢3[they speak]they speak the duumvirate deliberate the duumvirate deliberate 3⸣ [they speak]they speak the duumvirate deliberate the duumvirate deliberate during their
12
itinerary?
12
13Music, literature, Ireland, Dublin, Paris, friendship, woman,
14prostitution,⸢(B)
14prostitution,(B)⸣
13 diet, the influence of gaslight or the light of arc and
15glowlamps∧or the light of arc and
15glowlamps∧
on the
14 growth of adjoining∧adjoining∧
paraheliotropic⸢2paraheliotropic2⸣
trees,
exposed
16corporation emergency
15dustbuckets,⸢(B)exposed
16corporation emergency
15dustbuckets,(B)⸣
the Roman catholic church,
17ecclesiastical celibacy,⸢2
17ecclesiastical celibacy,2⸣
the Irish
16nation,⸢1the Irish
16nation,1⸣
jesuit education, careers, the
18 study of medicine, the past day,
∧the past day,
∧
the
17maleficent
influence of the
19presabbath,⸢3the
17maleficent
influence of the
19presabbath,3⸣
Stephen's ⸢1[breakdown.]breakdown.collapse.collapse.
1⸣ [breakdown.]breakdown.collapse.collapse.
18
20
Did Bloom discover common factors of⸢(B)common factors of(B)⸣ similarity between their
21
respective
19 ⸢1[like]like ⧼com⧽com like ⧼com⧽com like 1⸣ [like]like ⧼com⧽com like ⧼com⧽com like and unlike⸢(B)
19 ⸢1[like]like ⧼com⧽com like ⧼com⧽com like 1⸣ [like]like ⧼com⧽com like ⧼com⧽com like and unlike(B)⸣ reactions to experience?
20
22Both were sensitive to artistic impressions,
musical in preference to plastic
21
23 or pictorial. Both preferred a∧a∧ continental to an∧an∧ insular manner of ⸢(B)[life.]life.
24 life, a
22cisatlantic to a transatlantic place of residence.
24 life, a
22cisatlantic to a transatlantic place of residence.
(B)⸣ [life.]life.
24 life, a
22cisatlantic to a transatlantic place of residence.
24 life, a
22cisatlantic to a transatlantic place of residence.
Both
25 indurated by early
23 domestic training and an inherited tenacity of
heterodox⸢2heterodox2⸣
1 resistance
24 professed their disbelief in many∧many∧
⸢2[accepted]accepted orthodox orthodox
2⸣ [accepted]accepted orthodox orthodox
2religious,
national, social and
25 ethical doctrines. Both admitted the
3 alternately stimulating
and obtunding
26 influence of heterosexual
4 magnetism.
18
20
Did Bloom discover common factors of⸢(B)common factors of(B)⸣ similarity between their
21
respective
19 ⸢1[like]like ⧼com⧽com like ⧼com⧽com like 1⸣ [like]like ⧼com⧽com like ⧼com⧽com like and unlike⸢(B)
19 ⸢1[like]like ⧼com⧽com like ⧼com⧽com like 1⸣ [like]like ⧼com⧽com like ⧼com⧽com like and unlike(B)⸣ reactions to experience?
20
22Both were sensitive to artistic impressions,
musical in preference to plastic
21
23 or pictorial. Both preferred a∧a∧ continental to an∧an∧ insular manner of ⸢(B)[life.]life.
24 life, a
22cisatlantic to a transatlantic place of residence.
24 life, a
22cisatlantic to a transatlantic place of residence.
(B)⸣ [life.]life.
24 life, a
22cisatlantic to a transatlantic place of residence.
24 life, a
22cisatlantic to a transatlantic place of residence.
Both
25 indurated by early
23 domestic training and an inherited tenacity of
heterodox⸢2heterodox2⸣
1 resistance
24 professed their disbelief in many∧many∧
⸢2[accepted]accepted orthodox orthodox
2⸣ [accepted]accepted orthodox orthodox
2religious,
national, social and
25 ethical doctrines. Both admitted the
3 alternately stimulating
and obtunding
26 influence of heterosexual
4 magnetism.
27
5
Were their views on some points divergent?
28
6Stephen dissented openly from Bloom's views
on the importance of dietary
29
7and civic selfhelp while Bloom dissented tacitly from Stephen's views on the
30
8eternal affirmation of the spirit of man in literature.
Bloom assented
31
9 covertly to Stephen's rectification of the anachronism involved in assigning
32
10the date of the conversion of the Irish nation to christianity from druidism
33
11by Patrick son of Calpornus, son of Potitus, son of Odyssus, sent by pope
34
12Celestine I in the year 432 in the reign of Leary to the year ⸢2[288]288 260 260
2⸣ [288]288 260 260
or
35
13thereabouts in the reign of Cormac ⸢2[MacArt,]MacArt, MacArt († 266 A.D.), MacArt († 266 A.D.),
2⸣ [MacArt,]MacArt, MacArt († 266 A.D.), MacArt († 266 A.D.),
14suffocated by
36imperfect deglutition of aliment at Sletty and interred at
15Rossnaree.⸢1Bloom assented
31
9 covertly to Stephen's rectification of the anachronism involved in assigning
32
10the date of the conversion of the Irish nation to christianity from druidism
33
11by Patrick son of Calpornus, son of Potitus, son of Odyssus, sent by pope
34
12Celestine I in the year 432 in the reign of Leary to the year ⸢2[288]288 260 260
2⸣ [288]288 260 260
or
35
13thereabouts in the reign of Cormac ⸢2[MacArt,]MacArt, MacArt († 266 A.D.), MacArt († 266 A.D.),
2⸣ [MacArt,]MacArt, MacArt († 266 A.D.), MacArt († 266 A.D.),
14suffocated by
36imperfect deglutition of aliment at Sletty and interred at
15Rossnaree.1⸣
The
37 collapse which Bloom ascribed to gastric inanition and
16 certain chemical
38 compounds of varying degrees of adulteration and
17 alcoholic ⸢B[strength]strength strength,
39accelerated by mental exertion and the
18velocity of rapid circular motion⧼,⧽, in a
40relaxing atmosphere, strength,
39accelerated by mental exertion and the
18velocity of rapid circular motion⧼,⧽, in a
40relaxing atmosphere,
B⸣ [strength]strength strength,
39accelerated by mental exertion and the
18velocity of rapid circular motion⧼,⧽, in a
40relaxing atmosphere, strength,
39accelerated by mental exertion and the
18velocity of rapid circular motion⧼,⧽, in a
40relaxing atmosphere,
Stephen
19 attributed to the reapparition of a matutinal
41 cloud
(perceived by both ∧⧼at⧽at
20from
20from
∧⧼at⧽at
20from
20from
two different points of observation,
42Sandycove and Dublin)⸢C(perceived by both ∧⧼at⧽at
20from
20from
∧⧼at⧽at
20from
20from
two different points of observation,
42Sandycove and Dublin)C⸣
at
first
21 no bigger than a woman's hand.
27
5
Were their views on some points divergent?
28
6Stephen dissented openly from Bloom's views
on the importance of dietary
29
7and civic selfhelp while Bloom dissented tacitly from Stephen's views on the
30
8eternal affirmation of the spirit of man in literature.
Bloom assented
31
9 covertly to Stephen's rectification of the anachronism involved in assigning
32
10the date of the conversion of the Irish nation to christianity from druidism
33
11by Patrick son of Calpornus, son of Potitus, son of Odyssus, sent by pope
34
12Celestine I in the year 432 in the reign of Leary to the year ⸢2[288]288 260 260
2⸣ [288]288 260 260
or
35
13thereabouts in the reign of Cormac ⸢2[MacArt,]MacArt, MacArt († 266 A.D.), MacArt († 266 A.D.),
2⸣ [MacArt,]MacArt, MacArt († 266 A.D.), MacArt († 266 A.D.),
14suffocated by
36imperfect deglutition of aliment at Sletty and interred at
15Rossnaree.⸢1Bloom assented
31
9 covertly to Stephen's rectification of the anachronism involved in assigning
32
10the date of the conversion of the Irish nation to christianity from druidism
33
11by Patrick son of Calpornus, son of Potitus, son of Odyssus, sent by pope
34
12Celestine I in the year 432 in the reign of Leary to the year ⸢2[288]288 260 260
2⸣ [288]288 260 260
or
35
13thereabouts in the reign of Cormac ⸢2[MacArt,]MacArt, MacArt († 266 A.D.), MacArt († 266 A.D.),
2⸣ [MacArt,]MacArt, MacArt († 266 A.D.), MacArt († 266 A.D.),
14suffocated by
36imperfect deglutition of aliment at Sletty and interred at
15Rossnaree.1⸣
The
37 collapse which Bloom ascribed to gastric inanition and
16 certain chemical
38 compounds of varying degrees of adulteration and
17 alcoholic ⸢B[strength]strength strength,
39accelerated by mental exertion and the
18velocity of rapid circular motion⧼,⧽, in a
40relaxing atmosphere, strength,
39accelerated by mental exertion and the
18velocity of rapid circular motion⧼,⧽, in a
40relaxing atmosphere,
B⸣ [strength]strength strength,
39accelerated by mental exertion and the
18velocity of rapid circular motion⧼,⧽, in a
40relaxing atmosphere, strength,
39accelerated by mental exertion and the
18velocity of rapid circular motion⧼,⧽, in a
40relaxing atmosphere,
Stephen
19 attributed to the reapparition of a matutinal
41 cloud
(perceived by both ∧⧼at⧽at
20from
20from
∧⧼at⧽at
20from
20from
two different points of observation,
42Sandycove and Dublin)⸢C(perceived by both ∧⧼at⧽at
20from
20from
∧⧼at⧽at
20from
20from
two different points of observation,
42Sandycove and Dublin)C⸣
at
first
21 no bigger than a woman's hand.
43
22
Was there one point on which their views⸢1on which their views1⸣ were equal and negative?
44
23The influence of gaslight or electric light on the growth of adjoining
45
24paraheliotropic⸢3
24paraheliotropic3⸣
trees.
43
22
Was there one point on which their views⸢1on which their views1⸣ were equal and negative?
44
23The influence of gaslight or electric light on the growth of adjoining
45
24paraheliotropic⸢3
24paraheliotropic3⸣
trees.
46
25
Had Bloom discussed similar subjects during nocturnal perambulations
26
in
47 the past?
48
27In 1884 with Owen Goldberg and Cecil ⸢B[Turnbull.]Turnbull. Turnbull at night on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧ between Longwood avenue and Leonard's corner
29and
50Leonard's corner and Synge street and Synge street and Bloomfield
30avenue.
Turnbull at night on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧ between Longwood avenue and Leonard's corner
29and
50Leonard's corner and Synge street and Synge street and Bloomfield
30avenue.
B⸣ [Turnbull.]Turnbull. Turnbull at night on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧ between Longwood avenue and Leonard's corner
29and
50Leonard's corner and Synge street and Synge street and Bloomfield
30avenue.
Turnbull at night on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧ between Longwood avenue and Leonard's corner
29and
50Leonard's corner and Synge street and Synge street and Bloomfield
30avenue.
51In 1885 with Percy ⸢B[Apjohn.]Apjohn. Apjohn in the evenings,
reclined
31against the wall
52between Gibraltar villa and Bloomfield house in Crumlin,
1barony of
53Uppercross. Apjohn in the evenings,
reclined
31against the wall
52between Gibraltar villa and Bloomfield house in Crumlin,
1barony of
53Uppercross.
B⸣ [Apjohn.]Apjohn. Apjohn in the evenings,
reclined
31against the wall
52between Gibraltar villa and Bloomfield house in Crumlin,
1barony of
53Uppercross. Apjohn in the evenings,
reclined
31against the wall
52between Gibraltar villa and Bloomfield house in Crumlin,
1barony of
53Uppercross.
In 1886 ∧⧼frequently⧽frequently
occasionally
occasionally
∧⧼frequently⧽frequently
occasionally
occasionally
with casual ⸢B[acquaintances.]acquaintances.
2 acquaintances and
54 prospective purchasers∧and
54 prospective purchasers∧ on
3doorsteps, in front parlours, in
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
55railway carriages of
4suburban lines.
2 acquaintances and
54 prospective purchasers∧and
54 prospective purchasers∧ on
3doorsteps, in front parlours, in
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
55railway carriages of
4suburban lines.
B⸣ [acquaintances.]acquaintances.
2 acquaintances and
54 prospective purchasers∧and
54 prospective purchasers∧ on
3doorsteps, in front parlours, in
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
55railway carriages of
4suburban lines.
2 acquaintances and
54 prospective purchasers∧and
54 prospective purchasers∧ on
3doorsteps, in front parlours, in
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
55railway carriages of
4suburban lines.
In 1888 frequently∧frequently∧ with major Brian
56 Tweedy and his
5 daughter Miss Marion Tweedy, together and ⸢B[separately.]separately. separately on
57
6the lounge in Matthew Dillon's house in Roundtown. separately on
57
6the lounge in Matthew Dillon's house in Roundtown.
B⸣ [separately.]separately. separately on
57
6the lounge in Matthew Dillon's house in Roundtown. separately on
57
6the lounge in Matthew Dillon's house in Roundtown.
Once in 1892 and
58
7once in 1893 with Julius (Juda) ⸢B[Mastiansky.]Mastiansky.Mastiansky, on both
8occasions in the
59parlour of his
(Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ house in Lombard street, west.Mastiansky, on both
8occasions in the
59parlour of his
(Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ house in Lombard street, west.
B⸣ [Mastiansky.]Mastiansky.Mastiansky, on both
8occasions in the
59parlour of his
(Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ house in Lombard street, west.Mastiansky, on both
8occasions in the
59parlour of his
(Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ house in Lombard street, west.
46
25
Had Bloom discussed similar subjects during nocturnal perambulations
26
in
47 the past?
48
27In 1884 with Owen Goldberg and Cecil ⸢B[Turnbull.]Turnbull. Turnbull at night on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧ between Longwood avenue and Leonard's corner
29and
50Leonard's corner and Synge street and Synge street and Bloomfield
30avenue.
Turnbull at night on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧ between Longwood avenue and Leonard's corner
29and
50Leonard's corner and Synge street and Synge street and Bloomfield
30avenue.
B⸣ [Turnbull.]Turnbull. Turnbull at night on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧ between Longwood avenue and Leonard's corner
29and
50Leonard's corner and Synge street and Synge street and Bloomfield
30avenue.
Turnbull at night on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧on
28 public
49 thoroughfares∧ between Longwood avenue and Leonard's corner
29and
50Leonard's corner and Synge street and Synge street and Bloomfield
30avenue.
51In 1885 with Percy ⸢B[Apjohn.]Apjohn. Apjohn in the evenings,
reclined
31against the wall
52between Gibraltar villa and Bloomfield house in Crumlin,
1barony of
53Uppercross. Apjohn in the evenings,
reclined
31against the wall
52between Gibraltar villa and Bloomfield house in Crumlin,
1barony of
53Uppercross.
B⸣ [Apjohn.]Apjohn. Apjohn in the evenings,
reclined
31against the wall
52between Gibraltar villa and Bloomfield house in Crumlin,
1barony of
53Uppercross. Apjohn in the evenings,
reclined
31against the wall
52between Gibraltar villa and Bloomfield house in Crumlin,
1barony of
53Uppercross.
In 1886 ∧⧼frequently⧽frequently
occasionally
occasionally
∧⧼frequently⧽frequently
occasionally
occasionally
with casual ⸢B[acquaintances.]acquaintances.
2 acquaintances and
54 prospective purchasers∧and
54 prospective purchasers∧ on
3doorsteps, in front parlours, in
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
55railway carriages of
4suburban lines.
2 acquaintances and
54 prospective purchasers∧and
54 prospective purchasers∧ on
3doorsteps, in front parlours, in
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
55railway carriages of
4suburban lines.
B⸣ [acquaintances.]acquaintances.
2 acquaintances and
54 prospective purchasers∧and
54 prospective purchasers∧ on
3doorsteps, in front parlours, in
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
55railway carriages of
4suburban lines.
2 acquaintances and
54 prospective purchasers∧and
54 prospective purchasers∧ on
3doorsteps, in front parlours, in
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
⸢2[3rd]3rdthirdthird
2⸣ [3rd]3rdthirdthird
class∧
55railway carriages of
4suburban lines.
In 1888 frequently∧frequently∧ with major Brian
56 Tweedy and his
5 daughter Miss Marion Tweedy, together and ⸢B[separately.]separately. separately on
57
6the lounge in Matthew Dillon's house in Roundtown. separately on
57
6the lounge in Matthew Dillon's house in Roundtown.
B⸣ [separately.]separately. separately on
57
6the lounge in Matthew Dillon's house in Roundtown. separately on
57
6the lounge in Matthew Dillon's house in Roundtown.
Once in 1892 and
58
7once in 1893 with Julius (Juda) ⸢B[Mastiansky.]Mastiansky.Mastiansky, on both
8occasions in the
59parlour of his
(Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ house in Lombard street, west.Mastiansky, on both
8occasions in the
59parlour of his
(Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ house in Lombard street, west.
B⸣ [Mastiansky.]Mastiansky.Mastiansky, on both
8occasions in the
59parlour of his
(Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ house in Lombard street, west.Mastiansky, on both
8occasions in the
59parlour of his
(Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ house in Lombard street, west.
60
9
What reflection concerning the irregular sequence of dates 1884, 1885,
10
611886, 1888, 1892, 1893, 1904 did Bloom make before their arrival at their
62
11
destination?
63
12He reflected that the progressive extension of the field of ⧼persona⧽persona
13 individual
64 development and experience was regressively accompanied by a
14 restriction
65 of the converse domain of interindividual relations.
60
9
What reflection concerning the irregular sequence of dates 1884, 1885,
10
611886, 1888, 1892, 1893, 1904 did Bloom make before their arrival at their
62
11
destination?
63
12He reflected that the progressive extension of the field of ⧼persona⧽persona
13 individual
64 development and experience was regressively accompanied by a
14 restriction
65 of the converse domain of interindividual relations.
66
15
As in what ways?
67
16From inexistence to existence he came to many and was as one received:
68
17 existence with existence he was with any as any with any: from existence to
69
18 nonexistence gone he would be by all as none perceived.
66
15
As in what ways?
67
16From inexistence to existence he came to many and was as one received:
68
17 existence with existence he was with any as any with any: from existence to
69
18 nonexistence gone he would be by all as none perceived.
70
19
What ⸢3[action]action act act 3⸣ [action]action act act did Bloom make on their arrival at their destination?
71
20At the housesteps of
the
⧼f⧽f 4th of the equidifferent uneven numbers,⸢Bthe
⧼f⧽f 4th of the equidifferent uneven numbers,B⸣
21
⸢1[
number
]
number
nono
1⸣ [
number
]
number
nono
7
72 Eccles ⸢B[street]street
street,
street,
B⸣ [street]street
street,
street,
he ⸢3[put]put inserted inserted
3⸣ [put]put inserted inserted
his hand
22 mechanically into ∧⧼his⧽his the the
∧⧼his⧽his the the
back pocket
of his
73trousers⸢1of his
73trousers1⸣
to ⸢3[get]get obtain obtain
3⸣ [get]get obtain obtain
23 his latchkey.
74
24
Was it there?
75
25It was in the corresponding pocket of the trousers which he had worn on
76
26 the day but one preceding.
77
1
Why was he doubly irritated?
78
2Because he had forgotten and because he remembered that he had reminded
79
3 himself twice not to forget.
80
4
What were then the ⸢B[alternatives?]alternatives? alternatives before ⸢3[the]the the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, 3⸣ [the]the the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, keyless couple? alternatives before ⸢3[the]the the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, 3⸣ [the]the the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, keyless couple? B⸣ [alternatives?]alternatives? alternatives before ⸢3[the]the the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, 3⸣ [the]the the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, keyless couple? alternatives before ⸢3[the]the the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, 3⸣ [the]the the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, the,
5
premeditatedly (respectively)
81and inadvertently, keyless couple?
82
6To enter or not to enter. To knock or not to knock.
83 ⸢3[His]His
7
Bloom's
7
Bloom's 3⸣ [His]His
7
Bloom's
7
Bloom's decision?
84
8A stratagem. ⸢B[He]He Resting his feet on the dwarf wall, he Resting his feet on the dwarf wall, he
B⸣ [He]He Resting his feet on the dwarf wall, he Resting his feet on the dwarf wall, he
climbed over the
9 area
85 railings, compressed his hat on his head, grasped ⸢B[the lower parts of
10two ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
rails,]the lower parts of
10two ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
rails, two points at the lower
86union of rails and stiles, two points at the lower
86union of rails and stiles,
B⸣ [the lower parts of
10two ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
rails,]the lower parts of
10two ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
rails, two points at the lower
86union of rails and stiles, two points at the lower
86union of rails and stiles,
lowered his
11 body gradually by its length of five feet
87 nine inches
and a half to within
12two feet ten inches
of the area pavement
88and allowed his body to move
13 freely in space
by separating himself from the
89 railings and crouching in
14 preparation for the impact of the fall.
90
15
Did he fall?
91
16By his body's known⸢Bbody's knownB⸣
weight of
RONSIE
⸢3[ten]teneleveneleven
3⸣ [ten]teneleveneleven
stone and four ⸢1[ounces]ounces
17pounds
17pounds
1⸣ [ounces]ounces
17pounds
17pounds
in avoirdupois
92 measure, as certified by the graduated machine for
18 periodical selfweighing
93 in the premises of Francis Froedman,
19 pharmaceutical chemist of 19
94Frederick street, north, on the last feast of the
20 Ascension, to wit, the twelfth
95 day of May of the
bissextile⸢3bissextile3⸣
year one
21 thousand nine hundred and four
of
96 the christian ⸢3[era.]era.
era
(jewish era
22five thousand six hundred and sixtyfour,
97mohammadan
era one thousand
23three hundred and twentytwo), golden
98number 5, epact 13, solar cycle 9,
24dominical letters C B, Roman indiction
2,
99 Julian period 6617, MCMIV.
era
(jewish era
22five thousand six hundred and sixtyfour,
97mohammadan
era one thousand
23three hundred and twentytwo), golden
98number 5, epact 13, solar cycle 9,
24dominical letters C B, Roman indiction
2,
99 Julian period 6617, MCMIV.
3⸣ [era.]era.
era
(jewish era
22five thousand six hundred and sixtyfour,
97mohammadan
era one thousand
23three hundred and twentytwo), golden
98number 5, epact 13, solar cycle 9,
24dominical letters C B, Roman indiction
2,
99 Julian period 6617, MCMIV.
era
(jewish era
22five thousand six hundred and sixtyfour,
97mohammadan
era one thousand
23three hundred and twentytwo), golden
98number 5, epact 13, solar cycle 9,
24dominical letters C B, Roman indiction
2,
99 Julian period 6617, MCMIV.
100
1
Did he rise ⸢B[uninjured?]uninjured? uninjured by concussion? uninjured by concussion? B⸣ [uninjured?]uninjured? uninjured by concussion? uninjured by concussion?
⸢B[He]He
101
2 Regaining new stable equilibrium he
101
2 Regaining new stable equilibrium he
B⸣ [He]He
101
2 Regaining new stable equilibrium he
101
2 Regaining new stable equilibrium he
rose uninjured though ⸢3[shocked]shocked
3 concussed
3 concussed
3⸣ [shocked]shocked
3 concussed
3 concussed
by
102 the impact, raised the latch of the area door by
4the exertion of force at its
103
⸢1[free arm]free armfreely moving flangefreely moving flange
1⸣ [free arm]free armfreely moving flangefreely moving flange
∧at its
103
⸢1[free arm]free armfreely moving flangefreely moving flange
1⸣ [free arm]free armfreely moving flangefreely moving flange
∧ and by⸢B
4the exertion of force at its
103
⸢1[free arm]free armfreely moving flangefreely moving flange
1⸣ [free arm]free armfreely moving flangefreely moving flange
∧at its
103
⸢1[free arm]free armfreely moving flangefreely moving flange
1⸣ [free arm]free armfreely moving flangefreely moving flange
∧ and byB⸣
⸢B[leverage,]leverage,
5 leverage
of the first kind⸢3of the first kind3⸣
applied ⧼to its free arm⧽to its free arm at its
6fulcrum,
5 leverage
of the first kind⸢3of the first kind3⸣
applied ⧼to its free arm⧽to its free arm at its
6fulcrum,
B⸣ [leverage,]leverage,
5 leverage
of the first kind⸢3of the first kind3⸣
applied ⧼to its free arm⧽to its free arm at its
6fulcrum,
5 leverage
of the first kind⸢3of the first kind3⸣
applied ⧼to its free arm⧽to its free arm at its
6fulcrum,
104
⸢B[entered]entered
gained
retarded⸢1retarded1⸣
access to
gained
retarded⸢1retarded1⸣
access to
B⸣ [entered]entered
gained
retarded⸢1retarded1⸣
access to
gained
retarded⸢1retarded1⸣
access to
the kitchen through the
7subadjacent⸢B
7subadjacentB⸣
scullery,
105 ignited a lucifer match by friction, ⧼lit⧽lit set free
8 inflammable coal gas by turning
106 on the ventcock, lit a high flame which, by
9 regulating, he reduced to
107 quiescent candescence⧼,⧽, and lit finally a portable
10 candle.
108
11
⸢B[Where was Stephen meanwhile?]Where was Stephen meanwhile?What discrete succession of images did
12
Stephen meanwhile perceive?What discrete succession of images did
12
Stephen meanwhile perceive? B⸣ [Where was Stephen meanwhile?]Where was Stephen meanwhile?What discrete succession of images did
12
Stephen meanwhile perceive?What discrete succession of images did
12
Stephen meanwhile perceive?
109
13Reclined against the area railings he perceived through the transparent
110
14 kitchen panes a man regulating a ⸢1[gasflame,]gasflame,gasflame of 14 C P,gasflame of 14 C P,
1⸣ [gasflame,]gasflame,gasflame of 14 C P,gasflame of 14 C P,
a man
15 lighting a
111
⸢2[candle,]candle,
candle of 1 C P,
candle of 1 C P,
2⸣ [candle,]candle,
candle of 1 C P,
candle of 1 C P,
a man removing in turn each of his
16 two boots, a man
112 leaving the kitchen holding a candle.
113
17
Did the man reappear elsewhere?
114
18After a lapse of four
minutes the glimmer of his candle was discernible
115
19 through the
semitransparent⸢1semitransparent1⸣
semicircular⸢3semicircular3⸣ glass
fanlight over the
20halldoor.
116The halldoor turned gradually on its hinges. In the open space
21
⧼thus⧽thus of the
117 doorway the man reappeared without his hat, with his candle.
118
22
Did Stephen obey his sign?
119
23Yes, entering softly, he helped to close and chain the door and followed
120
24 softly along the hallway the man's back and
listed feet and lighted⸢Blisted feet and lightedB⸣
candle
121
25past a lighted crevice of doorway on the left and carefully∧carefully∧ down a turning
122
26staircase of more than
⸢1[
five
]
five
55
1⸣ [
five
]
five
55
steps ⧼.⧽. into the kitchen of Bloom's house.
123
1
What did Bloom do?
124
2He extinguished the candle by a sharp ⸢B[ejection]ejection expiration expiration
B⸣ [ejection]ejection expiration expiration
of breath
3 upon its flame,
125 drew two spoonseat deal∧spoonseat deal∧ chairs to the hearthstone,
one
4 for Stephen with its
126 back to the area window, the other for himself when
5 necessary,>one
4 for Stephen with its
126 back to the area window, the other for himself when
5 necessary,< knelt on one
127 knee,∧
one
4 for Stephen with its
126 back to the area window, the other for himself when
5 necessary,>one
4 for Stephen with its
126 back to the area window, the other for himself when
5 necessary,< knelt on one
127 knee,∧ composed in the grate a pyre of crosslaid
6 resintipped sticks and
128 various coloured papers and irregular polygons of
7
best∧best∧ Abram coal at
129twentyone shillings
a ton∧at
129twentyone shillings
a ton∧ from the yard of Messrs
8 Flower and M‘Donald of
130
⸢B[7]7
14
14
B⸣ [7]7
14
14
D'Olier street, kindled it at three
9 projecting points of paper with one
131 ignited ⸢3[wooden match.]wooden match. lucifer
10match, ⧼thu⧽thu thereby releasing the potential energy contained in the
132fuel by
11allowing its carbon and hydrogen elements to enter into free union
133with the
12oxygen of the air. lucifer
10match, ⧼thu⧽thu thereby releasing the potential energy contained in the
132fuel by
11allowing its carbon and hydrogen elements to enter into free union
133with the
12oxygen of the air.
3⸣ [wooden match.]wooden match. lucifer
10match, ⧼thu⧽thu thereby releasing the potential energy contained in the
132fuel by
11allowing its carbon and hydrogen elements to enter into free union
133with the
12oxygen of the air. lucifer
10match, ⧼thu⧽thu thereby releasing the potential energy contained in the
132fuel by
11allowing its carbon and hydrogen elements to enter into free union
133with the
12oxygen of the air.
134
13
Of what similar apparitions did Stephen think?
135
14Of others elsewhere in other times who, kneeling on one knee or on two,
136
15 had kindled fires for him, of Brother Michael in the infirmary of the college
137
16 of the Society of Jesus at Clongowes ⸢3[Wood]Wood Wood, Sallins, Wood, Sallins,
3⸣ [Wood]Wood Wood, Sallins, Wood, Sallins,
in the county
17 of
138
⸢1[Kildare,]Kildare,Kildare:Kildare:
1⸣ [Kildare,]Kildare,Kildare:Kildare:
of his father, Simon Dedalus, in ⸢1[the]theanan
1⸣ [the]theanan
18 unfurnished room of his first
139residence in Dublin, number thirteen ∧⧼North
19 Richmond⧽North
19 Richmond Fitzgibbon Fitzgibbon
∧⧼North
19 Richmond⧽North
19 Richmond Fitzgibbon Fitzgibbon
⸢1[street,]street,street:street:
1⸣ [street,]street,street:street:
of his godmother
140
⧼Mrs⧽Mrs Miss Kate
20 Morkan in the house of her dying sister Miss Julia Morkan at 15
141
Usher's ⸢1[Island,]Island,
21Island:
21Island:
1⸣ [Island,]Island,
21Island:
21Island:
of his aunt Sara, wife of Richie (Richard) Goulding,
22 in the
142kitchen of their lodgings at 62 Clanbrassil ⸢1[street,]street,
street:
street:
1⸣ [street,]street,
street:
street:
of his
23 mother
Mary, wife
143of ⧼S⌷
⧽S⌷
Simon Dedalus,
⸢3Mary, wife
143of ⧼S⌷
⧽S⌷
Simon Dedalus,
3⸣
in the kitchen of number
24 twelve North Richmond street
144 on the morning of the feast of Saint Francis
25 Xavier
⸢1[1898,]1898,1898:1898:
1⸣ [1898,]1898,1898:1898:
of the ⧼de⧽de dean of
145studies,
Father Butt, in the
26 physics' theatre of university College, 16
146Stephen's Green,
⸢1[north,]north,
27north:
27north:
1⸣ [north,]north,
27north:
27north:
of his sister Dilly (Delia) in his father's house in
147 Cabra.
148
1
What did Stephen see on raising his gaze to the height of a yard from the
149
2
fire towards the opposite wall?
⸢B[A]A
150
3 Under a row of ⸢1[5]5fivefive
1⸣ [5]5fivefive
coiled spring housebells a
150
3 Under a row of ⸢1[5]5fivefive
1⸣ [5]5fivefive
coiled spring housebells a
B⸣ [A]A
150
3 Under a row of ⸢1[5]5fivefive
1⸣ [5]5fivefive
coiled spring housebells a
150
3 Under a row of ⸢1[5]5fivefive
1⸣ [5]5fivefive
coiled spring housebells a
curvilinear
4rope,
stretched
151 between two holdfasts athwart∧athwart∧ across the recess beside
5 the chimney pier,
152 from which hung four smallsized square handkerchiefs
6
folded unattached
153
consecutively in adjacent rectangles∧folded unattached
153
consecutively in adjacent rectangles∧ and one pair of ⸢1[grey Lisle ladies']grey Lisle ladies'
7ladies' grey
7ladies' grey
1⸣ [grey Lisle ladies']grey Lisle ladies'
7ladies' grey
7ladies' grey
⸢3[stockings]stockingshosehose
3⸣ [stockings]stockingshosehose
with
154Lisle
suspender
8tops and feet⸢1with
154Lisle
suspender
8tops and feet1⸣
in their habitual position∧in their habitual position∧ clamped by three
155 erect wooden
9 pegs two at their outer extremities and the third at their point
156 of junction.
148
1
What did Stephen see on raising his gaze to the height of a yard from the
149
2
fire towards the opposite wall?
⸢B[A]A
150
3 Under a row of ⸢1[5]5fivefive
1⸣ [5]5fivefive
coiled spring housebells a
150
3 Under a row of ⸢1[5]5fivefive
1⸣ [5]5fivefive
coiled spring housebells a
B⸣ [A]A
150
3 Under a row of ⸢1[5]5fivefive
1⸣ [5]5fivefive
coiled spring housebells a
150
3 Under a row of ⸢1[5]5fivefive
1⸣ [5]5fivefive
coiled spring housebells a
curvilinear
4rope,
stretched
151 between two holdfasts athwart∧athwart∧ across the recess beside
5 the chimney pier,
152 from which hung four smallsized square handkerchiefs
6
folded unattached
153
consecutively in adjacent rectangles∧folded unattached
153
consecutively in adjacent rectangles∧ and one pair of ⸢1[grey Lisle ladies']grey Lisle ladies'
7ladies' grey
7ladies' grey
1⸣ [grey Lisle ladies']grey Lisle ladies'
7ladies' grey
7ladies' grey
⸢3[stockings]stockingshosehose
3⸣ [stockings]stockingshosehose
with
154Lisle
suspender
8tops and feet⸢1with
154Lisle
suspender
8tops and feet1⸣
in their habitual position∧in their habitual position∧ clamped by three
155 erect wooden
9 pegs two at their outer extremities and the third at their point
156 of junction.
157 [B ⧼
10
Of what⧽
10
Of what What did Bloom think of their different ages?
11That neither could Stephen now have his age then nor he then Stephen's
12 now.
10
Of what⧽
10
Of what What did Bloom think of their different ages?
11That neither could Stephen now have his age then nor he then Stephen's
12 now.
13
What did Bloom see on the range?
158
14On the right (smaller)∧(smaller)∧ hob a blue enamelled saucepan: on the left (larger)
159
15 hob a black iron kettle.
13
What did Bloom see on the range?
158
14On the right (smaller)∧(smaller)∧ hob a blue enamelled saucepan: on the left (larger)
159
15 hob a black iron kettle.
160 ⸢2[By what act did he solve the problem?]By what act did he solve the problem?
16
⸢3[What was his next act? ]What was his next act? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? 3⸣ [What was his next act? ]What was his next act? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? What
17
did Bloom do at the range?
16
⸢3[What was his next act? ]What was his next act? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? 3⸣ [What was his next act? ]What was his next act? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? 2⸣ [By what act did he solve the problem?]By what act did he solve the problem?
16
⸢3[What was his next act? ]What was his next act? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? 3⸣ [What was his next act? ]What was his next act? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? What
17
did Bloom do at the range?
16
⸢3[What was his next act? ]What was his next act? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? 3⸣ [What was his next act? ]What was his next act? What
17
did Bloom do at the range? What
17
did Bloom do at the range?
161
18He removed the saucepan to the left hob, rose and carried the iron kettle to
162
19the
[1tap and]tap and
sink in order to ⸢1[draw water]draw watertap the currenttap the current
1⸣ [draw water]draw watertap the currenttap the current
by turning the
20
∧⧼cock⧽cock faucet faucet
∧⧼cock⧽cock faucet faucet
to let it flow.
163
21
Did it flow?
164
22Yes. From Roundwood reservoir ∧⧼near Stillorgan,⧽near Stillorgan, in county Wicklow
⸢B[capable of containing]capable of containing
23 of a cubic capacity of
23 of a cubic capacity of
B⸣ [capable of containing]capable of containing
23 of a cubic capacity of
23 of a cubic capacity of
165
⸢1[2400]2400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
1⸣ [2400]2400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
million gallons,
percolating⸢BpercolatingB⸣
through
⸢B[an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
B⸣ [an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
aqueduct
of>
⸢B[an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
B⸣ [an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
aqueduct
of<
filter
166
⧼pipes⧽pipes mains
of single and double
26pipeage constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧
⸢Bof single and double
26pipeage constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧
B⸣
by
27way of⸢2
27way of2⸣
the Dargle, Rathdown, Glen of the Downs and⸢Bthe Dargle, Rathdown, Glen of the Downs andB⸣
168 Callowhill to
28the 26 acre
⧼relieving⧽relieving reservoir at⸢B
28the 26 acre
⧼relieving⧽relieving reservoir atB⸣
Stillorgan, a distance of 22 statute
169
1 miles, and ⸢B[thence]thence thence, through a system of relieving tanks, thence, through a system of relieving tanks,
B⸣ [thence]thence thence, through a system of relieving tanks, thence, through a system of relieving tanks,
by ⧼an⧽an a
2 gradient of 250
170 feet to the city boundary at ⸢B[Leeson street bridge]Leeson street bridge Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street, Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street,
B⸣ [Leeson street bridge]Leeson street bridge Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street, Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street,
in county Wicklow
⸢B[capable of containing]capable of containing
23 of a cubic capacity of
23 of a cubic capacity of
B⸣ [capable of containing]capable of containing
23 of a cubic capacity of
23 of a cubic capacity of
165
⸢1[2400]2400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
1⸣ [2400]2400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
million gallons,
percolating⸢BpercolatingB⸣
through
⸢B[an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
B⸣ [an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
aqueduct
of>
⸢B[an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
B⸣ [an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
aqueduct
of<
filter
166
⧼pipes⧽pipes mains
of single and double
26pipeage constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧
⸢Bof single and double
26pipeage constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧
B⸣
by
27way of⸢2
27way of2⸣
the Dargle, Rathdown, Glen of the Downs and⸢Bthe Dargle, Rathdown, Glen of the Downs andB⸣
168 Callowhill to
28the 26 acre
⧼relieving⧽relieving reservoir at⸢B
28the 26 acre
⧼relieving⧽relieving reservoir atB⸣
Stillorgan, a distance of 22 statute
169
1 miles, and ⸢B[thence]thence thence, through a system of relieving tanks, thence, through a system of relieving tanks,
B⸣ [thence]thence thence, through a system of relieving tanks, thence, through a system of relieving tanks,
by ⧼an⧽an a
2 gradient of 250
170 feet to the city boundary at ⸢B[Leeson street bridge]Leeson street bridge Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street, Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street,
B⸣ [Leeson street bridge]Leeson street bridge Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street, Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street,
∧⧼near Stillorgan,⧽near Stillorgan, in county Wicklow
⸢B[capable of containing]capable of containing
23 of a cubic capacity of
23 of a cubic capacity of
B⸣ [capable of containing]capable of containing
23 of a cubic capacity of
23 of a cubic capacity of
165
⸢1[2400]2400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
1⸣ [2400]2400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
million gallons,
percolating⸢BpercolatingB⸣
through
⸢B[an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
B⸣ [an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
aqueduct
of>
⸢B[an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
B⸣ [an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
aqueduct
of<
filter
166
⧼pipes⧽pipes mains
of single and double
26pipeage constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧
⸢Bof single and double
26pipeage constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧
B⸣
by
27way of⸢2
27way of2⸣
the Dargle, Rathdown, Glen of the Downs and⸢Bthe Dargle, Rathdown, Glen of the Downs andB⸣
168 Callowhill to
28the 26 acre
⧼relieving⧽relieving reservoir at⸢B
28the 26 acre
⧼relieving⧽relieving reservoir atB⸣
Stillorgan, a distance of 22 statute
169
1 miles, and ⸢B[thence]thence thence, through a system of relieving tanks, thence, through a system of relieving tanks,
B⸣ [thence]thence thence, through a system of relieving tanks, thence, through a system of relieving tanks,
by ⧼an⧽an a
2 gradient of 250
170 feet to the city boundary at ⸢B[Leeson street bridge]Leeson street bridge Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street, Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street,
B⸣ [Leeson street bridge]Leeson street bridge Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street, Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street,
in county Wicklow
⸢B[capable of containing]capable of containing
23 of a cubic capacity of
23 of a cubic capacity of
B⸣ [capable of containing]capable of containing
23 of a cubic capacity of
23 of a cubic capacity of
165
⸢1[2400]2400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
1⸣ [2400]2400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
⧼two thousand four
24hundred⧽two thousand four
24hundred
2.400
million gallons,
percolating⸢BpercolatingB⸣
through
⸢B[an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
B⸣ [an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
aqueduct
of>
⸢B[an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
B⸣ [an]an a
25subterranean a
25subterranean
aqueduct
of<
filter
166
⧼pipes⧽pipes mains
of single and double
26pipeage constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧
⸢Bof single and double
26pipeage constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧constructed at an initial plant cost of £5
167 per linear yard∧
B⸣
by
27way of⸢2
27way of2⸣
the Dargle, Rathdown, Glen of the Downs and⸢Bthe Dargle, Rathdown, Glen of the Downs andB⸣
168 Callowhill to
28the 26 acre
⧼relieving⧽relieving reservoir at⸢B
28the 26 acre
⧼relieving⧽relieving reservoir atB⸣
Stillorgan, a distance of 22 statute
169
1 miles, and ⸢B[thence]thence thence, through a system of relieving tanks, thence, through a system of relieving tanks,
B⸣ [thence]thence thence, through a system of relieving tanks, thence, through a system of relieving tanks,
by ⧼an⧽an a
2 gradient of 250
170 feet to the city boundary at ⸢B[Leeson street bridge]Leeson street bridge Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street, Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street,
B⸣ [Leeson street bridge]Leeson street bridge Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street, Eustace
3bridge, upper Leeson street,
∧⧼where⧽where though though
∧⧼where⧽where though though
171 from prolonged summer
4 drouth
and daily supply of 121⁄2 million gallons⸢Band daily supply of 121⁄2 million gallonsB⸣
the
172 water had fallen
5 below the sill of the overflow weir for which reason the
173 borough surveyor
6and waterworks engineer, Mr Spencer Harty, C. E.,⸢3
6and waterworks engineer, Mr Spencer Harty, C. E.,3⸣
on
174 the instructions
7 of the waterworks committee
had prohibited the use of
175 municipal water for
8 purposes other than those of consumption
⧼un⧽un (envisaging∧envisaging∧
176the
9possibility of recourse being had to the impotable water of the Grand
177and
10Royal canals as in 1893)⸢B
⧼un⧽un (envisaging∧envisaging∧
176the
9possibility of recourse being had to the impotable water of the Grand
177and
10Royal canals as in 1893)B⸣
particularly
as the South Dublin Guardians,
178
11 notwithstanding their ration of 15 gallons per day per pauper supplied
179
12
through∧through∧ a 6 inch meter,
had been convicted of a wastage of
20.000
13 gallons
180 per night by a reading of their meter on the affirmation of the law
14 agent of
181 the corporation, Mr Ignatius Rice,
solicitor,⸢3solicitor,3⸣
thereby acting to the
15 detriment
182 of another section of the public, selfsupporting taxpayers, solvent,
16 sound.
183
17
What in water did Bloom, ⸢1[carrying water,]carrying water, waterlover,∧waterlover,∧ drawer of
18
water, watercarrier, waterlover,∧waterlover,∧ drawer of
18
water, watercarrier, 1⸣ [carrying water,]carrying water, waterlover,∧waterlover,∧ drawer of
18
water, watercarrier, waterlover,∧waterlover,∧ drawer of
18
water, watercarrier,
184 returning to the range, admire?
185
19Its ⸢1[universality,]universality,universality:universality:
1⸣ [universality,]universality,universality:universality:
its
democratic⸢CdemocraticC⸣
equality and constancy
20 to its nature in
186 seeking its own ⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
its vastness in the ocean of
21
∧⧼Mercalli's⧽Mercalli's Mercator's Mercator's
∧⧼Mercalli's⧽Mercalli's Mercator's Mercator's
⸢1[projection,
]projection,
projection:
projection:
1⸣ [projection,
]projection,
projection:
projection:
its
187unplumbed
22 profundity in the Sundam trench of the Pacific exceeding
8000
188
⸢1[fathoms,]fathoms,
23fathoms:
23fathoms:
1⸣ [fathoms,]fathoms,
23fathoms:
23fathoms:
the restlessness of its waves and surface particles
24 visiting in turn
189 all points of its ⸢1[seaboard,]seaboard, seaboard: seaboard:
1⸣ [seaboard,]seaboard, seaboard: seaboard:
the independence
25of its ⸢1[units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
1⸣ [units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
⸢Cthe independence
25of its ⸢1[units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
1⸣ [units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
C⸣
its
hydrostatic⸢3hydrostatic3⸣
26 quiescence in ⸢1[calm,]calm,calm:calm:
1⸣ [calm,]calm,calm:calm:
its
hydrokinetic⸢3hydrokinetic3⸣
turgidity in
191neap and
27spring ⸢1[tides,]tides,tides: its subsidence after devastation:tides: its subsidence after devastation:
1⸣ [tides,]tides,tides: its subsidence after devastation:tides: its subsidence after devastation:
its sterility in the
192
28circumpolar icecaps, arctic and ⸢1[antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
1⸣ [antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
⸢Bits sterility in the
192
28circumpolar icecaps, arctic and ⸢1[antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
1⸣ [antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
B⸣
its climatic and
29commercial
193significance:⸢3its climatic and
29commercial
193significance:3⸣
its preponderance of 3 to 1
over the dry
30land of the ⸢1[globe,]globe,globe:globe:
1⸣ [globe,]globe,globe:globe:
its
194indisputable hegemony
extending in
31square leagues⸢2extending in
31square leagues2⸣
over all the region
195below the subequatorial tropic of ⸢1[Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
1⸣ [Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
⸢Cits
194indisputable hegemony
extending in
31square leagues⸢2extending in
31square leagues2⸣
over all the region
195below the subequatorial tropic of ⸢1[Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
1⸣ [Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
C⸣
the multisecular stability of its
196
primeval∧
primeval∧
33basin: its luteofulvous
bed:⸢3the multisecular stability of its
196
primeval∧
primeval∧
33basin: its luteofulvous
bed:3⸣
its capacity to
dissolve and⸢Bdissolve andB⸣
hold in
197 solution
34 all soluble substances including millions of tons of the most
198precious
1
⸢1[metals,]metals,metals:metals:
1⸣ [metals,]metals,metals:metals:
its slow erosions of peninsulas and islands, its persistent
199
2 formation of
homothetic islands, peninsulas
and⸢Chomothetic islands, peninsulas
andC⸣
downwardtending
200
3
⸢1[promontories,]promontories,promontories:promontories:
1⸣ [promontories,]promontories,promontories:promontories:
its alluvial ⸢1[deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
1⸣ [deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
⸢Cits alluvial ⸢1[deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
1⸣ [deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
C⸣
its
4 weight and volume and ⸢1[density,]density,density:density:
1⸣ [density,]density,density:density:
its
201
⧼
majesty in quiescence,⧽
majesty in quiescence,
5 imperturbability in lagoons, atolls,
highland ⸢1[tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
1⸣ [tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
⸢Bits
201
⧼
majesty in quiescence,⧽
majesty in quiescence,
5 imperturbability in lagoons, atolls,
highland ⸢1[tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
1⸣ [tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
B⸣
its
6 gradation of colours
202 in the torrid and temperate and frigid
7
⸢1[zones,]zones,zones:zones:
1⸣ [zones,]zones,zones:zones:
its vehicular ramifications in
203 continental lakecontained streams and
8
confluent∨confluent∨ oceanflowing rivers with
204 their tributaries∨with
204 their tributaries∨ and transoceanic ⸢C[currents,]currents,
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
C⸣ [currents,]currents,
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
its violence in ⸢B[seaquakes and]seaquakes and seaquakes, seaquakes,
B⸣ [seaquakes and]seaquakes and seaquakes, seaquakes,
waterspouts,
11Artesian
wells,
206eruptions,
torrents,⸢Ctorrents,C⸣
eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧ inundations,
208deluges, ⸢C[cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
C⸣ [cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
⸢B
11Artesian
wells,
206eruptions,
torrents,⸢Ctorrents,C⸣
eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧ inundations,
208deluges, ⸢C[cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
C⸣ [cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
B⸣
its vast
15 circumterrestrial ahorizontal ⸢1[curve,]curve,curve:curve:
1⸣ [curve,]curve,curve:curve:
>the restlessness of its waves and surface particles
24 visiting in turn
189 all points of its ⸢1[seaboard,]seaboard, seaboard: seaboard:
1⸣ [seaboard,]seaboard, seaboard: seaboard:
the independence
25of its ⸢1[units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
1⸣ [units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
⸢Cthe independence
25of its ⸢1[units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
1⸣ [units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
C⸣
its
hydrostatic⸢3hydrostatic3⸣
26 quiescence in ⸢1[calm,]calm,calm:calm:
1⸣ [calm,]calm,calm:calm:
its
hydrokinetic⸢3hydrokinetic3⸣
turgidity in
191neap and
27spring ⸢1[tides,]tides,tides: its subsidence after devastation:tides: its subsidence after devastation:
1⸣ [tides,]tides,tides: its subsidence after devastation:tides: its subsidence after devastation:
its sterility in the
192
28circumpolar icecaps, arctic and ⸢1[antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
1⸣ [antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
⸢Bits sterility in the
192
28circumpolar icecaps, arctic and ⸢1[antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
1⸣ [antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
B⸣
its climatic and
29commercial
193significance:⸢3its climatic and
29commercial
193significance:3⸣
its preponderance of 3 to 1
over the dry
30land of the ⸢1[globe,]globe,globe:globe:
1⸣ [globe,]globe,globe:globe:
its
194indisputable hegemony
extending in
31square leagues⸢2extending in
31square leagues2⸣
over all the region
195below the subequatorial tropic of ⸢1[Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
1⸣ [Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
⸢Cits
194indisputable hegemony
extending in
31square leagues⸢2extending in
31square leagues2⸣
over all the region
195below the subequatorial tropic of ⸢1[Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
1⸣ [Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
C⸣
the multisecular stability of its
196
primeval∧
primeval∧
33basin: its luteofulvous
bed:⸢3the multisecular stability of its
196
primeval∧
primeval∧
33basin: its luteofulvous
bed:3⸣
its capacity to
dissolve and⸢Bdissolve andB⸣
hold in
197 solution
34 all soluble substances including millions of tons of the most
198precious
1
⸢1[metals,]metals,metals:metals:
1⸣ [metals,]metals,metals:metals:
its slow erosions of peninsulas and islands, its persistent
199
2 formation of
homothetic islands, peninsulas
and⸢Chomothetic islands, peninsulas
andC⸣
downwardtending
200
3
⸢1[promontories,]promontories,promontories:promontories:
1⸣ [promontories,]promontories,promontories:promontories:
its alluvial ⸢1[deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
1⸣ [deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
⸢Cits alluvial ⸢1[deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
1⸣ [deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
C⸣
its
4 weight and volume and ⸢1[density,]density,density:density:
1⸣ [density,]density,density:density:
its
201
⧼
majesty in quiescence,⧽
majesty in quiescence,
5 imperturbability in lagoons, atolls,
highland ⸢1[tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
1⸣ [tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
⸢Bits
201
⧼
majesty in quiescence,⧽
majesty in quiescence,
5 imperturbability in lagoons, atolls,
highland ⸢1[tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
1⸣ [tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
B⸣
its
6 gradation of colours
202 in the torrid and temperate and frigid
7
⸢1[zones,]zones,zones:zones:
1⸣ [zones,]zones,zones:zones:
its vehicular ramifications in
203 continental lakecontained streams and
8
confluent∨confluent∨ oceanflowing rivers with
204 their tributaries∨with
204 their tributaries∨ and transoceanic ⸢C[currents,]currents,
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
C⸣ [currents,]currents,
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
its violence in ⸢B[seaquakes and]seaquakes and seaquakes, seaquakes,
B⸣ [seaquakes and]seaquakes and seaquakes, seaquakes,
waterspouts,
11Artesian
wells,
206eruptions,
torrents,⸢Ctorrents,C⸣
eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧ inundations,
208deluges, ⸢C[cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
C⸣ [cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
⸢B
11Artesian
wells,
206eruptions,
torrents,⸢Ctorrents,C⸣
eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧ inundations,
208deluges, ⸢C[cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
C⸣ [cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
B⸣
its vast
15 circumterrestrial ahorizontal ⸢1[curve,]curve,curve:curve:
1⸣ [curve,]curve,curve:curve:
<
∧its
187unplumbed
22 profundity in the Sundam trench of the Pacific exceeding
8000
188
⸢1[fathoms,]fathoms,
23fathoms:
23fathoms:
1⸣ [fathoms,]fathoms,
23fathoms:
23fathoms:
the restlessness of its waves and surface particles
24 visiting in turn
189 all points of its ⸢1[seaboard,]seaboard, seaboard: seaboard:
1⸣ [seaboard,]seaboard, seaboard: seaboard:
the independence
25of its ⸢1[units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
1⸣ [units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
⸢Cthe independence
25of its ⸢1[units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
1⸣ [units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
C⸣
its
hydrostatic⸢3hydrostatic3⸣
26 quiescence in ⸢1[calm,]calm,calm:calm:
1⸣ [calm,]calm,calm:calm:
its
hydrokinetic⸢3hydrokinetic3⸣
turgidity in
191neap and
27spring ⸢1[tides,]tides,tides: its subsidence after devastation:tides: its subsidence after devastation:
1⸣ [tides,]tides,tides: its subsidence after devastation:tides: its subsidence after devastation:
its sterility in the
192
28circumpolar icecaps, arctic and ⸢1[antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
1⸣ [antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
⸢Bits sterility in the
192
28circumpolar icecaps, arctic and ⸢1[antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
1⸣ [antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
B⸣
its climatic and
29commercial
193significance:⸢3its climatic and
29commercial
193significance:3⸣
its preponderance of 3 to 1
over the dry
30land of the ⸢1[globe,]globe,globe:globe:
1⸣ [globe,]globe,globe:globe:
its
194indisputable hegemony
extending in
31square leagues⸢2extending in
31square leagues2⸣
over all the region
195below the subequatorial tropic of ⸢1[Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
1⸣ [Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
⸢Cits
194indisputable hegemony
extending in
31square leagues⸢2extending in
31square leagues2⸣
over all the region
195below the subequatorial tropic of ⸢1[Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
1⸣ [Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
C⸣
the multisecular stability of its
196
primeval∧
primeval∧
33basin: its luteofulvous
bed:⸢3the multisecular stability of its
196
primeval∧
primeval∧
33basin: its luteofulvous
bed:3⸣
its capacity to
dissolve and⸢Bdissolve andB⸣
hold in
197 solution
34 all soluble substances including millions of tons of the most
198precious
1
⸢1[metals,]metals,metals:metals:
1⸣ [metals,]metals,metals:metals:
its slow erosions of peninsulas and islands, its persistent
199
2 formation of
homothetic islands, peninsulas
and⸢Chomothetic islands, peninsulas
andC⸣
downwardtending
200
3
⸢1[promontories,]promontories,promontories:promontories:
1⸣ [promontories,]promontories,promontories:promontories:
its alluvial ⸢1[deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
1⸣ [deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
⸢Cits alluvial ⸢1[deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
1⸣ [deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
C⸣
its
4 weight and volume and ⸢1[density,]density,density:density:
1⸣ [density,]density,density:density:
its
201
⧼
majesty in quiescence,⧽
majesty in quiescence,
5 imperturbability in lagoons, atolls,
highland ⸢1[tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
1⸣ [tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
⸢Bits
201
⧼
majesty in quiescence,⧽
majesty in quiescence,
5 imperturbability in lagoons, atolls,
highland ⸢1[tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
1⸣ [tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
B⸣
its
6 gradation of colours
202 in the torrid and temperate and frigid
7
⸢1[zones,]zones,zones:zones:
1⸣ [zones,]zones,zones:zones:
its vehicular ramifications in
203 continental lakecontained streams and
8
confluent∨confluent∨ oceanflowing rivers with
204 their tributaries∨with
204 their tributaries∨ and transoceanic ⸢C[currents,]currents,
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
C⸣ [currents,]currents,
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
its violence in ⸢B[seaquakes and]seaquakes and seaquakes, seaquakes,
B⸣ [seaquakes and]seaquakes and seaquakes, seaquakes,
waterspouts,
11Artesian
wells,
206eruptions,
torrents,⸢Ctorrents,C⸣
eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧ inundations,
208deluges, ⸢C[cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
C⸣ [cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
⸢B
11Artesian
wells,
206eruptions,
torrents,⸢Ctorrents,C⸣
eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧ inundations,
208deluges, ⸢C[cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
C⸣ [cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
B⸣
its vast
15 circumterrestrial ahorizontal ⸢1[curve,]curve,curve:curve:
1⸣ [curve,]curve,curve:curve:
>the restlessness of its waves and surface particles
24 visiting in turn
189 all points of its ⸢1[seaboard,]seaboard, seaboard: seaboard:
1⸣ [seaboard,]seaboard, seaboard: seaboard:
the independence
25of its ⸢1[units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
1⸣ [units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
⸢Cthe independence
25of its ⸢1[units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
1⸣ [units,]units,units: the variability of
190states of sea:units: the variability of
190states of sea:
C⸣
its
hydrostatic⸢3hydrostatic3⸣
26 quiescence in ⸢1[calm,]calm,calm:calm:
1⸣ [calm,]calm,calm:calm:
its
hydrokinetic⸢3hydrokinetic3⸣
turgidity in
191neap and
27spring ⸢1[tides,]tides,tides: its subsidence after devastation:tides: its subsidence after devastation:
1⸣ [tides,]tides,tides: its subsidence after devastation:tides: its subsidence after devastation:
its sterility in the
192
28circumpolar icecaps, arctic and ⸢1[antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
1⸣ [antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
⸢Bits sterility in the
192
28circumpolar icecaps, arctic and ⸢1[antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
1⸣ [antarctic,]antarctic,antarctic:antarctic:
B⸣
its climatic and
29commercial
193significance:⸢3its climatic and
29commercial
193significance:3⸣
its preponderance of 3 to 1
over the dry
30land of the ⸢1[globe,]globe,globe:globe:
1⸣ [globe,]globe,globe:globe:
its
194indisputable hegemony
extending in
31square leagues⸢2extending in
31square leagues2⸣
over all the region
195below the subequatorial tropic of ⸢1[Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
1⸣ [Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
⸢Cits
194indisputable hegemony
extending in
31square leagues⸢2extending in
31square leagues2⸣
over all the region
195below the subequatorial tropic of ⸢1[Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
1⸣ [Capricorn,]Capricorn,
32Capricorn:
32Capricorn:
C⸣
the multisecular stability of its
196
primeval∧
primeval∧
33basin: its luteofulvous
bed:⸢3the multisecular stability of its
196
primeval∧
primeval∧
33basin: its luteofulvous
bed:3⸣
its capacity to
dissolve and⸢Bdissolve andB⸣
hold in
197 solution
34 all soluble substances including millions of tons of the most
198precious
1
⸢1[metals,]metals,metals:metals:
1⸣ [metals,]metals,metals:metals:
its slow erosions of peninsulas and islands, its persistent
199
2 formation of
homothetic islands, peninsulas
and⸢Chomothetic islands, peninsulas
andC⸣
downwardtending
200
3
⸢1[promontories,]promontories,promontories:promontories:
1⸣ [promontories,]promontories,promontories:promontories:
its alluvial ⸢1[deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
1⸣ [deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
⸢Cits alluvial ⸢1[deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
1⸣ [deposits,]deposits,deposits:deposits:
C⸣
its
4 weight and volume and ⸢1[density,]density,density:density:
1⸣ [density,]density,density:density:
its
201
⧼
majesty in quiescence,⧽
majesty in quiescence,
5 imperturbability in lagoons, atolls,
highland ⸢1[tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
1⸣ [tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
⸢Bits
201
⧼
majesty in quiescence,⧽
majesty in quiescence,
5 imperturbability in lagoons, atolls,
highland ⸢1[tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
1⸣ [tarns,]tarns,tarns:tarns:
B⸣
its
6 gradation of colours
202 in the torrid and temperate and frigid
7
⸢1[zones,]zones,zones:zones:
1⸣ [zones,]zones,zones:zones:
its vehicular ramifications in
203 continental lakecontained streams and
8
confluent∨confluent∨ oceanflowing rivers with
204 their tributaries∨with
204 their tributaries∨ and transoceanic ⸢C[currents,]currents,
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
C⸣ [currents,]currents,
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
9
⸢3[currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
3⸣ [currents:]currents:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
currents,
gulfstream, north and south
205equatorial
10courses:
its violence in ⸢B[seaquakes and]seaquakes and seaquakes, seaquakes,
B⸣ [seaquakes and]seaquakes and seaquakes, seaquakes,
waterspouts,
11Artesian
wells,
206eruptions,
torrents,⸢Ctorrents,C⸣
eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧ inundations,
208deluges, ⸢C[cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
C⸣ [cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
⸢B
11Artesian
wells,
206eruptions,
torrents,⸢Ctorrents,C⸣
eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧eddies, ∨⧼
△
⧽
△
∨⧼
△
⧽
△
freshets,
spates,⸢Cspates,C⸣
12groundswells,⸢2
12groundswells,2⸣
watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨watersheds,
207 waterpartings, geysers,∨ cataracts,
13 whirlpools, ⸢C[maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
C⸣ [maelstroms:]maelstroms: maelstroms, maelstroms,
∧ inundations,
208deluges, ⸢C[cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
C⸣ [cloudbursts,]cloudbursts,
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
14 cloudbursts:
[1its subsidence after devastation:]its subsidence after devastation:
B⸣
its vast
15 circumterrestrial ahorizontal ⸢1[curve,]curve,curve:curve:
1⸣ [curve,]curve,curve:curve:
<
∧ its secrecy
209 in springs
16and latent humidity, revealed by rhabdomantic or hygrometric
210
17instruments and⸢3
16and latent humidity, revealed by rhabdomantic or hygrometric
210
17instruments and3⸣
exemplified by the well by
the hol⧼l⧽le in the wall at
18Ashtown
211
⸢1[gate,]gate,
⸢3[gate:]gate: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew:
3⸣ [gate:]gate: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew:
⸢3[gate:]gate: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew:
3⸣ [gate:]gate: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew:
1⸣ [gate,]gate,
⸢3[gate:]gate: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew:
3⸣ [gate:]gate: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew:
⸢3[gate:]gate: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew:
3⸣ [gate:]gate: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew: gate, saturation of air,
distillation of dew:
the
19 simplicity of its composition,
212 two
constituent⸢BconstituentB⸣
parts
of hydrogen with one
20constituent part⸢B
20constituent partB⸣
of ⸢1[oxygen,]oxygen,oxygen:oxygen:
1⸣ [oxygen,]oxygen,oxygen:oxygen:
∧the
19 simplicity of its composition,
212 two
constituent⸢BconstituentB⸣
parts
of hydrogen with one
20constituent part⸢B
20constituent partB⸣
of ⸢1[oxygen,]oxygen,oxygen:oxygen:
1⸣ [oxygen,]oxygen,oxygen:oxygen:
∧ its
213 healing ⸢1[virtues,]virtues,virtues:virtues:
1⸣ [virtues,]virtues,virtues:virtues:
21
its buoyancy in the waters of the Dead ⸢1[Sea,]Sea,Sea:Sea:
1⸣ [Sea,]Sea,Sea:Sea:
∧its buoyancy in the waters of the Dead ⸢1[Sea,]Sea,Sea:Sea:
1⸣ [Sea,]Sea,Sea:Sea:
∧
⧼its menace to life
22 and property in leaks,⧽its menace to life
22 and property in leaks,
⸢C
⧼its menace to life
22 and property in leaks,⧽its menace to life
22 and property in leaks,
C⸣
its persevering
214penetrativeness in runnels, gullies,
23inadequate dams, leaks on ⸢1[shipboard,]shipboard, shipboard: shipboard:
1⸣ [shipboard,]shipboard, shipboard: shipboard:
⸢Bits persevering
214penetrativeness in runnels, gullies,
23inadequate dams, leaks on ⸢1[shipboard,]shipboard, shipboard: shipboard:
1⸣ [shipboard,]shipboard, shipboard: shipboard:
B⸣
its
215properties for
24 cleansing, quenching thirst and fire, nourishing
25
⸢B[plant life,]plant life,
⸢1[vegetation,]vegetation,vegetation:vegetation:
1⸣ [vegetation,]vegetation,vegetation:vegetation:
⸢1[vegetation,]vegetation,vegetation:vegetation:
1⸣ [vegetation,]vegetation,vegetation:vegetation:
B⸣ [plant life,]plant life,
⸢1[vegetation,]vegetation,vegetation:vegetation:
1⸣ [vegetation,]vegetation,vegetation:vegetation:
⸢1[vegetation,]vegetation,vegetation:vegetation:
1⸣ [vegetation,]vegetation,vegetation:vegetation:
216
its infallibility
as paradigm and paragon:
its
26metamorphoses as vapour,
217mist, cloud, rain, sleet, snow, hail:⸢3
its infallibility
as paradigm and paragon:
its
26metamorphoses as vapour,
217mist, cloud, rain, sleet, snow, hail:3⸣
its strength
27 in rigid ⸢1[hydrants,]hydrants,hydrants:hydrants:
1⸣ [hydrants,]hydrants,hydrants:hydrants:
its variety
218of forms in loughs and bays
28and gulfs∧
28and gulfs∧ and bights and guts and lagoons and
219 atolls and archipelagos∧and lagoons and
219 atolls and archipelagos∧
29and sounds and fjords and minches and
tidal⸢3tidal3⸣
220estuaries and arms of
30
⸢1[sea,]sea,sea:sea:
1⸣ [sea,]sea,sea:sea:
its solidity in glaciers, icebergs, ⸢1[icefloes,]icefloes,icefloes:icefloes:
1⸣ [icefloes,]icefloes,icefloes:icefloes:
⸢Cits variety
218of forms in loughs and bays
28and gulfs∧
28and gulfs∧ and bights and guts and lagoons and
219 atolls and archipelagos∧and lagoons and
219 atolls and archipelagos∧
29and sounds and fjords and minches and
tidal⸢3tidal3⸣
220estuaries and arms of
30
⸢1[sea,]sea,sea:sea:
1⸣ [sea,]sea,sea:sea:
its solidity in glaciers, icebergs, ⸢1[icefloes,]icefloes,icefloes:icefloes:
1⸣ [icefloes,]icefloes,icefloes:icefloes:
C⸣
its
221
31docility in working hydraulic∧hydraulic∧ millwheels,
turbines, dynamos,⸢Cturbines, dynamos,C⸣
electric
32power
222stations,
bleachworks, tanneries, ⸢1[scutchmills,]scutchmills,scutchmills:scutchmills:
1⸣ [scutchmills,]scutchmills,scutchmills:scutchmills:
⸢Cbleachworks, tanneries, ⸢1[scutchmills,]scutchmills,scutchmills:scutchmills:
1⸣ [scutchmills,]scutchmills,scutchmills:scutchmills:
C⸣
its
33 utility in canals, rivers, if
223 navigable,
[Cbleachworks, tanneries, scutchmills,]bleachworks, tanneries, scutchmills,
34floating and graving ⸢1[docks,]docks,docks:docks:
1⸣ [docks,]docks,docks:docks:
⸢C
34floating and graving ⸢1[docks,]docks,docks:docks:
1⸣ [docks,]docks,docks:docks:
C⸣
its potentiality derivable from
224
35harnessed ⸢C[tides,]tides, tides or watercourses falling from level to
36
⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
tides or watercourses falling from level to
36
⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
C⸣ [tides,]tides, tides or watercourses falling from level to
36
⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
tides or watercourses falling from level to
36
⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
⸢Bits potentiality derivable from
224
35harnessed ⸢C[tides,]tides, tides or watercourses falling from level to
36
⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
tides or watercourses falling from level to
36
⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
C⸣ [tides,]tides, tides or watercourses falling from level to
36
⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
tides or watercourses falling from level to
36
⸢1[level,]level,level:level:
1⸣ [level,]level,level:level:
B⸣
its submarine∧submarine∧
225 fauna and ⸢3[flora,]flora, flora (anacoustic,
37photophobe),
flora (anacoustic,
37photophobe),
3⸣ [flora,]flora, flora (anacoustic,
37photophobe),
flora (anacoustic,
37photophobe),
numerically,
if not literally,⸢Bif not literally,B⸣
the
226inhabitants of the
1
⸢1[globe,]globe,globe:globe:
1⸣ [globe,]globe,globe:globe:
its ubiquity as ⸢1[it constituted]it constitutedconstitutingconstituting
1⸣ [it constituted]it constitutedconstitutingconstituting
90% of the
2 human
227
⸢1[body,]body,body:body:
1⸣ [body,]body,body:body:
∧numerically,
if not literally,⸢Bif not literally,B⸣
the
226inhabitants of the
1
⸢1[globe,]globe,globe:globe:
1⸣ [globe,]globe,globe:globe:
its ubiquity as ⸢1[it constituted]it constitutedconstitutingconstituting
1⸣ [it constituted]it constitutedconstitutingconstituting
90% of the
2 human
227
⸢1[body,]body,body:body:
1⸣ [body,]body,body:body:
∧
⸢B[its]its the the
B⸣ [its]its the the
noxiousness
of its effluvia⸢Bof its effluviaB⸣
in
3lacustrine⸢B
3lacustrineB⸣
marshes,
[Bfaded flowers,]faded flowers,
pestilential fens,
228
faded ⸢3[flowers,]flowers,
4flowerwater,
4flowerwater,
3⸣ [flowers,]flowers,
4flowerwater,
4flowerwater,
⸢B
faded ⸢3[flowers,]flowers,
4flowerwater,
4flowerwater,
3⸣ [flowers,]flowers,
4flowerwater,
4flowerwater,
B⸣
stagnant pools in the waning moon.
229
5
Having set the halffilled kettle on the now burning coals, why did he
6
return
230 to the stillflowing tap?
231
7To wash his soiled hands with a partially consumed tablet of
Barrington's⸢1Barrington's1⸣
232
8 lemonflavoured ∧⧼soap⧽soap
soap,
to which paper still adhered,
soap,
to which paper still adhered,
∧⧼soap⧽soap
soap,
to which paper still adhered,
soap,
to which paper still adhered,
(bought
9thirteen hours
233 previously for ⸢3[threepence]threepence fourpence fourpence
3⸣ [threepence]threepence fourpence fourpence
and still unpaid
10for),
in fresh cold neverchanging
234 everchanging water and dry them, face
11 and hands, in a long redbordered
235 holland cloth passed over a wooden
12 revolving roller.
236
13
What reason did Stephen give for declining Bloom's offer?
237
14That he was hydrophobe, hating
⸢B[total]total partial partial
B⸣ [total]total partial partial
∧
⸢B[total]total partial partial
B⸣ [total]total partial partial
∧ contact ∧⧼with⧽with by
15 immersion
or total by
238submersion⸢Bor total by
238submersionB⸣
in cold by
15 immersion
or total by
238submersion⸢Bor total by
238submersionB⸣
in cold
∧⧼with⧽with by
15 immersion
or total by
238submersion⸢Bor total by
238submersionB⸣
in cold by
15 immersion
or total by
238submersion⸢Bor total by
238submersionB⸣
in cold
water,
(his
last bath having
16 taken place in the month of
239 October of the preceding year),
disliking the∧the∧
17aqueous
substances of glass
240 and crystal, distrusting ⧼aquacitees⧽aquacitees aquacities
18 of thought and language.
241
19
What impeded Bloom from giving Stephen counsels of hygiene and
242
20
prophylactic ⸢1[with]withto which should be addedto which should be added 1⸣ [with]withto which should be addedto which should be added suggestions concerning a
243
21
preliminary wetting of the head and contraction of the muscles with rapid
244
22
splashing of the face and neck⸢1and neck1⸣ and thoracic and epigastric⸢1and epigastric1⸣ region∧and contraction of the muscles with rapid
244
22
splashing of the face and neck⸢1and neck1⸣ and thoracic and epigastric⸢1and epigastric1⸣ region∧ in
23
case of
245 sea or river ⸢1[bathing?]bathing? bathing, the parts of the human anatomy
24
most sensitive to cold
246being the nape, stomach and thenar or sole of foot? bathing, the parts of the human anatomy
24
most sensitive to cold
246being the nape, stomach and thenar or sole of foot? 1⸣ [bathing?]bathing? bathing, the parts of the human anatomy
24
most sensitive to cold
246being the nape, stomach and thenar or sole of foot? bathing, the parts of the human anatomy
24
most sensitive to cold
246being the nape, stomach and thenar or sole of foot?
247
⸢B[Aquacity.]Aquacity.
25 The incompatibility of aquacity with the erratic originality of
26genius.
25 The incompatibility of aquacity with the erratic originality of
26genius.
B⸣ [Aquacity.]Aquacity.
25 The incompatibility of aquacity with the erratic originality of
26genius.
25 The incompatibility of aquacity with the erratic originality of
26genius.
248
1
What additional didactic⸢3didactic3⸣ counsels did he similarly repress?∧
248
1
What additional didactic⸢3didactic3⸣ counsels did he similarly repress?∧
249
2Dietary: concerning the respective percentage
of protein and caloric energy
250
3 in bacon, salt ling and butter, the absence of the former in the lastnamed
251
4 and the abundance of the latter in the firstnamed.∧
249
2Dietary: concerning the respective percentage
of protein and caloric energy
250
3 in bacon, salt ling and butter, the absence of the former in the lastnamed
251
4 and the abundance of the latter in the firstnamed.∧
248
1
What additional didactic⸢3didactic3⸣ counsels did he similarly repress?∧
248
1
What additional didactic⸢3didactic3⸣ counsels did he similarly repress?∧
249
2Dietary: concerning the respective percentage
of protein and caloric energy
250
3 in bacon, salt ling and butter, the absence of the former in the lastnamed
251
4 and the abundance of the latter in the firstnamed.∧
249
2Dietary: concerning the respective percentage
of protein and caloric energy
250
3 in bacon, salt ling and butter, the absence of the former in the lastnamed
251
4 and the abundance of the latter in the firstnamed.∧
252
5
Which seemed to the host to be the predominant qualities of his guest?
253
6Confidence in himself, ∧⧼a reciprocal⧽a reciprocal an equal and opposite an equal and opposite
∧⧼a reciprocal⧽a reciprocal an equal and opposite an equal and opposite
power of
7 abandonment and
254 recuperation.
252
5
Which seemed to the host to be the predominant qualities of his guest?
253
6Confidence in himself, ∧⧼a reciprocal⧽a reciprocal an equal and opposite an equal and opposite
∧⧼a reciprocal⧽a reciprocal an equal and opposite an equal and opposite
power of
7 abandonment and
254 recuperation.
255
8
What concomitant⸢BconcomitantB⸣ phenomenon took place in the vessel of liquid ⸢B[on
9
the]on
9
the by the
256agency of by the
256agency of B⸣ [on
9
the]on
9
the by the
256agency of by the
256agency of fire?
257
10The phenomenon of ebullition.
Fanned by a constant updraught of
258
∧⧼
air⧽
air
11ventilation
11ventilation
∧⧼
air⧽
air
11ventilation
11ventilation
between the kitchen and the chimneyflue,
ignition was
259
⧼
12communication⧽
12communication communicated from the faggots of precombustible∧precombustible∧
13 fuel∧of precombustible∧precombustible∧
13 fuel∧ to ⧼polygonous⧽polygonous polyhedral
260masses of bituminous coal, containing in
14compressed mineral form the
261foliated
fossilised⸢1fossilised1⸣
decidua of primeval
15forests which had in turn derived
262their vegetative existence from the sun,
16primal source of ⸢1[energy.]energy. heat ⸢3[(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
3⸣ [(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
heat ⸢3[(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
3⸣ [(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
1⸣ [energy.]energy. heat ⸢3[(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
3⸣ [(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
heat ⸢3[(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
3⸣ [(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
⸢CFanned by a constant updraught of
258
∧⧼
air⧽
air
11ventilation
11ventilation
∧⧼
air⧽
air
11ventilation
11ventilation
between the kitchen and the chimneyflue,
ignition was
259
⧼
12communication⧽
12communication communicated from the faggots of precombustible∧precombustible∧
13 fuel∧of precombustible∧precombustible∧
13 fuel∧ to ⧼polygonous⧽polygonous polyhedral
260masses of bituminous coal, containing in
14compressed mineral form the
261foliated
fossilised⸢1fossilised1⸣
decidua of primeval
15forests which had in turn derived
262their vegetative existence from the sun,
16primal source of ⸢1[energy.]energy. heat ⸢3[(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
3⸣ [(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
heat ⸢3[(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
3⸣ [(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
1⸣ [energy.]energy. heat ⸢3[(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
3⸣ [(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
heat ⸢3[(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
3⸣ [(radiant).](radiant). (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether. (radiant),
263transmitted through
17omnipresent luminiferous diathermanous ether.
C⸣
⸢C[Convected heat]Convected heat
⸢1[Convected heat,]Convected heat,
18 Heat
264(convected),
18 Heat
264(convected),
1⸣ [Convected heat,]Convected heat,
18 Heat
264(convected),
18 Heat
264(convected),
a mode of motion⸢1a mode of motion1⸣
developed by
19such combustion,
⸢1[Convected heat,]Convected heat,
18 Heat
264(convected),
18 Heat
264(convected),
1⸣ [Convected heat,]Convected heat,
18 Heat
264(convected),
18 Heat
264(convected),
a mode of motion⸢1a mode of motion1⸣
developed by
19such combustion,
C⸣ [Convected heat]Convected heat
⸢1[Convected heat,]Convected heat,
18 Heat
264(convected),
18 Heat
264(convected),
1⸣ [Convected heat,]Convected heat,
18 Heat
264(convected),
18 Heat
264(convected),
a mode of motion⸢1a mode of motion1⸣
developed by
19such combustion,
⸢1[Convected heat,]Convected heat,
18 Heat
264(convected),
18 Heat
264(convected),
1⸣ [Convected heat,]Convected heat,
18 Heat
264(convected),
18 Heat
264(convected),
a mode of motion⸢1a mode of motion1⸣
developed by
19such combustion,
was
265 constantly and increasingly conveyed from the
20source
of calorification to
266 the liquid contained in the vessel, being radiated
21 through the uneven
267 unpolished dark surface of the metal iron, in part
22 reflected, in part
268 absorbed, in part transmitted, gradually raising the
23 temperature of the
269 water from normal to boiling ⸢1[point.]point.point, a rise in
24temperature expressible as the
270result of an expenditure of 72 thermal units
25needed to raise 1 pound of
271water from 50° to 212° Fahrenheit.point, a rise in
24temperature expressible as the
270result of an expenditure of 72 thermal units
25needed to raise 1 pound of
271water from 50° to 212° Fahrenheit.
1⸣ [point.]point.point, a rise in
24temperature expressible as the
270result of an expenditure of 72 thermal units
25needed to raise 1 pound of
271water from 50° to 212° Fahrenheit.point, a rise in
24temperature expressible as the
270result of an expenditure of 72 thermal units
25needed to raise 1 pound of
271water from 50° to 212° Fahrenheit.
272
26
How⧽
272
26
How What announced the accomplishment of this rise in temperature?
273
27A double∧double∧ falciform ejection of water vapour from under the kettlelid at
28 both
274 sides simultaneously.
275
1
For what personal purpose could Bloom have applied the water so
2
boiled?
276
3To shave himself.
275
1
For what personal purpose could Bloom have applied the water so
2
boiled?
276
3To shave himself.
277
4
What advantages ∧⧼accrued from⧽accrued from attended attended ∧⧼accrued from⧽accrued from attended attended shaving by night?
278
5A softer ⸢1[beard,]beard,beard:beard:
1⸣ [beard,]beard,beard:beard:
a softer brush if intentionally allowed to
6remain from shave
279to shave in its ⸢1[lather,]lather,agglutinated lather:agglutinated lather:
1⸣ [lather,]lather,agglutinated lather:agglutinated lather:
⸢(B)a softer brush if intentionally allowed to
6remain from shave
279to shave in its ⸢1[lather,]lather,agglutinated lather:agglutinated lather:
1⸣ [lather,]lather,agglutinated lather:agglutinated lather:
(B)⸣
a
7softer skin if unexpectedly∧unexpectedly∧
280encountering female acquaintances ⧼at⧽at in
8remote places at incustomary ⸢1[hours,]hours,hours:hours:
1⸣ [hours,]hours,hours:hours:
⸢Ba
7softer skin if unexpectedly∧unexpectedly∧
280encountering female acquaintances ⧼at⧽at in
8remote places at incustomary ⸢1[hours,]hours,hours:hours:
1⸣ [hours,]hours,hours:hours:
B⸣
281 quiet reflections upon the
9 course of the
⸢1[day,
]day,
day:day:
1⸣ [day,
]day,
day:day:
a cleaner sensation when
282 awaking after a
10 fresher sleep since matutinal noises, premonitions and
283 perturbations, a
11 clattered milkcan, a postman's double knock,
a paper read,
284 reread while
12lathering, relathering the same spot,⸢(B)a paper read,
284 reread while
12lathering, relathering the same spot,(B)⸣
a shock, a shoot, with
285 thought of
13 aught he sought though fraught with nought might cause a
286 faster rate of
14 shaving and a ⸢1[nick,]nick,nicknick
1⸣ [nick,]nick,nicknick
∧⧼for⧽for on on
∧⧼for⧽for on on
which incision plaster with ⸢1[precision,]precision,
15 precision
15 precision
1⸣ [precision,]precision,
15 precision
15 precision
287 cut and humected and ⸢1[applied,]applied,appliedapplied
1⸣ [applied,]applied,appliedapplied
adhered:
16 which was to be done.
277
4
What advantages ∧⧼accrued from⧽accrued from attended attended ∧⧼accrued from⧽accrued from attended attended shaving by night?
278
5A softer ⸢1[beard,]beard,beard:beard:
1⸣ [beard,]beard,beard:beard:
a softer brush if intentionally allowed to
6remain from shave
279to shave in its ⸢1[lather,]lather,agglutinated lather:agglutinated lather:
1⸣ [lather,]lather,agglutinated lather:agglutinated lather:
⸢(B)a softer brush if intentionally allowed to
6remain from shave
279to shave in its ⸢1[lather,]lather,agglutinated lather:agglutinated lather:
1⸣ [lather,]lather,agglutinated lather:agglutinated lather:
(B)⸣
a
7softer skin if unexpectedly∧unexpectedly∧
280encountering female acquaintances ⧼at⧽at in
8remote places at incustomary ⸢1[hours,]hours,hours:hours:
1⸣ [hours,]hours,hours:hours:
⸢Ba
7softer skin if unexpectedly∧unexpectedly∧
280encountering female acquaintances ⧼at⧽at in
8remote places at incustomary ⸢1[hours,]hours,hours:hours:
1⸣ [hours,]hours,hours:hours:
B⸣
281 quiet reflections upon the
9 course of the
⸢1[day,
]day,
day:day:
1⸣ [day,
]day,
day:day:
a cleaner sensation when
282 awaking after a
10 fresher sleep since matutinal noises, premonitions and
283 perturbations, a
11 clattered milkcan, a postman's double knock,
a paper read,
284 reread while
12lathering, relathering the same spot,⸢(B)a paper read,
284 reread while
12lathering, relathering the same spot,(B)⸣
a shock, a shoot, with
285 thought of
13 aught he sought though fraught with nought might cause a
286 faster rate of
14 shaving and a ⸢1[nick,]nick,nicknick
1⸣ [nick,]nick,nicknick
∧⧼for⧽for on on
∧⧼for⧽for on on
which incision plaster with ⸢1[precision,]precision,
15 precision
15 precision
1⸣ [precision,]precision,
15 precision
15 precision
287 cut and humected and ⸢1[applied,]applied,appliedapplied
1⸣ [applied,]applied,appliedapplied
adhered:
16 which was to be done.
288
17
Why did absence of light disturb him less than presence of noise?
289
18Because of the surety of the sense of touch in his firm full masculine
290
19 feminine passive active hand.
288
17
Why did absence of light disturb him less than presence of noise?
289
18Because of the surety of the sense of touch in his firm full masculine
290
19 feminine passive active hand.
291
20
What quality did it (his hand)⸢1(his hand)1⸣ possess but with what counteracting
292
21
influence?
293
22The operative surgical∧surgical∧ quality but that he was reluctant to shed human
294
23 blood even when the end justified the means⧼.⧽., preferring,
in their natural
295
24 order, heliotherapy, ⸢1[medical therapeutics,]medical therapeutics,psychophysicotherapeutics,psychophysicotherapeutics,
1⸣ [medical therapeutics,]medical therapeutics,psychophysicotherapeutics,psychophysicotherapeutics,
25 osteopathic surgery.
291
20
What quality did it (his hand)⸢1(his hand)1⸣ possess but with what counteracting
292
21
influence?
293
22The operative surgical∧surgical∧ quality but that he was reluctant to shed human
294
23 blood even when the end justified the means⧼.⧽., preferring,
in their natural
295
24 order, heliotherapy, ⸢1[medical therapeutics,]medical therapeutics,psychophysicotherapeutics,psychophysicotherapeutics,
1⸣ [medical therapeutics,]medical therapeutics,psychophysicotherapeutics,psychophysicotherapeutics,
25 osteopathic surgery.
296
26
What ⸢1[were the contents]were the contentslay under exposure on the lower, middle and
27
upper shelveslay under exposure on the lower, middle and
27
upper shelves 1⸣ [were the contents]were the contentslay under exposure on the lower, middle and
27
upper shelveslay under exposure on the lower, middle and
27
upper shelves of the
297 kitchen ⸢1[dresser when]dresser when dresser, dresser, 1⸣ [dresser when]dresser when dresser, dresser, opened by Bloom?
298
28On the lower shelf five vertical breakfast plates, six horizontal breakfast
299
29
∧⧼cups⧽cups saucers saucers
∧⧼cups⧽cups saucers saucers
on which rested inverted breakfast cups, a moustachecup,
300
1 uninverted, and saucer of Crown Derby, four white goldrimmed eggcups,
301
2an
open shammy purse displaying
coins, mostly copper,
and⸢3and3⸣
a phial of
302
3 aromatic
(violet)⸢3(violet)3⸣
⸢3[comfits and a red bettingticket.]comfits and a red bettingticket. comfits. comfits.
3⸣ [comfits and a red bettingticket.]comfits and a red bettingticket. comfits. comfits.
On the
4 middle shelf a chipped eggcup containing
303 pepper, a drum of table salt, four
5conglomerated⸢B
5conglomeratedB⸣
black
⧼conglomerated⧽conglomerated
⸢B
⧼conglomerated⧽conglomerated
B⸣
olives in
⸢B[oily]oily oleaginous oleaginous
B⸣ [oily]oily oleaginous oleaginous
304
6 paper, an empty ⧼jar o⌷
⧽jar o⌷
pot of Plumtree's potted meat, ⸢B[a]a an oval wicker
7basket
305bedded with fibre and containing one an oval wicker
7basket
305bedded with fibre and containing one
B⸣ [a]a an oval wicker
7basket
305bedded with fibre and containing one an oval wicker
7basket
305bedded with fibre and containing one
Jersey pear, a halfempty
8 bottle of
306 William Gilbey and Co's white invalid port,
half disrobed of its
9swathe of
307coralpink tissue paper,⸢Bhalf disrobed of its
9swathe of
307coralpink tissue paper,B⸣
a packet of Epps's soluble cocoa, five
10 ounces of
308 Anne Lynch's choice tea at 2/‐ per lb
in a crinkled leadpaper
11 bag,∧five
10 ounces of
308 Anne Lynch's choice tea at 2/‐ per lb
in a crinkled leadpaper
11 bag,∧ a
309
∧⧼bowl of⧽bowl of
cylindrical
canister containing the best crystallised
cylindrical
canister containing the best crystallised
∧⧼bowl of⧽bowl of
cylindrical
canister containing the best crystallised
cylindrical
canister containing the best crystallised
12 lump sugar, ∧⧼a bisected onion,⧽a bisected onion, two onions,
310one
⧼bisected.⧽bisected., the larger,
13 Spanish, entire, the other, smaller, Irish, bisected
with
311augmented surface⸢3with
311augmented surface3⸣
14 and more redolent, two onions,
310one
⧼bisected.⧽bisected., the larger,
13 Spanish, entire, the other, smaller, Irish, bisected
with
311augmented surface⸢3with
311augmented surface3⸣
14 and more redolent,
∧⧼a bisected onion,⧽a bisected onion, two onions,
310one
⧼bisected.⧽bisected., the larger,
13 Spanish, entire, the other, smaller, Irish, bisected
with
311augmented surface⸢3with
311augmented surface3⸣
14 and more redolent, two onions,
310one
⧼bisected.⧽bisected., the larger,
13 Spanish, entire, the other, smaller, Irish, bisected
with
311augmented surface⸢3with
311augmented surface3⸣
14 and more redolent,
a jar of Irish Model Dairy's
cream, a
312 jug
of brown
15crockery⸢Bof brown
15crockeryB⸣
∧⧼of⧽of containing a naggin
and a quarter of containing a naggin
and a quarter of
∧⧼of⧽of containing a naggin
and a quarter of containing a naggin
and a quarter of
soured
313
adulterated⸢C
adulteratedC⸣
⸢C[milk]milk
16 milk, converted by heat into water, acidulous serum and
314
17semisolidified∧
17semisolidified∧ curds,
16 milk, converted by heat into water, acidulous serum and
314
17semisolidified∧
17semisolidified∧ curds,
C⸣ [milk]milk
16 milk, converted by heat into water, acidulous serum and
314
17semisolidified∧
17semisolidified∧ curds,
16 milk, converted by heat into water, acidulous serum and
314
17semisolidified∧
17semisolidified∧ curds,
which added to the quantity subtracted for Mr
315
18 Bloom's and Mrs Fleming's breakfasts,
made one
imperial⸢2imperial2⸣
pint, the total
316
19 quantity originally delivered∧which added to the quantity subtracted for Mr
315
18 Bloom's and Mrs Fleming's breakfasts,
made one
imperial⸢2imperial2⸣
pint, the total
316
19 quantity originally delivered∧, two cloves, a halfpenny and a small dish
317
20 containing a slice of fresh ribsteak. On the upper shelf a battery of jamjars
318
21(empty)
of various ⸢3[sizes. △
]sizes. △
sizes and proveniences. sizes and proveniences.
3⸣ [sizes. △
]sizes. △
sizes and proveniences. sizes and proveniences.
319
22
What attracted his attention lying on the apron of the dresser?
320
23Four polygonal fragments of two lacerated scarlet betting tickets, numbered
321
24 8 87, 88 6.
319
22
What attracted his attention lying on the apron of the dresser?
320
23Four polygonal fragments of two lacerated scarlet betting tickets, numbered
321
24 8 87, 88 6.
322
25
What reminiscences temporarily corrugated his brow?
323
26Reminiscences of coincidences, truth stranger than fiction, preindicative of
324
27 the result of the Gold Cup flat handicap, the
official and definitive⸢3official and definitive3⸣
result
28 of
325 which he had read in the Evening Telegraph,
late pink edition, in the
326
29 cabman's shelter, at Butt
bridge.
323
26Reminiscences of coincidences, truth stranger than fiction, preindicative of
324
27 the result of the Gold Cup flat handicap, the
official and definitive⸢3official and definitive3⸣
result
28 of
325 which he had read in the Evening Telegraph,
late pink edition, in the
326
29 cabman's shelter, at Butt
bridge.
327
1
Where had previous intimations of the result, effected or projected, been
328
2
received by him?
329
3In Bernard Kiernan's licensed premises 8, 9 and 10 Little Britain ⸢2[street,]street,
4street:
4street:
2⸣ [street,]street,
4street:
4street:
in
330 David Byrne's
licensed premises, 14 Duke ⸢2[street,]street, street: street:
2⸣ [street,]street, street: street:
in
5 O'Connell street lower,
331 outside Graham Lemon's when a dark man had
6 placed in his hand a
332 throwaway (subsequently thrown away), advertising
7 Elijah, restorer of the
333 church in ⸢2[Zion,]Zion, Zion: Zion:
2⸣ [Zion,]Zion, Zion: Zion:
in Lincoln place outside the
8 premises of F. W.
Sweny and
334 Co (Limited),
dispensing chemists, when,
9 when Frederick M. (Bantam)
335 Lyons had rapidly and successively requested,
10 perused and restituted the
336 copy of the current issue of
the Freeman's Journal
11 and National Press
337 which he had been about to throw away (subsequently
12 thrown away), he
338 had proceeded towards the oriental edifice of the Turkish
13 and Warm Baths,
339 11 Leinster street, with the light of inspiration shining in
14 his countenance
340 and bearing in his arms the secret of the race, graven in the
15 language of
341 prediction.
327
1
Where had previous intimations of the result, effected or projected, been
328
2
received by him?
329
3In Bernard Kiernan's licensed premises 8, 9 and 10 Little Britain ⸢2[street,]street,
4street:
4street:
2⸣ [street,]street,
4street:
4street:
in
330 David Byrne's
licensed premises, 14 Duke ⸢2[street,]street, street: street:
2⸣ [street,]street, street: street:
in
5 O'Connell street lower,
331 outside Graham Lemon's when a dark man had
6 placed in his hand a
332 throwaway (subsequently thrown away), advertising
7 Elijah, restorer of the
333 church in ⸢2[Zion,]Zion, Zion: Zion:
2⸣ [Zion,]Zion, Zion: Zion:
in Lincoln place outside the
8 premises of F. W.
Sweny and
334 Co (Limited),
dispensing chemists, when,
9 when Frederick M. (Bantam)
335 Lyons had rapidly and successively requested,
10 perused and restituted the
336 copy of the current issue of
the Freeman's Journal
11 and National Press
337 which he had been about to throw away (subsequently
12 thrown away), he
338 had proceeded towards the oriental edifice of the Turkish
13 and Warm Baths,
339 11 Leinster street, with the light of inspiration shining in
14 his countenance
340 and bearing in his arms the secret of the race, graven in the
15 language of
341 prediction.
342
16
What ⸢C[collateral]collateral ⧼modify⧽modify qualifying ⧼modify⧽modify qualifying C⸣ [collateral]collateral ⧼modify⧽modify qualifying ⧼modify⧽modify qualifying considerations allayed his
17
perturbations?
343
18The difficulties of interpretation since the significance of any event followed
344
19 its occurrence
as variably as the acoustic report followed the electrical
345
20discharge
and of counterestimating against an actual loss by failure to
346
21 interpret the total sum of possible losses proceeding originally from a
347
22 successful interpretation.
342
16
What ⸢C[collateral]collateral ⧼modify⧽modify qualifying ⧼modify⧽modify qualifying C⸣ [collateral]collateral ⧼modify⧽modify qualifying ⧼modify⧽modify qualifying considerations allayed his
17
perturbations?
343
18The difficulties of interpretation since the significance of any event followed
344
19 its occurrence
as variably as the acoustic report followed the electrical
345
20discharge
and of counterestimating against an actual loss by failure to
346
21 interpret the total sum of possible losses proceeding originally from a
347
22 successful interpretation.
348
23
His mood?
349
24He had not risked, he did not expect, he had not been disappointed, he was
350
25 satisfied.
348
23
His mood?
349
24He had not risked, he did not expect, he had not been disappointed, he was
350
25 satisfied.
351
26
What satisfied him?
352
27To have sustained no positive loss. To have brought a positive gain to
353
28 others. Light to the gentiles.
351
26
What satisfied him?
352
27To have sustained no positive loss. To have brought a positive gain to
353
28 others. Light to the gentiles.
354
1
How did Bloom prepare a ∧⧼meal?⧽meal? ⸢B[collation?]collation? collation for a gentile? collation for a gentile? B⸣ [collation?]collation? collation for a gentile? collation for a gentile? ⸢B[collation?]collation? collation for a gentile? collation for a gentile? B⸣ [collation?]collation? collation for a gentile? collation for a gentile? ∧⧼meal?⧽meal? ⸢B[collation?]collation? collation for a gentile? collation for a gentile? B⸣ [collation?]collation? collation for a gentile? collation for a gentile? ⸢B[collation?]collation? collation for a gentile? collation for a gentile? B⸣ [collation?]collation? collation for a gentile? collation for a gentile?
355
2He poured into two teacups two level∧level∧ spoonfuls, four in all, of Epps's
356
3 soluble cocoa⧼.⧽. and proceeded according to the directions for use printed
4 on
357 the ⸢C[label.]label. label, to each adding
after sufficient time⸢1after sufficient time1⸣
for infusion⸢3for infusion3⸣
5the prescribed
358ingredients
⧼of⧽of for diffusion⸢3
⧼of⧽of for diffusion3⸣
in the manner and in the
6quantity prescribed. label, to each adding
after sufficient time⸢1after sufficient time1⸣
for infusion⸢3for infusion3⸣
5the prescribed
358ingredients
⧼of⧽of for diffusion⸢3
⧼of⧽of for diffusion3⸣
in the manner and in the
6quantity prescribed.
C⸣ [label.]label. label, to each adding
after sufficient time⸢1after sufficient time1⸣
for infusion⸢3for infusion3⸣
5the prescribed
358ingredients
⧼of⧽of for diffusion⸢3
⧼of⧽of for diffusion3⸣
in the manner and in the
6quantity prescribed. label, to each adding
after sufficient time⸢1after sufficient time1⸣
for infusion⸢3for infusion3⸣
5the prescribed
358ingredients
⧼of⧽of for diffusion⸢3
⧼of⧽of for diffusion3⸣
in the manner and in the
6quantity prescribed.
359
7
What supererogatory⸢3supererogatory3⸣ marks of special hospitality did the host show his
360
8
guest?
361
9Relinquishing his
symposiarchal⸢3symposiarchal3⸣
right to the moustache cup of imitation
362
10Crown
Derby presented to him by his only ⧼D⧽D daughter,
⸢2[Millicent,
]Millicent,
11Millicent (Milly),
11Millicent (Milly),
2⸣ [Millicent,
]Millicent,
11Millicent (Milly),
11Millicent (Milly),
he
363
⸢1[drank from]drank from
substituted
substituted
1⸣ [drank from]drank from
substituted
substituted
a cup identical with that of
12 his guest⧼.⧽. and served
extraordinarily⸢3extraordinarily3⸣
364 to his guest and, in reduced
13 measure, to himself
the
viscous⸢1viscous1⸣
cream
365
⸢3[usually]usually
ordinarily
ordinarily
3⸣ [usually]usually
ordinarily
ordinarily
reserved for
14
⧼his⧽his the breakfast of his wife Marion (Molly).
366
15
Was the guest conscious of and did he acknowledge∧and did he acknowledge∧ these ∧⧼attentions?⧽attentions?
16
marks of
367 hospitality?
16
marks of
367 hospitality? ∧⧼attentions?⧽attentions?
16
marks of
367 hospitality?
16
marks of
367 hospitality?
368
17His attention was directed to them by his host jocosely,
and he accepted
369
18 them ∧⧼in silence seriously.⧽in silence seriously. seriously as they drank in
jocoserious⸢3jocoserious3⸣
⸢3[silence.]silence.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
3⸣ [silence.]silence.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
seriously as they drank in
jocoserious⸢3jocoserious3⸣
⸢3[silence.]silence.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
3⸣ [silence.]silence.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
∧⧼in silence seriously.⧽in silence seriously. seriously as they drank in
jocoserious⸢3jocoserious3⸣
⸢3[silence.]silence.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
3⸣ [silence.]silence.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
seriously as they drank in
jocoserious⸢3jocoserious3⸣
⸢3[silence.]silence.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
3⸣ [silence.]silence.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
19 silence⧼,⧽, Epps's massproduct, the
370creature cocoa.
371
20
Was there a mark⧽
371
20
Was there a mark Were there marks Were there marks ∧⧼
371
20
Was there a mark⧽
371
20
Was there a mark Were there marks Were there marks of ⧼attention⧽attention hospitality which
21
he contemplated but ⧼suppressed?⧽suppressed? suppressed,
372 reserving ∧⧼it⧽it them them ∧⧼it⧽it them them for
22
another and for himself∧and for himself∧ on ∧⧼a future occasion?⧽a future occasion? future ⸢1[occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? 1⸣ [occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? future ⸢1[occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? 1⸣ [occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? ∧⧼a future occasion?⧽a future occasion? future ⸢1[occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? 1⸣ [occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? future ⸢1[occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? 1⸣ [occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
374
24The reparation of a fissure of the length of 11⁄2 inches in the right side of his
375
25 guest's jacket. A gift to his guest of one of the four lady's handkerchiefs, if
376
26 and when ascertained to be in a presentable condition.
371
20
Was there a mark⧽
371
20
Was there a mark Were there marks Were there marks ∧⧼
371
20
Was there a mark⧽
371
20
Was there a mark Were there marks Were there marks of ⧼attention⧽attention hospitality which
21
he contemplated but ⧼suppressed?⧽suppressed? suppressed,
372 reserving ∧⧼it⧽it them them ∧⧼it⧽it them them for
22
another and for himself∧and for himself∧ on ∧⧼a future occasion?⧽a future occasion? future ⸢1[occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? 1⸣ [occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? future ⸢1[occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? 1⸣ [occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? ∧⧼a future occasion?⧽a future occasion? future ⸢1[occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? 1⸣ [occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? future ⸢1[occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun? 1⸣ [occasions?]occasions?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
23
occasions to complete
373the act begun?
374
24The reparation of a fissure of the length of 11⁄2 inches in the right side of his
375
25 guest's jacket. A gift to his guest of one of the four lady's handkerchiefs, if
376
26 and when ascertained to be in a presentable condition.
377
1
Who drank more quickly?
378
2Bloom⧼.⧽., having the advantage of ∧⧼a few⧽a few ten ten
∧⧼a few⧽a few ten ten
seconds at the ⸢B[start]start
3initiation
3initiation
B⸣ [start]start
3initiation
3initiation
and
⸢3[taking]taking taking,
379from the concave surface of a spoon
4along the handle of which a steady
380flow of heat was conducted, taking,
379from the concave surface of a spoon
4along the handle of which a steady
380flow of heat was conducted,
3⸣ [taking]taking taking,
379from the concave surface of a spoon
4along the handle of which a steady
380flow of heat was conducted, taking,
379from the concave surface of a spoon
4along the handle of which a steady
380flow of heat was conducted,
three sips
5 to his opponent's
⸢1[one.]one. one, six to two,
381nine to three. one, six to two,
381nine to three.
1⸣ [one.]one. one, six to two,
381nine to three. one, six to two,
381nine to three.
382
6
What cerebration accompanied his frequentative⸢3frequentative3⸣ act?
383
7Concluding
by inspection but erroneously⸢Bby inspection but erroneouslyB⸣
that his silent companion was
384
8 engaged in mental composition he
reflected on the pleasures derived from
385
9 literature of instruction rather than of amusement as he himself had applied
386
10 to the works of
William⸢3William3⸣
Shakespeare more than once for the solution of
387
11 difficult problems in imaginary or real life.
388
12
Had he found their solution?
389
13In spite of careful and repeated reading of certain
classical⸢BclassicalB⸣
passages,
14 aided
390 by a glossary, he had
[Bnot]not
derived
imperfect⸢BimperfectB⸣
conviction from the ⸢B[text.]text.
15 text, the
391answers not bearing in
all points.
15 text, the
391answers not bearing in
all points.
B⸣ [text.]text.
15 text, the
391answers not bearing in
all points.
15 text, the
391answers not bearing in
all points.
392
16
What lines concluded his first piece of original verse written by him,
393
17
potential poet,⸢1by him,
393
17
potential poet,1⸣ at the age of 11 in 1877 ⧼written⧽written on the occasion of the
18
offering of∧the
18
offering of∧
394 three prizes of 10/‐, 5/‐ and 2/6 respectively ⸢⧼offered⧽offered ⸣ ⧼offered⧽offered for
19
competition by the
395 Shamrock , a∧, a∧ weekly newspaper?
396
20
An ambition to squint
397
21
At my verses in print
398
22
Makes me hope that for these you'll find room.
399
23
If you so condescend
400
24
Then please place at the end
401
25
The name of yours truly, L. Bloom.
402
1
Did he find four separating forces between his temporary guest and him?
403
2Name, age, race, creed.
404
3
What anagrams had he made on his name in youth?
405
4Leopold Bloom
406
5Ellpodbomool
407
6Molldopeloob
408
7Bollopedoom
409
8Old Ollebo, M. P.
410
9
What acrostic upon the abbreviation of his first name had he (kinetic
10
poet)⸢2(kinetic
10
poet)2⸣
411 sent to Miss Marion (Molly) Tweedy on the 14 February 1888?
412
11
Poets
oft have sung in rhyme
413
12
Of
music sweet their praise divine.
414
13
Let
them hymn it nine times nine.
415
14
Dearer
far than song or wine.
416
15
You
are mine. The world is mine.
417
16
What had prevented him from completing a topical ∧⧼song,⧽song, song (music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)⸢2(music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)2⸣ on the events of the ⧼year,⧽year, past, or fixtures for the
18
actual, years, song (music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)⸢2(music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)2⸣ on the events of the ⧼year,⧽year, past, or fixtures for the
18
actual, years, ∧⧼song,⧽song, song (music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)⸢2(music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)2⸣ on the events of the ⧼year,⧽year, past, or fixtures for the
18
actual, years, song (music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)⸢2(music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)2⸣ on the events of the ⧼year,⧽year, past, or fixtures for the
18
actual, years, entitled
419 If Brian Boru could but come back and see old Dublin
19
now, commissioned
420 by Michael ∧⧼Gunn⧽Gunn Gunn, lessee of the Gaiety
20
Theatre, ⸢3[South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 3⸣ [South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King
421 street, Gunn, lessee of the Gaiety
20
Theatre, ⸢3[South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 3⸣ [South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King
421 street, ∧⧼Gunn⧽Gunn Gunn, lessee of the Gaiety
20
Theatre, ⸢3[South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 3⸣ [South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King
421 street, Gunn, lessee of the Gaiety
20
Theatre, ⸢3[South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 3⸣ [South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King
421 street, and to be ⧼sung
21
by⧽sung
21
by introduced into the ⧼scene⧽scene sixth scene, the valley of diamonds, of
422the⸢2 ⧼scene⧽scene sixth scene, the valley of diamonds, of
422the2⸣
22
second edition (30 January 1893)⸢2(30 January 1893)2⸣ of the grand annual⸢2grand annual2⸣ Christmas
423
23
pantomime Sinbad the Sailor ⸢1 Sinbad the Sailor 1⸣ ∧⧼1896⧽1896 ⸢2[1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, 2⸣ [1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892,
424 written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) ⸢2written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) 2⸣ ⸢2[1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, 2⸣ [1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892,
424 written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) ⸢2written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) 2⸣ ∧⧼1896⧽1896 ⸢2[1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, 2⸣ [1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892,
424 written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) ⸢2written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) 2⸣ ⸢2[1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, 2⸣ [1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892,
424 written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) ⸢2written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) 2⸣ and sung by ⸢1[Fay Arthurs,]Fay Arthurs, Nelly
28
Bouverist, Nelly
28
Bouverist, 1⸣ [Fay Arthurs,]Fay Arthurs, Nelly
28
Bouverist, Nelly
28
Bouverist, principal ∧⧼boy?⧽boy? girl? girl? ∧⧼boy?⧽boy? girl? girl?
⸢1[Oscillation]Oscillation
428
29 Firstly, oscillation
428
29 Firstly, oscillation
1⸣ [Oscillation]Oscillation
428
29 Firstly, oscillation
428
29 Firstly, oscillation
between events of ⸢C[local and of
30imperial]local and of
30imperial imperial and of local imperial and of local
C⸣ [local and of
30imperial]local and of
30imperial imperial and of local imperial and of local
interest, the
429
anticipated⸢3
anticipated3⸣
diamond jubilee
1 of Queen Victoria
(born 1820, acceded 1837)
⸢C(born 1820, acceded 1837)
C⸣
430and the
posticipated⸢3posticipated3⸣
2 opening of the new municipal fish ⸢1[market,]market, market: secondly, market: secondly,
1⸣ [market,]market, market: secondly, market: secondly,
431
3 apprehension of opposition from extreme circles on the questions of the
432
4 respective visits of Their Royal Highnesses
the duke and duchess of York
433
5(real)
and of His Majesty
King⸢CKingC⸣
Brian Boru ⸢1[(imaginary),](imaginary),
(imaginary):
6thirdly,
(imaginary):
6thirdly,
1⸣ [(imaginary),](imaginary),
(imaginary):
6thirdly,
(imaginary):
6thirdly,
a conflict
434 between professional etiquette and professional
7 emulation concerning the
435 recent erections of the Grand Lyric Hall on
8 Burgh Quay and the Theatre
436 Royal in Hawkins
⸢1[street,
]street,
street:
9fourthly,
street:
9fourthly,
1⸣ [street,
]street,
street:
9fourthly,
street:
9fourthly,
distraction resultant from compassion
437 for ⸢1[Fay Arthur's]Fay Arthur's
10Nelly Bouverist's
10Nelly Bouverist's
1⸣ [Fay Arthur's]Fay Arthur's
10Nelly Bouverist's
10Nelly Bouverist's
non‐intellectual, non‐political, non‐topical expression
438 of
11 countenance and concupiscence caused by ⸢1[Fay Arthur's]Fay Arthur's Nelly
12Bouverist's Nelly
12Bouverist's
1⸣ [Fay Arthur's]Fay Arthur's Nelly
12Bouverist's Nelly
12Bouverist's
revelations
439 of white articles of non‐intellectual,
13 non‐political, non‐topical∧non‐intellectual,
13 non‐political, non‐topical∧
440 underclothing while she ( ⸢1[Fay Arthur]Fay Arthur Nelly
14Bouverist Nelly
14Bouverist
1⸣ [Fay Arthur]Fay Arthur Nelly
14Bouverist Nelly
14Bouverist
) was in the ⸢1[articles,]articles, articles: fifthly, articles: fifthly,
1⸣ [articles,]articles, articles: fifthly, articles: fifthly,
the
441
⧼diffi⧽diffi
⧼rhyming⧽rhyming
15 difficulties of >⧼rhyming and⧽rhyming and the selection of the selection of
<⧼rhyming and⧽rhyming and the selection of the selection of
appropriate music and
16
⸢[selection of]selection of
⸣ [selection of]selection of
humorous
allusions
442
⧼
◻
⧽
◻
from Everybody's Book of Jokes
17 (1000 pages and a laugh in every ⸢1[one),]one),
one):
443sixthly,
one):
443sixthly,
1⸣ [one),]one),
one):
443sixthly,
one):
443sixthly,
∧of >⧼rhyming and⧽rhyming and the selection of the selection of
<⧼rhyming and⧽rhyming and the selection of the selection of
appropriate music and
16
⸢[selection of]selection of
⸣ [selection of]selection of
humorous
allusions
442
⧼
◻
⧽
◻
from Everybody's Book of Jokes
17 (1000 pages and a laugh in every ⸢1[one),]one),
one):
443sixthly,
one):
443sixthly,
1⸣ [one),]one),
one):
443sixthly,
one):
443sixthly,
∧
the rhymes,
18 homophonous and cacophonous,∧the rhymes,
18 homophonous and cacophonous,∧ associated with the
444 names of the new
19 lord mayor, Daniel Tallon, the new high sheriff, Thomas
445 Pile and the new
20solicitorgeneral,
Dunbar Plunket Barton.
417
16
What had prevented him from completing a topical ∧⧼song,⧽song, song (music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)⸢2(music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)2⸣ on the events of the ⧼year,⧽year, past, or fixtures for the
18
actual, years, song (music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)⸢2(music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)2⸣ on the events of the ⧼year,⧽year, past, or fixtures for the
18
actual, years, ∧⧼song,⧽song, song (music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)⸢2(music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)2⸣ on the events of the ⧼year,⧽year, past, or fixtures for the
18
actual, years, song (music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)⸢2(music
17
by R. G.
418Johnston)2⸣ on the events of the ⧼year,⧽year, past, or fixtures for the
18
actual, years, entitled
419 If Brian Boru could but come back and see old Dublin
19
now, commissioned
420 by Michael ∧⧼Gunn⧽Gunn Gunn, lessee of the Gaiety
20
Theatre, ⸢3[South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 3⸣ [South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King
421 street, Gunn, lessee of the Gaiety
20
Theatre, ⸢3[South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 3⸣ [South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King
421 street, ∧⧼Gunn⧽Gunn Gunn, lessee of the Gaiety
20
Theatre, ⸢3[South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 3⸣ [South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King
421 street, Gunn, lessee of the Gaiety
20
Theatre, ⸢3[South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 3⸣ [South Anne]South Anne 46, 47, 48, 49 South King 46, 47, 48, 49 South King
421 street, and to be ⧼sung
21
by⧽sung
21
by introduced into the ⧼scene⧽scene sixth scene, the valley of diamonds, of
422the⸢2 ⧼scene⧽scene sixth scene, the valley of diamonds, of
422the2⸣
22
second edition (30 January 1893)⸢2(30 January 1893)2⸣ of the grand annual⸢2grand annual2⸣ Christmas
423
23
pantomime Sinbad the Sailor ⸢1 Sinbad the Sailor 1⸣ ∧⧼1896⧽1896 ⸢2[1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, 2⸣ [1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892,
424 written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) ⸢2written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) 2⸣ ⸢2[1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, 2⸣ [1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892,
424 written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) ⸢2written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) 2⸣ ∧⧼1896⧽1896 ⸢2[1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, 2⸣ [1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892,
424 written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) ⸢2written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) 2⸣ ⸢2[1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, 2⸣ [1897]1897 (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892, (produced by R Shelton∧by R Shelton∧
24
26 December 1892,
424 written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) ⸢2written by Greenleaf Whittier, scenery by George
25
A. Jackson and Cecil
425Hicks, costumes by Mrs and Miss Whelan under the
26
personal supervision
426of Mrs Michael Gunn, ballets by Jessie Noir,
27
harlequinade by Thomas
427Otto) 2⸣ and sung by ⸢1[Fay Arthurs,]Fay Arthurs, Nelly
28
Bouverist, Nelly
28
Bouverist, 1⸣ [Fay Arthurs,]Fay Arthurs, Nelly
28
Bouverist, Nelly
28
Bouverist, principal ∧⧼boy?⧽boy? girl? girl? ∧⧼boy?⧽boy? girl? girl?
⸢1[Oscillation]Oscillation
428
29 Firstly, oscillation
428
29 Firstly, oscillation
1⸣ [Oscillation]Oscillation
428
29 Firstly, oscillation
428
29 Firstly, oscillation
between events of ⸢C[local and of
30imperial]local and of
30imperial imperial and of local imperial and of local
C⸣ [local and of
30imperial]local and of
30imperial imperial and of local imperial and of local
interest, the
429
anticipated⸢3
anticipated3⸣
diamond jubilee
1 of Queen Victoria
(born 1820, acceded 1837)
⸢C(born 1820, acceded 1837)
C⸣
430and the
posticipated⸢3posticipated3⸣
2 opening of the new municipal fish ⸢1[market,]market, market: secondly, market: secondly,
1⸣ [market,]market, market: secondly, market: secondly,
431
3 apprehension of opposition from extreme circles on the questions of the
432
4 respective visits of Their Royal Highnesses
the duke and duchess of York
433
5(real)
and of His Majesty
King⸢CKingC⸣
Brian Boru ⸢1[(imaginary),](imaginary),
(imaginary):
6thirdly,
(imaginary):
6thirdly,
1⸣ [(imaginary),](imaginary),
(imaginary):
6thirdly,
(imaginary):
6thirdly,
a conflict
434 between professional etiquette and professional
7 emulation concerning the
435 recent erections of the Grand Lyric Hall on
8 Burgh Quay and the Theatre
436 Royal in Hawkins
⸢1[street,
]street,
street:
9fourthly,
street:
9fourthly,
1⸣ [street,
]street,
street:
9fourthly,
street:
9fourthly,
distraction resultant from compassion
437 for ⸢1[Fay Arthur's]Fay Arthur's
10Nelly Bouverist's
10Nelly Bouverist's
1⸣ [Fay Arthur's]Fay Arthur's
10Nelly Bouverist's
10Nelly Bouverist's
non‐intellectual, non‐political, non‐topical expression
438 of
11 countenance and concupiscence caused by ⸢1[Fay Arthur's]Fay Arthur's Nelly
12Bouverist's Nelly
12Bouverist's
1⸣ [Fay Arthur's]Fay Arthur's Nelly
12Bouverist's Nelly
12Bouverist's
revelations
439 of white articles of non‐intellectual,
13 non‐political, non‐topical∧non‐intellectual,
13 non‐political, non‐topical∧
440 underclothing while she ( ⸢1[Fay Arthur]Fay Arthur Nelly
14Bouverist Nelly
14Bouverist
1⸣ [Fay Arthur]Fay Arthur Nelly
14Bouverist Nelly
14Bouverist
) was in the ⸢1[articles,]articles, articles: fifthly, articles: fifthly,
1⸣ [articles,]articles, articles: fifthly, articles: fifthly,
the
441
⧼diffi⧽diffi
⧼rhyming⧽rhyming
15 difficulties of >⧼rhyming and⧽rhyming and the selection of the selection of
<⧼rhyming and⧽rhyming and the selection of the selection of
appropriate music and
16
⸢[selection of]selection of
⸣ [selection of]selection of
humorous
allusions
442
⧼
◻
⧽
◻
from Everybody's Book of Jokes
17 (1000 pages and a laugh in every ⸢1[one),]one),
one):
443sixthly,
one):
443sixthly,
1⸣ [one),]one),
one):
443sixthly,
one):
443sixthly,
∧of >⧼rhyming and⧽rhyming and the selection of the selection of
<⧼rhyming and⧽rhyming and the selection of the selection of
appropriate music and
16
⸢[selection of]selection of
⸣ [selection of]selection of
humorous
allusions
442
⧼
◻
⧽
◻
from Everybody's Book of Jokes
17 (1000 pages and a laugh in every ⸢1[one),]one),
one):
443sixthly,
one):
443sixthly,
1⸣ [one),]one),
one):
443sixthly,
one):
443sixthly,
∧
the rhymes,
18 homophonous and cacophonous,∧the rhymes,
18 homophonous and cacophonous,∧ associated with the
444 names of the new
19 lord mayor, Daniel Tallon, the new high sheriff, Thomas
445 Pile and the new
20solicitorgeneral,
Dunbar Plunket Barton.
446
21
What relation existed between their ages?
447
2216 years before in∧in∧ 1888 when Bloom was of Stephen's present age
23 Stephen
448 was 6. ⸢1[Sixteen]Sixteen 16 16
1⸣ [Sixteen]Sixteen 16 16
years after in 1920 when Stephen would be of
24 Bloom's present age
449
⧼Blond⧽Blond Bloom would be 54.
In 1936 when Bloom
25would be 70 and Stephen 54 their
450ages initially ∧⧼as⧽as in the ratio of in the ratio of
∧⧼as⧽as in the ratio of in the ratio of
16 to 0
26would be as 17 1⁄2 to 13 1⁄2, the proportion
451
∧⧼
diminishing⧽
diminishing increasing increasing
∧⧼
diminishing⧽
diminishing increasing increasing
and the
27disparity diminishing
according⸢CaccordingC⸣
as
arbitrary⸢1arbitrary1⸣
future
years
452were
28added,
for if the proportion existing in 1883 had continued ⸢1[immutable]immutable
29immutable,
453conceiving that to be possible,
29immutable,
453conceiving that to be possible,
1⸣ [immutable]immutable
29immutable,
453conceiving that to be possible,
29immutable,
453conceiving that to be possible,
till then 1904∧1904∧ when Stephen
30was 22 Bloom
454would be 374 and in 1920 when Stephen would ∧⧼be,⧽be, be 38, be 38,
∧⧼be,⧽be, be 38, be 38,
31as Bloom then was,
455
⸢[
38]
38
⸣ [
38]
38
Bloom would be 646 while in 1952 when Stephen
32would have attained the
456
⸢1[postdiluvian maximum]postdiluvian maximum
maximum
33postdiluvian
maximum
33postdiluvian
1⸣ [postdiluvian maximum]postdiluvian maximum
maximum
33postdiluvian
maximum
33postdiluvian
∧
⸢1[postdiluvian maximum]postdiluvian maximum
maximum
33postdiluvian
maximum
33postdiluvian
1⸣ [postdiluvian maximum]postdiluvian maximum
maximum
33postdiluvian
maximum
33postdiluvian
∧ age of 70 Bloom, ⧼
◻
⧽
◻
being 1190 years alive having been
457
34born in the year ⸢2[714]714 714, 714,
2⸣ [714]714 714, 714,
would have surpassed by 221 years the
1maximum
458antediluvian age, that of Methusalah,
969 years, while,
if
2Stephen ∧⧼attained⧽attained would
459 continue to live until he would attain would
459 continue to live until he would attain
∧⧼attained⧽attained would
459 continue to live until he would attain would
459 continue to live until he would attain
that age in
3the year 3072 A.D.,
Bloom
460would have been obliged to have been alive
483,300 years, having been
461obliged to have been born in the year
581,396 B.C.⸢BIn 1936 when Bloom
25would be 70 and Stephen 54 their
450ages initially ∧⧼as⧽as in the ratio of in the ratio of
∧⧼as⧽as in the ratio of in the ratio of
16 to 0
26would be as 17 1⁄2 to 13 1⁄2, the proportion
451
∧⧼
diminishing⧽
diminishing increasing increasing
∧⧼
diminishing⧽
diminishing increasing increasing
and the
27disparity diminishing
according⸢CaccordingC⸣
as
arbitrary⸢1arbitrary1⸣
future
years
452were
28added,
for if the proportion existing in 1883 had continued ⸢1[immutable]immutable
29immutable,
453conceiving that to be possible,
29immutable,
453conceiving that to be possible,
1⸣ [immutable]immutable
29immutable,
453conceiving that to be possible,
29immutable,
453conceiving that to be possible,
till then 1904∧1904∧ when Stephen
30was 22 Bloom
454would be 374 and in 1920 when Stephen would ∧⧼be,⧽be, be 38, be 38,
∧⧼be,⧽be, be 38, be 38,
31as Bloom then was,
455
⸢[
38]
38
⸣ [
38]
38
Bloom would be 646 while in 1952 when Stephen
32would have attained the
456
⸢1[postdiluvian maximum]postdiluvian maximum
maximum
33postdiluvian
maximum
33postdiluvian
1⸣ [postdiluvian maximum]postdiluvian maximum
maximum
33postdiluvian
maximum
33postdiluvian
∧
⸢1[postdiluvian maximum]postdiluvian maximum
maximum
33postdiluvian
maximum
33postdiluvian
1⸣ [postdiluvian maximum]postdiluvian maximum
maximum
33postdiluvian
maximum
33postdiluvian
∧ age of 70 Bloom, ⧼
◻
⧽
◻
being 1190 years alive having been
457
34born in the year ⸢2[714]714 714, 714,
2⸣ [714]714 714, 714,
would have surpassed by 221 years the
1maximum
458antediluvian age, that of Methusalah,
969 years, while,
if
2Stephen ∧⧼attained⧽attained would
459 continue to live until he would attain would
459 continue to live until he would attain
∧⧼attained⧽attained would
459 continue to live until he would attain would
459 continue to live until he would attain
that age in
3the year 3072 A.D.,
Bloom
460would have been obliged to have been alive
483,300 years, having been
461obliged to have been born in the year
581,396 B.C.B⸣
462
6
What events might nullify these calculations?
463
7The cessation of existence of both or either, the inauguration of a new era
464
8 or calendar, the annihilation of the ⸢B[world.]world. world and consequent
9 extermination of
465 the human species∧and consequent
9 extermination of
465 the human species∧, inevitable but impredictable. world and consequent
9 extermination of
465 the human species∧and consequent
9 extermination of
465 the human species∧, inevitable but impredictable.
B⸣ [world.]world. world and consequent
9 extermination of
465 the human species∧and consequent
9 extermination of
465 the human species∧, inevitable but impredictable. world and consequent
9 extermination of
465 the human species∧and consequent
9 extermination of
465 the human species∧, inevitable but impredictable.
466
10
⸢B[Had Bloom and Stephen met before that day?]Had Bloom and Stephen met before that day? ∧⧼What⧽What How many
11
previous How many
11
previous ∧⧼What⧽What How many
11
previous How many
11
previous encounters proved their preexisting acquaintance? ∧⧼What⧽What How many
11
previous How many
11
previous ∧⧼What⧽What How many
11
previous How many
11
previous encounters proved their preexisting acquaintance? B⸣ [Had Bloom and Stephen met before that day?]Had Bloom and Stephen met before that day? ∧⧼What⧽What How many
11
previous How many
11
previous ∧⧼What⧽What How many
11
previous How many
11
previous encounters proved their preexisting acquaintance? ∧⧼What⧽What How many
11
previous How many
11
previous ∧⧼What⧽What How many
11
previous How many
11
previous encounters proved their preexisting acquaintance?
⸢B[Twice.]Twice.
467
12 Two.
467
12 Two.
B⸣ [Twice.]Twice.
467
12 Two.
467
12 Two.
The first
[Btime]time
in the lilacgarden of Matthew Dillon's
13house,
Medina Villa,
468 Kimmage road, Roundtown, in 1887, in the company
14 of ⸢1[his]his Stephen's Stephen's
1⸣ [his]his Stephen's Stephen's
mother,∧in the company
14 of ⸢1[his]his Stephen's Stephen's
1⸣ [his]his Stephen's Stephen's
mother,∧
469 Stephen being then of the age of 5 and
15 reluctant to give his hand in
470 salutation. The second
[Btime]time
in the
16coffeeroom
of Breslin's hotel ∧⧼in⧽in on a rainy
471 Sunday in the January⧼.⧽. of on a rainy
471 Sunday in the January⧼.⧽. of
∧⧼in⧽in on a rainy
471 Sunday in the January⧼.⧽. of on a rainy
471 Sunday in the January⧼.⧽. of
17 1892, in the company of ⸢1[his]his Stephen's Stephen's
1⸣ [his]his Stephen's Stephen's
father⧼,⧽, and
472
⸢1[his]his
Stephen's
Stephen's
1⸣ [his]his
Stephen's
Stephen's
18 granduncle,∧in the company of ⸢1[his]his Stephen's Stephen's
1⸣ [his]his Stephen's Stephen's
father⧼,⧽, and
472
⸢1[his]his
Stephen's
Stephen's
1⸣ [his]his
Stephen's
Stephen's
18 granduncle,∧ Stephen being then 5 years older.
473
19
Did Bloom accept the invitation to dinner given then⸢1then1⸣ by the son and
474
20
afterwards seconded by the father?
475
21Very gratefully, ⸢1[appreciatively, sincerely, regretfully,]appreciatively, sincerely, regretfully, with grateful
22appreciation, with sincere appreciative
476gratitude, in appreciatively grateful
23sincerity of regret, with grateful
22appreciation, with sincere appreciative
476gratitude, in appreciatively grateful
23sincerity of regret,
1⸣ [appreciatively, sincerely, regretfully,]appreciatively, sincerely, regretfully, with grateful
22appreciation, with sincere appreciative
476gratitude, in appreciatively grateful
23sincerity of regret, with grateful
22appreciation, with sincere appreciative
476gratitude, in appreciatively grateful
23sincerity of regret,
he declined.
477
24
Did their conversation on the subject of these reminiscences reveal a third
478
25
connecting link between them?
479
26Mrs Riordan (Dante),
a widow of independent means,
⧼
△
⧽
△
⸢B
⧼
△
⧽
△
B⸣
had resided in
27 the
480 house of Stephen's parents from 1 September 1888 to 29 December
28 1891⧼.⧽.
481 and had also resided ⧼from⧽from during the years 1892, 1893 and 1894
29 in the City Arms
482 Hotel owned by Elizabeth O'Dowd of 54 Prussia street
1where,
during parts
483 of the years 1893 and
1894,
she had been a constant
2 informant of Bloom
484 who resided also in the same hotel, being at that time a
3 clerk in the
485 employment of Joseph Cuffe of 5 Smithfield for the
4 superintendence of sales
486 in the adjacent∧adjacent∧ Dublin Cattle market on the
5 North Circular road.
487
6
Had he performed any special corporal work of mercy for her?
488
7He had sometimes ∧⧼wheeled⧽wheeled propelled propelled
∧⧼wheeled⧽wheeled propelled propelled
her on warm summer evenings∧on warm summer evenings∧,
8 an infirm
489 widow of independent, if limited,
means, in her
convalescent⸢BconvalescentB⸣
9 bathchair with
490
⧼some⧽some slow revolutions of its wheels as far as the corner of
10 the North Circular
491 road opposite Mr Gavin Low's place of business where
11 she had remained
492 for a certain time scanning through his onelensed
12binocular⸢1
12binocular1⸣
fieldglasses
493 unrecognisable citizens on tramcars, roadster ⸢B[bicycles,]bicycles,
13
bicycles
equipped with
494inflated pneumatic tyres,
13
bicycles
equipped with
494inflated pneumatic tyres,
B⸣ [bicycles,]bicycles,
13
bicycles
equipped with
494inflated pneumatic tyres,
13
bicycles
equipped with
494inflated pneumatic tyres,
hackney
14 carriages, tandems, private and hired
495 landaus, dogcarts, ponytraps and
15 brakes passing from the city to the
496Phoenix
Park and vice versa.
497
16
Why could he then⸢3then3⸣ support ∧⧼this⧽this that his that his ∧⧼this⧽this that his that his vigil with the greater
17
equanimity?
498
18Because in middle youth he had often sat observing through a ∧⧼boss⧽boss
⸢B[glass boss]glass boss
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
B⸣ [glass boss]glass boss
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
⸢B[glass boss]glass boss
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
B⸣ [glass boss]glass boss
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
∧⧼boss⧽boss
⸢B[glass boss]glass boss
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
B⸣ [glass boss]glass boss
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
⸢B[glass boss]glass boss
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
B⸣ [glass boss]glass boss
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
19 rondel of
499bossed glass
of a multicoloured pane the spectacle
20 offered with continual
500 changes of the thoroughfare without, pedestrians,
21 quadrupeds, velocipedes,
501 vehicles, passing slowly, quickly, evenly, round
22 and round and round the
502 rim of a round
and round⸢1and round1⸣
precipitous globe.
503
23
What distinct different memories had each of her now eight years
24
deceased?
504
25The older, her bezique cards and counters, her Skye terrier, her
505
26 suppositious wealth, her lapses of ⸢B[responsiveness:]responsiveness: responsiveness and
27incipient catarrhal
506deafness: responsiveness and
27incipient catarrhal
506deafness:
B⸣ [responsiveness:]responsiveness: responsiveness and
27incipient catarrhal
506deafness: responsiveness and
27incipient catarrhal
506deafness:
the younger, her lamp of colza oil before the
28 statue of the
507 Immaculate Conception, her green and maroon brushes for
29Charles
508Stewart⸢3
29Charles
508Stewart3⸣
Parnell and for Michael Davitt, her tissue papers.
503
23
What distinct different memories had each of her now eight years
24
deceased?
504
25The older, her bezique cards and counters, her Skye terrier, her
505
26 suppositious wealth, her lapses of ⸢B[responsiveness:]responsiveness: responsiveness and
27incipient catarrhal
506deafness: responsiveness and
27incipient catarrhal
506deafness:
B⸣ [responsiveness:]responsiveness: responsiveness and
27incipient catarrhal
506deafness: responsiveness and
27incipient catarrhal
506deafness:
the younger, her lamp of colza oil before the
28 statue of the
507 Immaculate Conception, her green and maroon brushes for
29Charles
508Stewart⸢3
29Charles
508Stewart3⸣
Parnell and for Michael Davitt, her tissue papers.
509
1
Were there no means still remaining to him to achieve the rejuvenation
510
2
which these reminiscences divulged to a younger companion rendered the
511
3
more desirable?
512
4The indoor exercises,
formerly intermittently practised, subsequently
513
5 abandoned, prescribed in Eugen Sandow's Physical Strength and How
6
⧼
To
⧽
To
to
514 Obtain It which, designed particularly for commercial men
7 engaged in
515 sedentary occupations, were to be made with mental
8 concentration in front
516 of a mirror so as to bring into play the various
9 families of muscles and
517 produce successively a pleasant rigidity, a more
10 pleasant
relaxation and the
518 most pleasant repristination of juvenile agility.
519
11
Had any special agility been his in earlier youth?
520
12Though ringweight lifting had been beyond his strength and the full circle
521
13 gyration beyond his courage yet as a High school
scholar he had excelled in
522
14 his stable
and ⧼protacted⧽protacted protracted execution of the half lever movement
15 on the
523 parallel bars in consequence of his abnormally developed abdominal
524
16 muscles.
525
17
Did either openly allude to their racial difference?
526
18Neither.
527 ⸢1[What did Bloom think that Stephen thought]What did Bloom think that Stephen thought
19
What, reduced to their
20
simplest reciprocal⸢3reciprocal3⸣ form, were Bloom's thoughts
528about Stephen's
21
thoughts
19
What, reduced to their
20
simplest reciprocal⸢3reciprocal3⸣ form, were Bloom's thoughts
528about Stephen's
21
thoughts 1⸣ [What did Bloom think that Stephen thought]What did Bloom think that Stephen thought
19
What, reduced to their
20
simplest reciprocal⸢3reciprocal3⸣ form, were Bloom's thoughts
528about Stephen's
21
thoughts
19
What, reduced to their
20
simplest reciprocal⸢3reciprocal3⸣ form, were Bloom's thoughts
528about Stephen's
21
thoughts about ⸢3[Bloom?]Bloom? Bloom and ⧼S⧽S about Stephen's thoughts about
529
22
Bloom's thoughts about Stephen? Bloom and ⧼S⧽S about Stephen's thoughts about
529
22
Bloom's thoughts about Stephen? 3⸣ [Bloom?]Bloom? Bloom and ⧼S⧽S about Stephen's thoughts about
529
22
Bloom's thoughts about Stephen? Bloom and ⧼S⧽S about Stephen's thoughts about
529
22
Bloom's thoughts about Stephen?
530
23He thought that he thought that he was a jew whereas he knew that he
531
24 knew that he knew that he ⧼wasn⧽wasn was not.
532 ⸢1[What]What
25
What, the enclosures of reticence removed,
25
What, the enclosures of reticence removed, 1⸣ [What]What
25
What, the enclosures of reticence removed,
25
What, the enclosures of reticence removed, were their respective
533
26
parentages?
534
27Bloom, only
born⸢3born3⸣
male
transubstantial⸢3transubstantial3⸣
heir of Rudolf Virag
28 (subsequently
535Rudolph
Bloom) of Szombathély,
Vienna, Budapest,⸢1Vienna, Budapest,1⸣
29 Milan, London and
536 Dublin and of ⸢B[Margaret]Margaret Ellen Ellen
B⸣ [Margaret]Margaret Ellen Ellen
Higgins,
∧Higgins,
∧
second
1 daughter of Julius ⧼ma⧽ma Higgins (born
537 Karoly) and Fanny Higgins (born
2Hegarty).
Stephen, eldest surviving∧surviving∧ male
538
consubstantial⸢3
consubstantial3⸣
heir of Simon
3 Dedalus of Cork and Dublin and of Mary,
539 daughter of Richard and
4 Christina Goulding (born Grier).
540
5
Had Bloom and Stephen been ⸢1[baptised?]baptised? baptised, and where and by
6
whom, cleric or
541layman? baptised, and where and by
6
whom, cleric or
541layman? 1⸣ [baptised?]baptised? baptised, and where and by
6
whom, cleric or
541layman? baptised, and where and by
6
whom, cleric or
541layman?
⧼
542
7Stephen on⧽
542
7Stephen on Bloom (three times),
by the reverend Mr Gilmer Johnston
8M. A., alone,
in
543 the protestant∨protestant∨ church of Saint Nicholas
Without,
9Coombe,
>in
543 the protestant∨protestant∨ church of Saint Nicholas
Without,
9Coombe,
<
∧alone,
in
543 the protestant∨protestant∨ church of Saint Nicholas
Without,
9Coombe,
>in
543 the protestant∨protestant∨ church of Saint Nicholas
Without,
9Coombe,
<
∧
by James
544 O'Connor, Philip Gilligan and James
10 Fitzpatrick , together, under a pump
545 in the village of Swords,∧, together, under a pump
545 in the village of Swords,∧
and by the
11 reverend Charles Malone
C. C., in the
546 church of the Three Patrons,
12 Rathgar. Stephen (once) by the reverend
547 Charles Malone
C. C.,
alone,
∧alone,
∧
13 in the church of the Three Patrons, Rathgar.
548 ∧⧼
14
Were⧽
14
Were Did they find Did they find ∧⧼
14
Were⧽
14
Were Did they find Did they find their educational careers similar?
⸢1[Bloom had]Bloom had
549
15
⸢3[If Stephen had been Bloom he]If Stephen had been Bloom he Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom
3⸣ [If Stephen had been Bloom he]If Stephen had been Bloom he Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom
would have
549
15
⸢3[If Stephen had been Bloom he]If Stephen had been Bloom he Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom
3⸣ [If Stephen had been Bloom he]If Stephen had been Bloom he Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom
would have
1⸣ [Bloom had]Bloom had
549
15
⸢3[If Stephen had been Bloom he]If Stephen had been Bloom he Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom
3⸣ [If Stephen had been Bloom he]If Stephen had been Bloom he Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom
would have
549
15
⸢3[If Stephen had been Bloom he]If Stephen had been Bloom he Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom
3⸣ [If Stephen had been Bloom he]If Stephen had been Bloom he Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom Substituting Stephen for
16Bloom Stoom
would have
passed successively
550 through a dame's school
17 and the high ⸢3[school:]school:
school.
school.
3⸣ [school:]school:
school.
school.
⸢1[Stephen]Stephen
⸢3[if Bloom had been
18Stephen he]if Bloom had been
18Stephen he Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen
3⸣ [if Bloom had been
18Stephen he]if Bloom had been
18Stephen he Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen
would have passed
19successively
⸢3[if Bloom had been
18Stephen he]if Bloom had been
18Stephen he Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen
3⸣ [if Bloom had been
18Stephen he]if Bloom had been
18Stephen he Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen
would have passed
19successively
1⸣ [Stephen]Stephen
⸢3[if Bloom had been
18Stephen he]if Bloom had been
18Stephen he Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen
3⸣ [if Bloom had been
18Stephen he]if Bloom had been
18Stephen he Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen
would have passed
19successively
⸢3[if Bloom had been
18Stephen he]if Bloom had been
18Stephen he Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen
3⸣ [if Bloom had been
18Stephen he]if Bloom had been
18Stephen he Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen Substituting Bloom for
551Stephen Blephen
would have passed
19successively
through the preparatory,
552 junior, middle and senior grades of
20 the intermediate and through the
553 matriculation, first arts,
second arts and
21arts⸢3
21arts3⸣
degree courses
of the
royal⸢1royal1⸣
554 university.
555
22
Why did Bloom refrain from stating that he had frequented the university
556
23
of life?
557
24Because of his
fluctuating⸢1fluctuating1⸣
incertitude as to whether ∧⧼Stephen had said
25 this to him already or he himself had said it to Stephen.⧽Stephen had said
25 this to him already or he himself had said it to Stephen. this observation
26 had
or
558had not⸢2or
558had not2⸣
been already made by him to Stephen or by Stephen to
27 him⧼?⧽?. this observation
26 had
or
558had not⸢2or
558had not2⸣
been already made by him to Stephen or by Stephen to
27 him⧼?⧽?.
∧⧼Stephen had said
25 this to him already or he himself had said it to Stephen.⧽Stephen had said
25 this to him already or he himself had said it to Stephen. this observation
26 had
or
558had not⸢2or
558had not2⸣
been already made by him to Stephen or by Stephen to
27 him⧼?⧽?. this observation
26 had
or
558had not⸢2or
558had not2⸣
been already made by him to Stephen or by Stephen to
27 him⧼?⧽?.
559
1
What two temperaments did they individually represent?
560
2The scientific. The artistic.
561
3
What proofs did Bloom ∧⧼give⧽give adduce adduce ∧⧼give⧽give adduce adduce to prove that his tendency was
4
towards
562 applied, rather than ⸢1[to]to towards towards 1⸣ [to]to towards towards pure, science?
563
5Certain possible∧possible∧ inventions of which he had cogitated when reclining
[3
6on his back]
6on his back
in a
564 state of
supine⸢3supine3⸣
repletion to aid digestion, stimulated by
7 his appreciation of
565 the importance of inventions now common but once
8revolutionary,
for
566 example, the
aeronautic⸢1aeronautic1⸣
parachute,
the reflecting
9telescope,⸢Bthe reflecting
9telescope,B⸣
the
spiral⸢1spiral1⸣
567 corkscrew, the safety pin,
the mineral water
10siphon,
⸢Bthe mineral water
10siphon,
B⸣
the canal ⸢1[lock.]lock. lock with
568winch and ⸢3[sluice.]sluice. sluice, the
11suction pump. sluice, the
11suction pump.
3⸣ [sluice.]sluice. sluice, the
11suction pump. sluice, the
11suction pump.
lock with
568winch and ⸢3[sluice.]sluice. sluice, the
11suction pump. sluice, the
11suction pump.
3⸣ [sluice.]sluice. sluice, the
11suction pump. sluice, the
11suction pump.
1⸣ [lock.]lock. lock with
568winch and ⸢3[sluice.]sluice. sluice, the
11suction pump. sluice, the
11suction pump.
3⸣ [sluice.]sluice. sluice, the
11suction pump. sluice, the
11suction pump.
lock with
568winch and ⸢3[sluice.]sluice. sluice, the
11suction pump. sluice, the
11suction pump.
3⸣ [sluice.]sluice. sluice, the
11suction pump. sluice, the
11suction pump.
569
12
Were these inventions principally intended for an improved scheme of
570
13
kindergarten?
⸢1[Yes.]Yes.
571
14 Yes, rendering obsolete popguns, elastic∧elastic∧ airbladders, games of
15hazard,
572catapults.
571
14 Yes, rendering obsolete popguns, elastic∧elastic∧ airbladders, games of
15hazard,
572catapults.
1⸣ [Yes.]Yes.
571
14 Yes, rendering obsolete popguns, elastic∧elastic∧ airbladders, games of
15hazard,
572catapults.
571
14 Yes, rendering obsolete popguns, elastic∧elastic∧ airbladders, games of
15hazard,
572catapults.
They comprised astronomical kaleidoscopes exhibiting
16 the twelve
573 constellations of the zodiac from ⧼the⧽the Aries to Pisces,
17miniature mechanical
574orreries,⸢1
17miniature mechanical
574orreries,1⸣
arithmetical gelatine lozenges, geometrical
18 to correspond ⸢3[to]to with with
3⸣ [to]to with with
575 zoological biscuits, globemap playing balls,
19 historically costumed dolls.
576
20
What ∧⧼encouraged⧽encouraged also stimulated also stimulated ∧⧼encouraged⧽encouraged also stimulated also stimulated him in his cogitations?
577
21The financial success achieved by Ephraim Marks and Charles A.
James,
578
22 the former by his ∧⧼penny⧽penny
1d
1d
∧⧼penny⧽penny
1d
1d
bazaar at 42 George's street,
south,
the
23 latter at
his⸢1his1⸣
57961⁄2d
shop and world's ⧼wa⧽wa
fancy∧fancy∧ fair and∧and∧ waxwork
24exhibition
at 30 Henry
580street,
admission ∧⧼sixpence,⧽sixpence,
⸢3[6d,
]6d,
2d,
2d,
3⸣ [6d,
]6d,
2d,
2d,
⸢3[6d,
]6d,
2d,
2d,
3⸣ [6d,
]6d,
2d,
2d,
∧⧼sixpence,⧽sixpence,
⸢3[6d,
]6d,
2d,
2d,
3⸣ [6d,
]6d,
2d,
2d,
⸢3[6d,
]6d,
2d,
2d,
3⸣ [6d,
]6d,
2d,
2d,
25 children 1d:
and the infinite possibilities hitherto
581 unexploited of the modern
26 art of advertisement if condensed in triliteral
582
monoideal⸢3
monoideal3⸣
⸢3[symbols]symbols
27symbols, vertically of maximum ∧⧼visibility,⧽visibility, visibility (divined), visibility (divined),
∧⧼visibility,⧽visibility, visibility (divined), visibility (divined),
28horizontally
583of maximum legibility (deciphered)∧(deciphered)∧ and
27symbols, vertically of maximum ∧⧼visibility,⧽visibility, visibility (divined), visibility (divined),
∧⧼visibility,⧽visibility, visibility (divined), visibility (divined),
28horizontally
583of maximum legibility (deciphered)∧(deciphered)∧ and
3⸣ [symbols]symbols
27symbols, vertically of maximum ∧⧼visibility,⧽visibility, visibility (divined), visibility (divined),
∧⧼visibility,⧽visibility, visibility (divined), visibility (divined),
28horizontally
583of maximum legibility (deciphered)∧(deciphered)∧ and
27symbols, vertically of maximum ∧⧼visibility,⧽visibility, visibility (divined), visibility (divined),
∧⧼visibility,⧽visibility, visibility (divined), visibility (divined),
28horizontally
583of maximum legibility (deciphered)∧(deciphered)∧ and
of magnetising
⸢3[efficacy.
]efficacy.
29
efficacy to arrest
584involuntary attention, to interest, to convince,
30to decide.
29
efficacy to arrest
584involuntary attention, to interest, to convince,
30to decide.
3⸣ [efficacy.
]efficacy.
29
efficacy to arrest
584involuntary attention, to interest, to convince,
30to decide.
29
efficacy to arrest
584involuntary attention, to interest, to convince,
30to decide.
585
1
Such as?
586
2K. 11. Kino's 11/‐ Trousers.
587
3House of ⧼Keyes⧽Keyes Keys. Alexander J. Keyes.
588
4
Such as not?
589
5Look at this long candle. Calculate when it burns out and you receive gratis
590
6 1 pair of our special non‐compo boots,
guaranteed 1 ⧼c⧽c
candle
power.
591
7 Address: Barclay and Cook, 18 Talbot street.
592
8Bacilikil (Insect Powder).
593
9Veribest (Boot Blacking).
594
10Uwantit (Combined pocket
twoblade penknife with corkscrew, nailfile and
595
11pipecleaner).
8Bacilikil (Insect Powder).
593
9Veribest (Boot Blacking).
594
10Uwantit (Combined pocket
twoblade penknife with corkscrew, nailfile and
595
11pipecleaner).
596
12
Such as never?⸢B
12
Such as never?B⸣
597
13What is home without Plumtree's Potted Meat?
598
14Incomplete.
599
15With it an abode of bliss.
600
16Manufactured by George Plumtree, 23 Merchants'
quay, Dublin , put up
17 in
6014 oz
pots,∧, put up
17 in
6014 oz
pots,∧ and inserted by Councillor ∧⧼J.⧽J. Joseph Joseph
∧⧼J.⧽J. Joseph Joseph
P. Nannetti⧼.⧽., ⧼M⧽M
18 M. P., Rotunda
602 Ward, 19 Hardwicke street,
under the obituary notices and
19 anniversaries of
603 deceases. The name on the ∧⧼jar⧽jar label label
∧⧼jar⧽jar label label
is Plumtree. A
20 plumtree in
a meatpot,
604 registered trade mark.∧A
20 plumtree in
a meatpot,
604 registered trade mark.∧
Beware of imitations.⸢BBeware of imitations.B⸣
⸢2[Plumtree.]Plumtree.
21 Peatmot. Trumplee.
21 Peatmot. Trumplee.
2⸣ [Plumtree.]Plumtree.
21 Peatmot. Trumplee.
21 Peatmot. Trumplee.
⸢1
⸢2[Plumtree.]Plumtree.
21 Peatmot. Trumplee.
21 Peatmot. Trumplee.
2⸣ [Plumtree.]Plumtree.
21 Peatmot. Trumplee.
21 Peatmot. Trumplee.
1⸣
Moutpat.
605Plamtroo.⸢3Moutpat.
605Plamtroo.3⸣
606
22
Which example did he adduce to induce Stephen to ⸢B[comprehend]comprehend
23
deduce
23
deduce B⸣ [comprehend]comprehend
23
deduce
23
deduce that ⸢B[originality]originality originality,
607though producing∧producing∧ its own
24
reward, originality,
607though producing∧producing∧ its own
24
reward, B⸣ [originality]originality originality,
607though producing∧producing∧ its own
24
reward, originality,
607though producing∧producing∧ its own
24
reward, does not invariably conduce to success?
608
25His own ideated and rejected project of an illuminated showcart, drawn by
609
26 a beast of burden, in which two smartly dressed girls were to be seated
610
27 engaged in writing.
611
1
What suggested∧suggested∧ scene ∧⧼did this suggest to⧽did this suggest to was then constructed by was then constructed by ∧⧼did this suggest to⧽did this suggest to was then constructed by was then constructed by
2
Stephen?
⸢1[A solitary]A solitary
612
3 Solitary
612
3 Solitary
1⸣ [A solitary]A solitary
612
3 Solitary
612
3 Solitary
hotel in
[1a]a
mountain pass. Autumn. Twilight. ⸢1[A
4fire]A
4fire Fire Fire
1⸣ [A
4fire]A
4fire Fire Fire
lit. In
[1a]a
dark corner
613
[1
a]
a
young man seated. ⸢1[A young]A young
5Young
5Young
1⸣ [A young]A young
5Young
5Young
woman enters. Restless.
Solitary.⸢2Solitary.2⸣
She sits. She
614 goes to
[1the]the
6 window. She stands. She sits. Twilight. She thinks. On solitary hotel
615 paper
7 she writes. She thinks. She writes. She sighs. Wheels and hoofs. She
616 hurries
8 out. He comes from his dark corner.
He seizes
[1the]the
solitary paper. He
617
9 holds it towards
[1the]the
fire. Twilight. He reads.
Solitary.⸢2Solitary.2⸣
618
10
What?
619
11In sloping, upright and ⸢1[backhands,]backhands, backhands: backhands:
1⸣ [backhands,]backhands, backhands: backhands:
Queen's Hotel,
12 Queen's Hotel,
620 Queen's Hotel.
Queen's Ho ...
621
13
What suggested∧suggested∧ scene ∧⧼did this suggest to⧽did this suggest to was then reconstructed by was then reconstructed by ∧⧼did this suggest to⧽did this suggest to was then reconstructed by was then reconstructed by
14
Bloom?
622
15The ⧼queen's⧽queen's Queen's Hotel, Ennis, county
Clare,
where Rudolph Bloom
16 (Rudolf
623 Virag) died on
the evening of⸢1the evening of1⸣
the 27 June ⸢1[1886]1886 1886, at some
17hour unstated, in
624consequence 1886, at some
17hour unstated, in
624consequence
1⸣ [1886]1886 1886, at some
17hour unstated, in
624consequence 1886, at some
17hour unstated, in
624consequence
of an overdose of ⧼aconite⧽aconite
monkshood
18 (aconite)
selfadministered⸢1selfadministered1⸣
in the
625 form of a neuralgic liniment⧼.⧽.
composed
19 of 2 parts of aconite liniment to 1 of
626 chloroform
⸢1[liniment.
]liniment.
liniment
20(purchased
by him at 10.20 a.m.
∧by him at 10.20 a.m.
∧
on the ⧼afternoo⧽afternoo morning of 27 June
627
211886 at the ∧⧼drapery store⧽drapery store medical hall medical hall
∧⧼drapery store⧽drapery store medical hall medical hall
of Francis Dennehy, 17 Church
22street, Ennis)
628 after having, though not in consequence of having,
23purchased at 3.15 p.m.
629 on the afternoon of 27 June 1886∧at 3.15 p.m.
629 on the afternoon of 27 June 1886∧ a new boater
24straw hat, extra ⸢2[smart,]smart, smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid), smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid),
2⸣ [smart,]smart, smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid), smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid),
at the general drapery store of
632James Cullen, 4 Main street,
27Ennis.
liniment
20(purchased
by him at 10.20 a.m.
∧by him at 10.20 a.m.
∧
on the ⧼afternoo⧽afternoo morning of 27 June
627
211886 at the ∧⧼drapery store⧽drapery store medical hall medical hall
∧⧼drapery store⧽drapery store medical hall medical hall
of Francis Dennehy, 17 Church
22street, Ennis)
628 after having, though not in consequence of having,
23purchased at 3.15 p.m.
629 on the afternoon of 27 June 1886∧at 3.15 p.m.
629 on the afternoon of 27 June 1886∧ a new boater
24straw hat, extra ⸢2[smart,]smart, smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid), smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid),
2⸣ [smart,]smart, smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid), smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid),
at the general drapery store of
632James Cullen, 4 Main street,
27Ennis.
1⸣ [liniment.
]liniment.
liniment
20(purchased
by him at 10.20 a.m.
∧by him at 10.20 a.m.
∧
on the ⧼afternoo⧽afternoo morning of 27 June
627
211886 at the ∧⧼drapery store⧽drapery store medical hall medical hall
∧⧼drapery store⧽drapery store medical hall medical hall
of Francis Dennehy, 17 Church
22street, Ennis)
628 after having, though not in consequence of having,
23purchased at 3.15 p.m.
629 on the afternoon of 27 June 1886∧at 3.15 p.m.
629 on the afternoon of 27 June 1886∧ a new boater
24straw hat, extra ⸢2[smart,]smart, smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid), smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid),
2⸣ [smart,]smart, smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid), smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid),
at the general drapery store of
632James Cullen, 4 Main street,
27Ennis.
liniment
20(purchased
by him at 10.20 a.m.
∧by him at 10.20 a.m.
∧
on the ⧼afternoo⧽afternoo morning of 27 June
627
211886 at the ∧⧼drapery store⧽drapery store medical hall medical hall
∧⧼drapery store⧽drapery store medical hall medical hall
of Francis Dennehy, 17 Church
22street, Ennis)
628 after having, though not in consequence of having,
23purchased at 3.15 p.m.
629 on the afternoon of 27 June 1886∧at 3.15 p.m.
629 on the afternoon of 27 June 1886∧ a new boater
24straw hat, extra ⸢2[smart,]smart, smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid), smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid),
2⸣ [smart,]smart, smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid), smart (after
630having, though not in consequence of
25having, purchased at the hour and in
631the place aforesaid,
the toxin
26aforesaid),
at the general drapery store of
632James Cullen, 4 Main street,
27Ennis.
633
1
Did he attribute this homonymity ⧼ ⌷ ⧽ ⌷ to information or∧information or∧ coincidence or
634
2
intuition?
635
3Coincidence.
636
4
Did he depict the scene ∧⧼in words⧽in words verbally verbally ∧⧼in words⧽in words verbally verbally ∧⧼?⧽? for his guest to see? for his guest to see? ∧⧼?⧽? for his guest to see? for his guest to see?
637
5He preferred himself to see
another's face⸢2another's face2⸣
and listen to another's words
6 by
638 which potential narration was realised and kinetic temperament
7 relieved.
636
4
Did he depict the scene ∧⧼in words⧽in words verbally verbally ∧⧼in words⧽in words verbally verbally ∧⧼?⧽? for his guest to see? for his guest to see? ∧⧼?⧽? for his guest to see? for his guest to see?
637
5He preferred himself to see
another's face⸢2another's face2⸣
and listen to another's words
6 by
638 which potential narration was realised and kinetic temperament
7 relieved.
639
8
Did he see only a second∧second∧ coincidence in the second scene narrated to him,
640
9
described by the narrator as A Pisgah Sight of Palestine or The Parable of
641
10
the Plums?
642
11It, with the preceding ⧼scenes⧽scenes scene and with others unnarrated ⧼by⧽by
but∧but∧
12 existent by
643 implication,
to which add essays on various subjects
or
13moral apothegms
644(e.g. My Favourite Hero or Procrastination is the Thief of
14 Time)⸢2or
13moral apothegms
644(e.g. My Favourite Hero or Procrastination is the Thief of
14 Time)2⸣
composed
645during schoolyears,⸢Bto which add essays on various subjects
or
13moral apothegms
644(e.g. My Favourite Hero or Procrastination is the Thief of
14 Time)⸢2or
13moral apothegms
644(e.g. My Favourite Hero or Procrastination is the Thief of
14 Time)2⸣
composed
645during schoolyears,B⸣
seemed to him to contain in itself
15
and in conjunction
646 with the personal equation∧and in conjunction
646 with the personal equation∧ certain possibilities of
16 financial , social, personal
647 and sexual∧, social, personal
647 and sexual∧ success, whether
specially
17collected and selected as model
648
pedagogic⸢3
pedagogic3⸣
themes
(of cent per cent
18merit)⸢C(of cent per cent
18merit)C⸣
for the use of preparatory and
649junior grade students or⸢Bspecially
17collected and selected as model
648
pedagogic⸢3
pedagogic3⸣
themes
(of cent per cent
18merit)⸢C(of cent per cent
18merit)C⸣
for the use of preparatory and
649junior grade students orB⸣
19 contributed in printed form , following the
650 precedent of Philip Beaufoy or
20 Doctor Dick or Heblon's Studies in Blue,∧, following the
650 precedent of Philip Beaufoy or
20 Doctor Dick or Heblon's Studies in Blue,∧ to
651 a publication of certified
21 circulation and solvency or employed verbally as
652 intellectual stimulation for
22
⧼a⧽a sympathetic ⧼auditor⧽auditor
⸢B[auditors]auditors auditors, tacitly appreciative of
653
23successful narrative and confidently augurative of successful achievement, auditors, tacitly appreciative of
653
23successful narrative and confidently augurative of successful achievement,
B⸣ [auditors]auditors auditors, tacitly appreciative of
653
23successful narrative and confidently augurative of successful achievement, auditors, tacitly appreciative of
653
23successful narrative and confidently augurative of successful achievement,
654
24 during the increasingly ⸢1[long]long longer longer
1⸣ [long]long longer longer
nights gradually following the
25 summer
655
⸢2[solstice.]solstice.
solstice on the day but three following, videlicet,
26Tuesday, 21 June
(S.
656Aloysius Gonzaga)⸢3(S.
656Aloysius Gonzaga)3⸣
, sunrise
3.33 a.m.,
sunset
278.29 p.m.
solstice on the day but three following, videlicet,
26Tuesday, 21 June
(S.
656Aloysius Gonzaga)⸢3(S.
656Aloysius Gonzaga)3⸣
, sunrise
3.33 a.m.,
sunset
278.29 p.m.
2⸣ [solstice.]solstice.
solstice on the day but three following, videlicet,
26Tuesday, 21 June
(S.
656Aloysius Gonzaga)⸢3(S.
656Aloysius Gonzaga)3⸣
, sunrise
3.33 a.m.,
sunset
278.29 p.m.
solstice on the day but three following, videlicet,
26Tuesday, 21 June
(S.
656Aloysius Gonzaga)⸢3(S.
656Aloysius Gonzaga)3⸣
, sunrise
3.33 a.m.,
sunset
278.29 p.m.
657
28
Which domestic problem as much as, if not more than, any other frequently
658
29
engaged his mind?
659
30What to∧to∧ do with our wives.
660
1
What had been his hypothetical singular∧singular∧ solutions?
661
2Parlour games (dominos,
[1bézique,]bézique,
halma, tiddledywinks,
spilikins,
cup
3and ball, nap,
662spoil five, bezique, twentyfive, beggar my neighbour,⸢1spilikins,
cup
3and ball, nap,
662spoil five, bezique, twentyfive, beggar my neighbour,1⸣
4
⧼draughts or⧽draughts or draughts, chess or
663 backgammon): embroidery, darning or
5 knitting for the policeaided clothing
664 society: musical duets, mandoline and
6 guitar, piano and flute, guitar and
665 piano: legal scrivenery or envelope
7 addressing: ⧼courses of even⧽courses of even biweekly visits to variety
666 entertainments:
8 commercial activity
as pleasantly commanding and
667pleasingly obeyed
9mistress proprietress⸢1as pleasantly commanding and
667pleasingly obeyed
9mistress proprietress1⸣
in a cool dairy shop or warm cigar
668 divan: the
10 clandestine satisfaction of erotic irritation in masculine brothels,
669state
11 inspected
and medically controlled:
social visits, at regular infrequent
670
12prevented∧
12prevented∧ intervals and with regular frequent preventive∧preventive∧
13superintendence,
671 to and from female acquaintances of recognised
14respectability in the
672vicinity:⸢Bsocial visits, at regular infrequent
670
12prevented∧
12prevented∧ intervals and with regular frequent preventive∧preventive∧
13superintendence,
671 to and from female acquaintances of recognised
14respectability in the
672vicinity:B⸣
courses of evening instruction specially
15 designed to render
liberal⸢2liberal2⸣
673 instruction agreeable.
674
16
What instances of deficient mental development in his wife∧in his wife∧ inclined him
17
in
675 favour of the lastmentioned ⸢2[(eighth) ](eighth) (ninth) (ninth) 2⸣ [(eighth) ](eighth) (ninth) (ninth) solution?
676
18In disoccupied moments she had more than once covered a sheet of paper
677
19 with signs and hieroglyphics which she stated were Greek and Irish
and
678
20Hebrew⸢1and
678
20Hebrew1⸣
characters. She had interrogated constantly ⧼a⧽a at varying∧varying∧
21 intervals as
679 to the correct method of writing the capital initial of the name
22 of a city in
680 Canada, Quebec. She understood little of political
23 complications, ⸢B[internal]internal internal, internal,
B⸣ [internal]internal internal, internal,
681 or
balance of power,⸢Bbalance of power,B⸣
external. In
24 calculating the addenda of bills she
682 frequently had recourse to digital aid.
25After completion of laconic epistolary
683compositions she abandoned the
26implement of calligraphy in the encaustic
684pigment,
exposed to the corrosive
27action of copperas, green vitriol and
685nutgall.⸢3
25After completion of laconic epistolary
683compositions she abandoned the
26implement of calligraphy in the encaustic
684pigment,
exposed to the corrosive
27action of copperas, green vitriol and
685nutgall.3⸣
Unusual ⧼words⧽words
28 polysyllables of foreign origin she interpreted phonetically
686 or by false
29 analogy or by both: metempsychosis (met him pike hoses),
alias
687 (a
30 mendacious person mentioned in
sacred⸢BsacredB⸣
scripture).
688
1
What ⧼outweighed⧽outweighed compensated in the false balance of her intelligence for
2
these and
689 such deficiencies of judgment regarding persons, places and
3
things?
690
4The false apparent parallelism of all perpendicular arms of all balances,
691
5
proved∧proved∧ true by construction. The counterbalance of her proficiency of
692
6 judgment regarding one person, proved true by experiment.
688
1
What ⧼outweighed⧽outweighed compensated in the false balance of her intelligence for
2
these and
689 such deficiencies of judgment regarding persons, places and
3
things?
690
4The false apparent parallelism of all perpendicular arms of all balances,
691
5
proved∧proved∧ true by construction. The counterbalance of her proficiency of
692
6 judgment regarding one person, proved true by experiment.
693
7
How had he attempted to remedy this state of comparative ignorance?
694
8Variously. By leaving in a conspicuous place a certain book open at a
695
9 certain ⸢2[page,]page, page: page:
2⸣ [page,]page, page: page:
by assuming in her,
when alluding explanatorily,
10
⸢⧼a⧽a
⸣ ⧼a⧽a
latent∧latent∧
696
⸢2[knowledge,]knowledge,
knowledge:
knowledge:
2⸣ [knowledge,]knowledge,
knowledge:
knowledge:
by open ridicule in her presence of
11 some absent other's
697 ignorant lapse.
⸢⧼By direct instruction.⧽By direct instruction.
⸣ ⧼By direct instruction.⧽By direct instruction.
698
12
With what ∧⧼success?⧽success? success had he attempted direct instruction? success had he attempted direct instruction? ∧⧼success?⧽success? success had he attempted direct instruction? success had he attempted direct instruction?
699
13She followed not all, a part of the whole, gave attention with interest,
700
14 comprehended with surprise, with care repeated, with greater difficulty
701
15 remembered, forgot with ease, with misgiving ⸢B[remembered,]remembered,
16reremembered,
16reremembered,
B⸣ [remembered,]remembered,
16reremembered,
16reremembered,
⸢B[repeated]repeated rerepeated rerepeated
B⸣ [repeated]repeated rerepeated rerepeated
702 with error.
703
17
What system had proved more effective?
704
18Indirect suggestion implicating selfinterest.
703
17
What system had proved more effective?
704
18Indirect suggestion implicating selfinterest.
705
19
Example?
706
20She disliked umbrella with rain, he liked woman with umbrella⧼.⧽., she
21 disliked
707
∧⧼rain with new hat,⧽rain with new hat, new hat with rain, new hat with rain,
∧⧼rain with new hat,⧽rain with new hat, new hat with rain, new hat with rain,
he liked woman with
22 new hat,∧he liked woman with
22 new hat,∧ he bought new hat with
708rain, she
carried umbrella with new
23 hat.
705
19
Example?
706
20She disliked umbrella with rain, he liked woman with umbrella⧼.⧽., she
21 disliked
707
∧⧼rain with new hat,⧽rain with new hat, new hat with rain, new hat with rain,
∧⧼rain with new hat,⧽rain with new hat, new hat with rain, new hat with rain,
he liked woman with
22 new hat,∧he liked woman with
22 new hat,∧ he bought new hat with
708rain, she
carried umbrella with new
23 hat.
709
24
Accepting the analogy implied in his guest's parable which examples of
710
25
postexilic ∧⧼greatness⧽greatness eminence eminence ∧⧼greatness⧽greatness eminence eminence did he adduce?
711
26Three seekers of the pure truth, Moses of Egypt, Moses Maimonides,
712
27 author of
More
Nebukim
(Guide of the Perplexed) and Moses
1 Mendelssohn
713 of such eminence that from Moses (of Egypt) to Moses
2 (Mendelssohn) there
714 arose none like Moses (Maimonides).
715
3
What statement was made, under correction, by Bloom concerning a
4
fourth
716 seeker of pure truth, by name Aristotle, ⸢3[mentioned]mentioned mentioned,
5
with permission, mentioned,
5
with permission, 3⸣ [mentioned]mentioned mentioned,
5
with permission, mentioned,
5
with permission, by
717 Stephen?
718
6That the seeker mentioned had been a pupil of a rabbinical philosopher,
719
7 name uncertain.
715
3
What statement was made, under correction, by Bloom concerning a
4
fourth
716 seeker of pure truth, by name Aristotle, ⸢3[mentioned]mentioned mentioned,
5
with permission, mentioned,
5
with permission, 3⸣ [mentioned]mentioned mentioned,
5
with permission, mentioned,
5
with permission, by
717 Stephen?
718
6That the seeker mentioned had been a pupil of a rabbinical philosopher,
719
7 name uncertain.
720
8
Were other anapocryphal⸢3anapocryphal3⸣ illustrious sons of the law and children of a
721
9
∧⧼chosen⧽chosen selected selected ∧⧼chosen⧽chosen selected selected or rejected race mentioned?
722
10Felix Bartholdy Mendelssohn (composer), Baruch Spinoza (philosopher),
723
11 Mendoza ⸢2[(pugilist).](pugilist).
(pugilist),
Ferdinand Lassalle
(reformer,
12duellist).
(pugilist),
Ferdinand Lassalle
(reformer,
12duellist).
2⸣ [(pugilist).](pugilist).
(pugilist),
Ferdinand Lassalle
(reformer,
12duellist).
(pugilist),
Ferdinand Lassalle
(reformer,
12duellist).
724
720
8
Were other anapocryphal⸢3anapocryphal3⸣ illustrious sons of the law and children of a
721
9
∧⧼chosen⧽chosen selected selected ∧⧼chosen⧽chosen selected selected or rejected race mentioned?
722
10Felix Bartholdy Mendelssohn (composer), Baruch Spinoza (philosopher),
723
11 Mendoza ⸢2[(pugilist).](pugilist).
(pugilist),
Ferdinand Lassalle
(reformer,
12duellist).
(pugilist),
Ferdinand Lassalle
(reformer,
12duellist).
2⸣ [(pugilist).](pugilist).
(pugilist),
Ferdinand Lassalle
(reformer,
12duellist).
(pugilist),
Ferdinand Lassalle
(reformer,
12duellist).
724
13
What fragments of verse from the ancient Hebrew and ancient Irish
725
14
languages were cited with modulations of voice and translation of texts∧with modulations of voice and translation of texts∧
15
by
726 guest to host and by host to guest?
727
16By Stephen: suil, suil, suil arun, suil go siocair agus
suil go cuin (walk, walk,
728
17 walk your way, walk in safety, walk with care).
729
18By Bloom:
kifeloch,
harimon rakatejch m'baad l'zamatejch
(thy temple
730
19 amid thy hair is as a slice of pomegranate).
731
20
How was a glyphic comparison [(B)made]made of the phonic symbols of both ⸢(B)[languages?]languages?
21
languages
732made in substantiation of the oral comparison?
21
languages
732made in substantiation of the oral comparison? (B)⸣ [languages?]languages?
21
languages
732made in substantiation of the oral comparison?
21
languages
732made in substantiation of the oral comparison?
733
22By juxtaposition.∧
733
22By juxtaposition.∧
On the penultimate blank page of a book
⸢3[entitled]entitled
23of inferior
734 literary style,∧
23of inferior
734 literary style,∧
entituled
23of inferior
734 literary style,∧
23of inferior
734 literary style,∧
entituled
3⸣ [entitled]entitled
23of inferior
734 literary style,∧
23of inferior
734 literary style,∧
entituled
23of inferior
734 literary style,∧
23of inferior
734 literary style,∧
entituled
Sweets of Sin (produced by Bloom
24
and so
735 manipulated that its front cover came in contact with
the surface of
25 the
736 table∧and so
735 manipulated that its front cover came in contact with
the surface of
25 the
736 table∧) with a pencil (supplied by Stephen) Stephen wrote the Irish
737
26 characters for gee, eh, dee, em, simple and modified, and Bloom in turn
738
27 wrote the Hebrew characters ⧼qoph,⧽qoph, ghimel, aleph, daleth and (in the
28 absence of
739 mem) a substituted qoph,
explaining their arithmetical values ⸢1[of]of
29 as ordinal and
740cardinal numbers, videlicet
29 as ordinal and
740cardinal numbers, videlicet
1⸣ [of]of
29 as ordinal and
740cardinal numbers, videlicet
29 as ordinal and
740cardinal numbers, videlicet
3, 1, 4, and 100.
741
1
Was the knowledge possessed by both of each of these languages, the
2
extinct
742 and the revived, theoretical or practical?
743
3Theoretical, being confined to ⸢2[some]some certain grammatical certain grammatical
2⸣ [some]some certain grammatical certain grammatical
rules of ⸢2[grammar]grammar
4 accidence
4 accidence
2⸣ [grammar]grammar
4 accidence
4 accidence
and
744 syntax and practically excluding vocabulary.
741
1
Was the knowledge possessed by both of each of these languages, the
2
extinct
742 and the revived, theoretical or practical?
743
3Theoretical, being confined to ⸢2[some]some certain grammatical certain grammatical
2⸣ [some]some certain grammatical certain grammatical
rules of ⸢2[grammar]grammar
4 accidence
4 accidence
2⸣ [grammar]grammar
4 accidence
4 accidence
and
744 syntax and practically excluding vocabulary.
745
5
What points of contact existed between these languages and between⸢BbetweenB⸣
6
the
746 peoples who spoke them?
747
7The presence of guttural ⸢3[sounds]sounds sounds, diacritic aspirations, epenthetic
8and servile
748letters sounds, diacritic aspirations, epenthetic
8and servile
748letters
3⸣ [sounds]sounds sounds, diacritic aspirations, epenthetic
8and servile
748letters sounds, diacritic aspirations, epenthetic
8and servile
748letters
in ∧⧼both,⧽both, both ⸢2[languages,]languages, languages: languages:
2⸣ [languages,]languages, languages: languages:
both ⸢2[languages,]languages, languages: languages:
2⸣ [languages,]languages, languages: languages:
∧⧼both,⧽both, both ⸢2[languages,]languages, languages: languages:
2⸣ [languages,]languages, languages: languages:
both ⸢2[languages,]languages, languages: languages:
2⸣ [languages,]languages, languages: languages:
∧⧼the
9 antiquity of both,⧽the
9 antiquity of both, their antiquity, their antiquity,
∧⧼the
9 antiquity of both,⧽the
9 antiquity of both, their antiquity, their antiquity,
both having been
taught on the
749 plain of
10 Shinar 242 years after the deluge in the seminary instituted by
750 Fenius
11 Farsaigh, descendant of Noah, progenitor of Israel, and ascendant
751 of
12 Heber and Heremon, progenitors of ⸢2[Ireland,]Ireland, Ireland: Ireland:
2⸣ [Ireland,]Ireland, Ireland: Ireland:
their
[1vast
]vast
13archaeological,
∧
13archaeological,
∧
752
⸢1[genealogical and]genealogical andgenealogical,genealogical,
1⸣ [genealogical and]genealogical andgenealogical,genealogical,
hagiographical,
14exegetical, homiletic,
toponomastic,⸢3hagiographical,
14exegetical, homiletic,
toponomastic,3⸣
historical
753 and religious literatures
15 comprising the works of rabbis and culdees, Torah,
754
⸢2[Talmud,]Talmud,
Talmud
16(Mischna and Ghemara),
Massor,
Talmud
16(Mischna and Ghemara),
Massor,
2⸣ [Talmud,]Talmud,
Talmud
16(Mischna and Ghemara),
Massor,
Talmud
16(Mischna and Ghemara),
Massor,
Pentateuch, Book of the Dun
755 Cow,
17 Book of Ballymote,
Garland of Howth,⸢2Garland of Howth,2⸣
Book of Kells: their dispersal,
756
18 persecution, survival and revival:
the isolation of their
synagogical and
757
19ecclesiastical⸢3synagogical and
757
19ecclesiastical3⸣
rites in ghetto (S. Mary's Abbey) and masshouse (Adam and
758
20Eve's tavern): the proscription of their national costumes in penal laws and
759
21jewish dress acts:⸢(B)the isolation of their
synagogical and
757
19ecclesiastical⸢3synagogical and
757
19ecclesiastical3⸣
rites in ghetto (S. Mary's Abbey) and masshouse (Adam and
758
20Eve's tavern): the proscription of their national costumes in penal laws and
759
21jewish dress acts:(B)⸣
the restoration in Chanah
David of Zion and the
760
22 possibility of Irish political autonomy or devolution.
745
5
What points of contact existed between these languages and between⸢BbetweenB⸣
6
the
746 peoples who spoke them?
747
7The presence of guttural ⸢3[sounds]sounds sounds, diacritic aspirations, epenthetic
8and servile
748letters sounds, diacritic aspirations, epenthetic
8and servile
748letters
3⸣ [sounds]sounds sounds, diacritic aspirations, epenthetic
8and servile
748letters sounds, diacritic aspirations, epenthetic
8and servile
748letters
in ∧⧼both,⧽both, both ⸢2[languages,]languages, languages: languages:
2⸣ [languages,]languages, languages: languages:
both ⸢2[languages,]languages, languages: languages:
2⸣ [languages,]languages, languages: languages:
∧⧼both,⧽both, both ⸢2[languages,]languages, languages: languages:
2⸣ [languages,]languages, languages: languages:
both ⸢2[languages,]languages, languages: languages:
2⸣ [languages,]languages, languages: languages:
∧⧼the
9 antiquity of both,⧽the
9 antiquity of both, their antiquity, their antiquity,
∧⧼the
9 antiquity of both,⧽the
9 antiquity of both, their antiquity, their antiquity,
both having been
taught on the
749 plain of
10 Shinar 242 years after the deluge in the seminary instituted by
750 Fenius
11 Farsaigh, descendant of Noah, progenitor of Israel, and ascendant
751 of
12 Heber and Heremon, progenitors of ⸢2[Ireland,]Ireland, Ireland: Ireland:
2⸣ [Ireland,]Ireland, Ireland: Ireland:
their
[1vast
]vast
13archaeological,
∧
13archaeological,
∧
752
⸢1[genealogical and]genealogical andgenealogical,genealogical,
1⸣ [genealogical and]genealogical andgenealogical,genealogical,
hagiographical,
14exegetical, homiletic,
toponomastic,⸢3hagiographical,
14exegetical, homiletic,
toponomastic,3⸣
historical
753 and religious literatures
15 comprising the works of rabbis and culdees, Torah,
754
⸢2[Talmud,]Talmud,
Talmud
16(Mischna and Ghemara),
Massor,
Talmud
16(Mischna and Ghemara),
Massor,
2⸣ [Talmud,]Talmud,
Talmud
16(Mischna and Ghemara),
Massor,
Talmud
16(Mischna and Ghemara),
Massor,
Pentateuch, Book of the Dun
755 Cow,
17 Book of Ballymote,
Garland of Howth,⸢2Garland of Howth,2⸣
Book of Kells: their dispersal,
756
18 persecution, survival and revival:
the isolation of their
synagogical and
757
19ecclesiastical⸢3synagogical and
757
19ecclesiastical3⸣
rites in ghetto (S. Mary's Abbey) and masshouse (Adam and
758
20Eve's tavern): the proscription of their national costumes in penal laws and
759
21jewish dress acts:⸢(B)the isolation of their
synagogical and
757
19ecclesiastical⸢3synagogical and
757
19ecclesiastical3⸣
rites in ghetto (S. Mary's Abbey) and masshouse (Adam and
758
20Eve's tavern): the proscription of their national costumes in penal laws and
759
21jewish dress acts:(B)⸣
the restoration in Chanah
David of Zion and the
760
22 possibility of Irish political autonomy or devolution.
761
23
What anthem did Bloom chant partially in anticipation of that
24
multiple,
762 ethnically irreductible ⸢B
24
multiple,
762 ethnically irreductible B⸣ consummation?
763
25
Kolod balejwaw pnimah
764
26
Nefesch, jehudi, homijah.
761
23
What anthem did Bloom chant partially in anticipation of that
24
multiple,
762 ethnically irreductible ⸢B
24
multiple,
762 ethnically irreductible B⸣ consummation?
763
25
Kolod balejwaw pnimah
764
26
Nefesch, jehudi, homijah.
765
1
Why ⸢1[did he not conclude?]did he not conclude? was the chant arrested at the conclusion of
2
this first distich? was the chant arrested at the conclusion of
2
this first distich? 1⸣ [did he not conclude?]did he not conclude? was the chant arrested at the conclusion of
2
this first distich? was the chant arrested at the conclusion of
2
this first distich?
766
3In consequence of defective mnemotechnic.
765
1
Why ⸢1[did he not conclude?]did he not conclude? was the chant arrested at the conclusion of
2
this first distich? was the chant arrested at the conclusion of
2
this first distich? 1⸣ [did he not conclude?]did he not conclude? was the chant arrested at the conclusion of
2
this first distich? was the chant arrested at the conclusion of
2
this first distich?
766
3In consequence of defective mnemotechnic.
767
4
How did ⸢1[he]he the chanter the chanter 1⸣ [he]he the chanter the chanter compensate for this deficiency?
768
5By a periphrastic version of the general text.
767
4
How did ⸢1[he]he the chanter the chanter 1⸣ [he]he the chanter the chanter compensate for this deficiency?
768
5By a periphrastic version of the general text.
769
6
In what common study did their mutual reflections merge?
770
7The increasing simplification traceable from the Egyptian
epigraphic⸢3epigraphic3⸣
771
8
⧼hieoroglyphs⧽hieoroglyphs hieroglyphs to the Greek and Roman alphabets and the
9 anticipation of
772 modern stenography and telegraphic code∧and telegraphic code∧ in the
10 cuneiform inscriptions
773 (Semitic) and the virgular
quinquecostate⸢3quinquecostate3⸣
ogham
11 writing (Celtic).
774
12
Did the guest comply with his host's request?
775
13Doubly, by appending his signature in Irish and Roman characters.
776
14
What ∧⧼were⧽were was was ∧⧼were⧽were was was Stephen's auditive ∧⧼and visual sensations?⧽and visual sensations? sensation? sensation? ∧⧼and visual sensations?⧽and visual sensations? sensation? sensation?
777
15He heard in a profound ancient male unfamiliar melody the accumulation
778
16 of the ∧⧼past, the predestination of the future⧽past, the predestination of the future past. past.
∧⧼past, the predestination of the future⧽past, the predestination of the future past. past.
779
17
What was Bloom's visual sensation?
780
18He saw in a quick young male familiar form the predestination of a future.
781
19
What were Stephen's and Bloom's quasisimultaneous volitional
782
20
quasisensations of concealed identities∧of concealed identities∧?
783
21Visually, Stephen's:
The traditional figure of hypostasis, depicted by
784
22 Johannes Damascenus, Lentulus Romanus and Epiphanius Monachus as
785
23 leucodermic, sesquipedalian with winedark hair.
786
24Auditively,
Bloom's: ⸢3[
⌀
]
⌀
The traditional
accent of
the ecstasy of
25catastrophe. The traditional
accent of
the ecstasy of
25catastrophe.
3⸣ [
⌀
]
⌀
The traditional
accent of
the ecstasy of
25catastrophe. The traditional
accent of
the ecstasy of
25catastrophe.
781
19
What were Stephen's and Bloom's quasisimultaneous volitional
782
20
quasisensations of concealed identities∧of concealed identities∧?
783
21Visually, Stephen's:
The traditional figure of hypostasis, depicted by
784
22 Johannes Damascenus, Lentulus Romanus and Epiphanius Monachus as
785
23 leucodermic, sesquipedalian with winedark hair.
786
24Auditively,
Bloom's: ⸢3[
⌀
]
⌀
The traditional
accent of
the ecstasy of
25catastrophe. The traditional
accent of
the ecstasy of
25catastrophe.
3⸣ [
⌀
]
⌀
The traditional
accent of
the ecstasy of
25catastrophe. The traditional
accent of
the ecstasy of
25catastrophe.
787
1
What future∧future∧ careers had been possible for ⸢3[him]him Bloom Bloom 3⸣ [him]him Bloom Bloom in the ⧼past?⧽past?
2
past and with what
788 exemplars?
789
3In the church, Roman, Anglican
or Nonconformist: exemplars, the very
790
4 reverend John Conmee S. J., the reverend T. Salmon, D. D.,
provost of
791
5 Trinity college, Dr Alexander J. Dowie. At the ∧⧼bar:⧽bar: bar, English or
6Irish:
bar, English or
6Irish:
∧⧼bar:⧽bar: bar, English or
6Irish:
bar, English or
6Irish:
792
exemplars,
Seymour Bushe, K. C., Rufus Isaacs, ⧼K. C.,⧽K. C.,
⧼K. C..⧽K. C..
7 K. C. On the stage,
793 modern or Shakespearean:
exemplars,
Charles
8 Wyndham, high comedian,
794 Osmond Tearle († 1901), exponent of
9 Shakespeare.
795
10
Did the host encourage his guest to chant in a modulated voice a strange
796
11
legend on an allied theme?
797
12Reassuringly, their place , where
none could hear them talk,∧, where
none could hear them talk,∧
being
13 secluded,
798 reassured, the ⸢C[prepared]prepared decocted decocted
C⸣ [prepared]prepared decocted decocted
⸢C[beverages]beverages beverages,
14allowing for
subsolid⸢1subsolid1⸣
residual ⸢1[sediment,]sediment, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa,
1⸣ [sediment,]sediment, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa,
beverages,
14allowing for
subsolid⸢1subsolid1⸣
residual ⸢1[sediment,]sediment, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa,
1⸣ [sediment,]sediment, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa,
C⸣ [beverages]beverages beverages,
14allowing for
subsolid⸢1subsolid1⸣
residual ⸢1[sediment,]sediment, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa,
1⸣ [sediment,]sediment, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa,
beverages,
14allowing for
subsolid⸢1subsolid1⸣
residual ⸢1[sediment,]sediment, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa,
1⸣ [sediment,]sediment, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa, sediment
799of
a mechanical
15mixture,⸢3a mechanical
15mixture,3⸣
water plus sugar plus cream plus cocoa,
having
800 been
16 consumed.
801
17
Recite the first (major) part of∧the first (major) part of∧ this chanted legend.
802
18
Little Harry Hughes and his schoolfellows all
803
19
Went out for to play ball.
804
20
And the very first ball little
Harry Hughes played
805
21
He drove it o'er the jew's
garden wall.
806
22
And the very second ball little Harry Hughes played
807
23
He broke the jew's windows all.
🕮
1
🕮
1
809
2
How did the ⸢C[host]host son of Rudolph son of Rudolph C⸣ [host]host son of Rudolph son of Rudolph receive this first part?
810
3With unmixed feeling.⸢3
810
3With unmixed feeling.3⸣
Smiling, a jew, he heard with pleasure and saw the
811
4 unbroken kitchen window.
812
5
Recite the second part (minor) of the legend.
813
6
Then out there
came the ⧼old⧽old jew's daughter
814
7
And she all dressed in green.
815
8
“Come back, come back, you pretty little boy,
816
9
And play your ball again.”
817
1
“I
can't come back and I won't come back
818
2
Without my schoolfellows all.
819
3
For if my master he did hear
820
4
He'd make it a sorry ball.”
821
5
She
took him by the lilywhite hand
822
6
And led him along the hall
823
7
Until she led him to a room
824
8
Where none could hear him call.
825
9
She
took a penknife out of her pocket
826
10
And cut off his little head.
827
11
And now he'll play his ball no more
828
12
For he lies among the dead.
🕮
13
🕮
13
829
14
How did the ⸢C[host]host father of Millicent father of Millicent C⸣ [host]host father of Millicent father of Millicent receive this second part?
830
15With mixed feelings.⸢3
830
15With mixed feelings.3⸣
Unsmiling, he heard and saw with wonder a jew's
831
16 daughter,
[CMillicent (Milly),]Millicent (Milly),
all dressed in green.
832
1
Condense Stephen's commentary.
833
2One of all, the least of all, is the victim predestined. Once by inadvertence,
834
3 twice by design he challenges his destiny.
It comes when he is abandoned
835
4 and challenges him reluctant and, as an apparition of hope and youth,
holds
836
5 him unresisting. It leads him to a strange habitation, to a secret infidel
837
6 apartment, and there, implacable, immolates him, consenting.
838
7
Why was the host (victim predestined) sad?
839
8He wished that a tale of a deed should be told of a deed not by him should
840
9 by him not be told.
838
7
Why was the host (victim predestined) sad?
839
8He wished that a tale of a deed should be told of a deed not by him should
840
9 by him not be told.
841
10
Why was the host (reluctant, unresisting) still?
⸢3[
⌀
]
⌀
842
11 In accordance with the law of the conservation of energy.
842
11 In accordance with the law of the conservation of energy.
3⸣ [
⌀
]
⌀
842
11 In accordance with the law of the conservation of energy.
842
11 In accordance with the law of the conservation of energy.
841
10
Why was the host (reluctant, unresisting) still?
⸢3[
⌀
]
⌀
842
11 In accordance with the law of the conservation of energy.
842
11 In accordance with the law of the conservation of energy.
3⸣ [
⌀
]
⌀
842
11 In accordance with the law of the conservation of energy.
842
11 In accordance with the law of the conservation of energy.
843
12
Why was the host (secret infidel)⸢C(secret infidel)C⸣ silent?
844
13He weighed the possible evidences for and against ritual murder⧼,⧽,: the
845
14incitations
of the hierarchy, the superstition of the populace,
the
846
15propagation of rumour in continued fraction of veridicity,⸢2the
846
15propagation of rumour in continued fraction of veridicity,2⸣
the ∧⧼desire of
16 persecution:⧽desire of
16 persecution: envy of
847
⸢1[opulence⧼,⧽,:]opulence⧼,⧽,:
opulence,
opulence,
1⸣ [opulence⧼,⧽,:]opulence⧼,⧽,:
opulence,
opulence,
envy of
847
⸢1[opulence⧼,⧽,:]opulence⧼,⧽,:
opulence,
opulence,
1⸣ [opulence⧼,⧽,:]opulence⧼,⧽,:
opulence,
opulence,
∧⧼desire of
16 persecution:⧽desire of
16 persecution: envy of
847
⸢1[opulence⧼,⧽,:]opulence⧼,⧽,:
opulence,
opulence,
1⸣ [opulence⧼,⧽,:]opulence⧼,⧽,:
opulence,
opulence,
envy of
847
⸢1[opulence⧼,⧽,:]opulence⧼,⧽,:
opulence,
opulence,
1⸣ [opulence⧼,⧽,:]opulence⧼,⧽,:
opulence,
opulence,
the influence of
17 retaliation, the sporadic reappearance of atavistic
848 delinquency, the
18 mitigating circumstances of fanaticism, hypnotic
849 suggestion and
19somnambulism.
850
20
From which (if any)⸢3(if any)3⸣ of these mental or physical disorders was he not
21
totally
851 immune?
852
22From hypnotic suggestion: once, waking, he had not recognised his
853
23 sleeping apartment: more than once, waking, he had been for an indefinite
854
24 time incapable of moving or uttering sounds. From somnambulism:
once,
855
25 sleeping, his body had risen, crouched and crawled in the direction of a
856
26 heatless fire and, having attained its destination, there, curled, unheated, in
857
27 night attire had lain, sleeping.
850
20
From which (if any)⸢3(if any)3⸣ of these mental or physical disorders was he not
21
totally
851 immune?
852
22From hypnotic suggestion: once, waking, he had not recognised his
853
23 sleeping apartment: more than once, waking, he had been for an indefinite
854
24 time incapable of moving or uttering sounds. From somnambulism:
once,
855
25 sleeping, his body had risen, crouched and crawled in the direction of a
856
26 heatless fire and, having attained its destination, there, curled, unheated, in
857
27 night attire had lain, sleeping.
858
1
Had this latter or any cognate∧latter or any cognate∧ phenomenon declared itself in any member
859
2
of his family?
860
3Twice, ∧⧼in Ontario terrace and in Holles street,⧽in Ontario terrace and in Holles street, in Holles street and in
4 Ontario terrace, in Holles street and in
4 Ontario terrace,
∧⧼in Ontario terrace and in Holles street,⧽in Ontario terrace and in Holles street, in Holles street and in
4 Ontario terrace, in Holles street and in
4 Ontario terrace,
his daughter Millicent
861 (Milly) at the ages of 6 and 8 years
5 had ⧼exclaimed⧽exclaimed uttered in sleep an exclamation of
862 terror and had replied to
6 the interrogations of two figures in night attire
863 with a vacant mute
7 expression.
864
8
What other infantile memories had he of her?
865
915 June
1889. A querulous
newborn⸢2newborn2⸣
female infant crying to cause and
866
10 lessen ∧⧼pain⧽pain congestion congestion
∧⧼pain⧽pain congestion congestion
. A child renamed Padney Socks she shook with
11 shocks
867 her moneybox: counted his three free
moneypenny⸢1moneypenny1⸣
buttons,
one,
12 tloo, tlee:
868 a doll, a boy, a sailor she ⸢1[threw]threw cast cast
1⸣ [threw]threw cast cast
away: ∧⧼fair⧽fair blond blond
∧⧼fair⧽fair blond blond
,
13 born of two dark, she had blond
869 ancestry, remote, a ∧⧼military⧽military
∧⧼military⧽military
violation,
14 Herr Hauptmann Hainau, ∧⧼a soldier,⧽a soldier, Austrian army, Austrian army,
∧⧼a soldier,⧽a soldier, Austrian army, Austrian army,
870 proximate, a
15 hallucination,
lieutenant Mulvey, British navy.
871
16
What endemic characteristics were present?
872
17Conversely the nasal and frontal formation was derived in a direct line of
873
18 lineage which, though interrupted, would continue at distant intervals to
874
19 more distant intervals
to its most distant intervals.
875
20
What memories had he of her adolescence?
876
21She relegated her
hoop and⸢Bhoop andB⸣
skippingrope to a recess. On the duke's
22lawn,
877entreated by an English visitor,
she declined to permit him to make
23 and take
878 away her photographic ⸢2[image.]image. image (objection not stated). image (objection not stated).
2⸣ [image.]image. image (objection not stated). image (objection not stated).
24 On the South Circular
879 road in the company of Elsa Potter, followed by an
25 individual of sinister
880 aspect, she went half way down Stamer street and
26 turned abruptly ⸢2[back.]back. back
881(reason of change not stated). back
881(reason of change not stated).
2⸣ [back.]back. back
881(reason of change not stated). back
881(reason of change not stated).
On the vigil
27 of the
15th
anniversary of her
882birth she wrote a letter from Mullingar,
28 county Westmeath, making a brief
883 allusion to a local∧local∧
⸢2[student.]student. student
29(faculty and year∧and year∧ not stated). student
29(faculty and year∧and year∧ not stated).
2⸣ [student.]student. student
29(faculty and year∧and year∧ not stated). student
29(faculty and year∧and year∧ not stated).
884
1
Did that first division, portending a second division, afflict him?
885
2Less than he had imagined, more than he had hoped.
886
3
What second departure was contemporaneously perceived by him ∧⧼and
4
differently, if similarly?⧽and
4
differently, if similarly? similarly,
887 if differently? similarly,
887 if differently? ∧⧼and
4
differently, if similarly?⧽and
4
differently, if similarly? similarly,
887 if differently? similarly,
887 if differently?
888
5A temporary departure of his cat.
889
6
Why similarly, why differently?
890
7Similarly, because actuated by a secret purpose the quest of a
new⸢BnewB⸣
male
891
8(Mullingar student)⸢B
8(Mullingar student)B⸣
or of a healing ⸢B[herb.]herb. herb (valerian). herb (valerian).
B⸣ [herb.]herb. herb (valerian). herb (valerian).
Differently,
9 because of
892 different possible returns to the inhabitants or to the habitation.
893
10
In other respects were their differences similar?
894
11In passivity, in economy, in the instinct of tradition, in unexpectedness.
895
12
As?
⸢2[Leaning]Leaning
896
13 Inasmuch as leaning
896
13 Inasmuch as leaning
2⸣ [Leaning]Leaning
896
13 Inasmuch as leaning
896
13 Inasmuch as leaning
she sustained her blond hair for him to
14 ribbon it for
897
⸢2[her. On]her. On
her (cf
∧⧼ornamentable⧽ornamentable neckarching neckarching
∧⧼ornamentable⧽ornamentable neckarching neckarching
cat).
15Moreover, on
her (cf
∧⧼ornamentable⧽ornamentable neckarching neckarching
∧⧼ornamentable⧽ornamentable neckarching neckarching
cat).
15Moreover, on
2⸣ [her. On]her. On
her (cf
∧⧼ornamentable⧽ornamentable neckarching neckarching
∧⧼ornamentable⧽ornamentable neckarching neckarching
cat).
15Moreover, on
her (cf
∧⧼ornamentable⧽ornamentable neckarching neckarching
∧⧼ornamentable⧽ornamentable neckarching neckarching
cat).
15Moreover, on
the free surface of the lake in
898 Stephen's green amid
16 inverted reflections of trees her uncommented spit,
899 describing concentric
17 circles of waterrings, indicated by the constancy of its
900 permanence the locus
18 of a somnolent prostrate ⸢2[fish. In]fish. In fish (cf
mousewatching cat).
901Again,
19in
fish (cf
mousewatching cat).
901Again,
19in
2⸣ [fish. In]fish. In fish (cf
mousewatching cat).
901Again,
19in
fish (cf
mousewatching cat).
901Again,
19in
order to remember the date, combatants, issue and consequences
902 of a
20 famous military engagement she pulled a plait of her ⸢2[hair. Silly]hair. Silly hair (cf
903
21earwashing cat). Furthermore, silly
hair (cf
903
21earwashing cat). Furthermore, silly
2⸣ [hair. Silly]hair. Silly hair (cf
903
21earwashing cat). Furthermore, silly
hair (cf
903
21earwashing cat). Furthermore, silly
Milly,
she dreamed of having had an
904
22 unspoken unremembered conversation with a horse whose name had been
905
23 Joseph to whom (which) she had offered a tumblerful of lemonade which it
906
24 (he) had appeared to have ⸢2[accepted.]accepted. accepted (cf
hearthdreaming cat).
25Hence,
in
907passivity, in economy, in the instinct of tradition, in
26unexpectedness, their
908differences were similar. accepted (cf
hearthdreaming cat).
25Hence,
in
907passivity, in economy, in the instinct of tradition, in
26unexpectedness, their
908differences were similar.
2⸣ [accepted.]accepted. accepted (cf
hearthdreaming cat).
25Hence,
in
907passivity, in economy, in the instinct of tradition, in
26unexpectedness, their
908differences were similar. accepted (cf
hearthdreaming cat).
25Hence,
in
907passivity, in economy, in the instinct of tradition, in
26unexpectedness, their
908differences were similar.
909
1
In what way had he utilised ∧⧼given gifts⧽given gifts ⸢2[gifts, ]gifts, gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), 2⸣ [gifts, ]gifts, gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), given ⸢2[gifts, ]gifts, gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), 2⸣ [gifts, ]gifts, gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), given ∧⧼given gifts⧽given gifts ⸢2[gifts, ]gifts, gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), 2⸣ [gifts, ]gifts, gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), given ⸢2[gifts, ]gifts, gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), 2⸣ [gifts, ]gifts, gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), gifts (1 an owl, 2 a
2
clock), given as
910 matrimonial auguries, to interest and to instruct her?
911
3As object lessons to explain: 1 the nature and habits of oviparous animals,
912
4 the possibility of aerial flight, certain abnormalities of vision, the secular
913
5 process of imbalsamation: 2 the principle of the pendulum, exemplified in
914
6 bob, wheelgear and regulator, the translation in terms of human or social
915
7 regulation of the various positions of
clockwise⸢3clockwise3⸣
moveable
indicators on
8 an
916 unmoving dial, the exactitude of the recurrence per hour of an instant in
917
9 each hour
when the longer and the shorter indicator were at the same
10 angle
918 of inclination, videlicet, 55⁄11 minutes past each hour per hour in
919
11 arithmetical progression.
920
12
In what manners did she reciprocate?
921
13She remembered: on the
27th anniversary of his birth she presented to him a
922
14 breakfast moustachecup of imitation Crown
Derby porcelain ware. She
923
15 provided: at quarter day or thereabouts if or when purchases had been
924
16 made by him not for her she showed herself attentive to his necessities,
925
17 anticipating his desires. She admired: a natural phenomenon having been
926
18 explained by him to
her she expressed the immediate desire to possess
927
19 without gradual∧gradual∧ acquisition a fraction of his science, the moiety,∧the moiety,∧ the
928
20 quarter, a thousandth part.
929
21
What proposal did Bloom, diambulist, father of Milly, somnambulist,
22
make
930 to Stephen, noctambulist?
931
23To pass in repose the hours intervening between Thursday (proper) and
932
24 Friday (normal) on an extemporised cubicle in the apartment immediately
933
25 above the kitchen and immediately
adjacent to the sleeping apartment of his
934
26 host and hostess.
935
27
What various advantages would or might have resulted from a
936
28
prolongation of such an extemporisation?
937
29For the guest: security of domicile and seclusion of study. For the host:
938
30 rejuvenation of intelligence, vicarious satisfaction. For the hostess:
939
31 disintegration of obsession, acquisition of correct Italian pronunciation.
940
1
Why might these several ∧⧼eventualities⧽eventualities provisional>provisional< contingencies provisional>provisional< contingencies ∧⧼eventualities⧽eventualities provisional>provisional< contingencies provisional>provisional< contingencies
2
between a guest and a
941 hostess not necessarily preclude or be precluded by a
3
permanent ∧⧼contingency⧽contingency eventuality
942 of reconciliatory union eventuality
942 of reconciliatory union ∧⧼contingency⧽contingency eventuality
942 of reconciliatory union eventuality
942 of reconciliatory union between a ⸢1[boy]boy
4
schoolfellow
4
schoolfellow 1⸣ [boy]boy
4
schoolfellow
4
schoolfellow and a jew's daughter?
943
5Because the way to daughter led through mother, the way to mother
944
6 through daughter.
940
1
Why might these several ∧⧼eventualities⧽eventualities provisional>provisional< contingencies provisional>provisional< contingencies ∧⧼eventualities⧽eventualities provisional>provisional< contingencies provisional>provisional< contingencies
2
between a guest and a
941 hostess not necessarily preclude or be precluded by a
3
permanent ∧⧼contingency⧽contingency eventuality
942 of reconciliatory union eventuality
942 of reconciliatory union ∧⧼contingency⧽contingency eventuality
942 of reconciliatory union eventuality
942 of reconciliatory union between a ⸢1[boy]boy
4
schoolfellow
4
schoolfellow 1⸣ [boy]boy
4
schoolfellow
4
schoolfellow and a jew's daughter?
943
5Because the way to daughter led through mother, the way to mother
944
6 through daughter.
945
7
To what inconsequent polysyllabic⸢2inconsequent polysyllabic2⸣ question of his host did the guest
8
return
946 a monosyllabic∧monosyllabic∧ negative answer?
947
9If he had known the late∧the late∧ Mrs Emily Sinico, accidentally killed at Sydney
948
10 Parade railway station,
14 October 1903.
945
7
To what inconsequent polysyllabic⸢2inconsequent polysyllabic2⸣ question of his host did the guest
8
return
946 a monosyllabic∧monosyllabic∧ negative answer?
947
9If he had known the late∧the late∧ Mrs Emily Sinico, accidentally killed at Sydney
948
10 Parade railway station,
14 October 1903.
949
11
What inchoate ∧⧼consequent⧽consequent corollary corollary ∧⧼consequent⧽consequent corollary corollary statement was consequently
12
suppressed by the
950 host?
951
13A statement explanatory of his absence on the occasion of the interment of
952
14 Mrs Mary Dedalus (born Goulding),
26 June 1903, vigil of the
15 anniversary
953 of the decease of Rudolph Bloom (born Virag).
949
11
What inchoate ∧⧼consequent⧽consequent corollary corollary ∧⧼consequent⧽consequent corollary corollary statement was consequently
12
suppressed by the
950 host?
951
13A statement explanatory of his absence on the occasion of the interment of
952
14 Mrs Mary Dedalus (born Goulding),
26 June 1903, vigil of the
15 anniversary
953 of the decease of Rudolph Bloom (born Virag).
954
16
Was the proposal of asylum⸢3of asylum3⸣ accepted?
955
17Promptly, inexplicably, with amicability, gratefully it was declined.
956
18
What exchange of money took place between host and guest?
957
19The former returned to the latter, without interest, a sum of money
958
20 (£1‐7‐0), one pound seven shillings sterling,
advanced by the latter to the
959
21former.
956
18
What exchange of money took place between host and guest?
957
19The former returned to the latter, without interest, a sum of money
958
20 (£1‐7‐0), one pound seven shillings sterling,
advanced by the latter to the
959
21former.
960
22
What counterproposals were alternately advanced, accepted, modified,
961
23
declined, restated in other terms, reaccepted, ratified, reconfirmed?
962
24To inaugurate a ∧⧼series⧽series
prearranged⸢1prearranged1⸣
course
prearranged⸢1prearranged1⸣
course
∧⧼series⧽series
prearranged⸢1prearranged1⸣
course
prearranged⸢1prearranged1⸣
course
of Italian instruction, place
25 the
963 residence of the instructed. To inaugurate a course of vocal instruction,
964
26 place the residence of the instructress. To inaugurate a series of static,
965
1 semistatic and peripatetic intellectual dialogues, places the residence of both
966
2 speakers (if both speakers were resident in the same place),
the Ship
hotel
967
3 and tavern, 6 Lower Abbey street (W. and E.
Connery, proprietors), the
968
4 National Library of Ireland, 10 Kildare street, the National Maternity
969
5 Hospital, 29, 30 and 31 Holles street, a public garden, the vicinity of a place
970
6 of worship, a conjunction of two or more ⧼streets⧽streets public thoroughfares, the
7 point of
971 bisection of a right line drawn between their residences (if both
8 speakers
972 were resident in different places).
973
9
What rendered problematic for Bloom∧for Bloom∧ the realisation of these mutually
974
10
selfexcluding ∧⧼proposals⧽proposals propositions propositions ∧⧼proposals⧽proposals propositions propositions ?
975
11The irreparability of the past: once at a performance of Albert Hengler's
976
12 circus in the Rotunda, Rutland square,
Dublin,
an intuitive
⧼particlo⧽particlo
13 particoloured
977 clown in quest of paternity∧in quest of paternity∧ had ⧼had⧽had penetrated from the
14 ring to a place in the
978 auditorium where Bloom, solitary, was seated and had
15 publicly declared to
979 an exhilarated audience that he (Bloom) was his (the
16 clown's) papa. The
980
⧼imprevidebility⧽imprevidebility imprevidibility of the future: once in
17
the summer of∧the summer of∧ 1898 he (Bloom) had
981 marked a florin
(2/‐) with three
18 notches on the milled edge and tendered it
982 in payment of an account due to
19 and received by J.
and T.
Davy, family
983 grocers, 1 Charlemont Mall,
20 Grand Canal, for circulation on the waters of
984 civic finance, for possible,
21 circuitous or direct, return.
985
22
Was the clown Bloom's son?
986
23No.
987
24
Had Bloom's coin returned?
988
25Never.
989
26
Why would a recurrent frustration the more depress him?
990
27Because at the critical turningpoint of human existence he desired to amend
991
28 many social conditions, the product of inequality and avarice and
992
29 international animosity.
993
1
He believed then that human life was infinitely perfectible, eliminating these
994
2
conditions?
995
3There remained the generic conditions imposed by natural, as distinct from
996
4 human ⸢(B)[law:]law: law, as integral parts of the human whole:
law, as integral parts of the human whole:
(B)⸣ [law:]law: law, as integral parts of the human whole:
law, as integral parts of the human whole:
the necessity
5 of
997 destruction to procure alimentary ⸢1[sustenance,]sustenance,
sustenance:
sustenance:
1⸣ [sustenance,]sustenance,
sustenance:
sustenance:
the
6 painful character of
the
998ultimate functions of separate∧separate∧ existence,⸢1the
998ultimate functions of separate∧separate∧ existence,1⸣
the
7agonies of⸢3the
7agonies of3⸣
birth and ⸢1[death,]death,
death:
death:
1⸣ [death,]death,
death:
death:
the
999 monotonous menstruation
of
8 simian⧼,⧽, and (particularly) human females
1000 extending from the age of
9 puberty to the ⸢1[menopause,]menopause,
menopause:
menopause:
1⸣ [menopause,]menopause,
menopause:
menopause:
⸢⧼catastrophic⧽catastrophic
⸣ ⧼catastrophic⧽catastrophic
inevitable
10 accidents at
1001 sea, in mines and ⸢1[factories,]factories, factories: factories:
1⸣ [factories,]factories, factories: factories:
certain very painful
11 maladies and their resultant
1002 surgical operations, innate lunacy and
12congenital⸢1
12congenital1⸣
criminality,
decimating
1003
⸢1[epidemics,]epidemics,
epidemics:
epidemics:
1⸣ [epidemics,]epidemics,
epidemics:
epidemics:
⸢(B)decimating
1003
⸢1[epidemics,]epidemics,
epidemics:
epidemics:
1⸣ [epidemics,]epidemics,
epidemics:
epidemics:
(B)⸣
13 catastrophic cataclysms
which make terror the basis of human
1004
⸢1[mentality,]mentality,
14 mentality:
14 mentality:
1⸣ [mentality,]mentality,
14 mentality:
14 mentality:
seismic upheavals the epicentres of which are
15 located in densely
1005 populated ⸢1[regions,]regions, regions: regions:
1⸣ [regions,]regions, regions: regions:
the fact of vital ⸢1[growth]growth
16 growth, through convulsions of
1006metamorphosis,
16 growth, through convulsions of
1006metamorphosis,
1⸣ [growth]growth
16 growth, through convulsions of
1006metamorphosis,
16 growth, through convulsions of
1006metamorphosis,
from infancy
17 through maturity to decay.
1007
18
Why did he desist from speculation?
1008
19Because it was a task for a ⧼high⧽high superior intelligence to substitute other
20more∧
20more∧
1009acceptable⸢2
20more∧
20more∧
1009acceptable2⸣
phenomena in the
place of ⸢1[those]those the
less
21acceptable⸢2less
21acceptable2⸣
phenomena the
less
21acceptable⸢2less
21acceptable2⸣
phenomena
1⸣ [those]those the
less
21acceptable⸢2less
21acceptable2⸣
phenomena the
less
21acceptable⸢2less
21acceptable2⸣
phenomena
to be
1010 removed.
1011
22
Did Stephen participate in his dejection?
1012
23He affirmed his significance as a
conscious rational animal proceeding
1013
24syllogistically from the known to the unknown and a⸢1conscious rational animal proceeding
1013
24syllogistically from the known to the unknown and a1⸣
conscious rational
1014
25 reagent between a micro
and a macrocosm
ineluctably⸢3ineluctably3⸣
constructed upon
26 the
1015 incertitude of the void.
1016
27
Was this affirmation apprehended by Bloom?
1017
28Not ⸢(B)[literally, substantially.]literally, substantially.
verbally. Substantially.
verbally. Substantially.
(B)⸣ [literally, substantially.]literally, substantially.
verbally. Substantially.
verbally. Substantially.
1018
1
What comforted his misapprehension?
1019
2That as a competent keyless citizen he had proceeded energetically from the
1020
3
∧⧼uncertain⧽uncertain unknown unknown
∧⧼uncertain⧽uncertain unknown unknown
to the known through the incertitude of the void.
1
What comforted his misapprehension?
1019
2That as a competent keyless citizen he had proceeded energetically from the
1020
3
∧⧼uncertain⧽uncertain unknown unknown
∧⧼uncertain⧽uncertain unknown unknown
to the known through the incertitude of the void.
1021
4
In what order of precedence, with what attendant ceremony was the
5
exodus
1022 from the house of bondage to the wilderness of inhabitation
6
effected?
1023
7Lighted Candle in Stick
1024
8borne
by
1025
9Bloom
1026
10Diaconal Hat on Ashplant
1027
11borne
by
1028
12Stephen
1021
4
In what order of precedence, with what attendant ceremony was the
5
exodus
1022 from the house of bondage to the wilderness of inhabitation
6
effected?
1023
7Lighted Candle in Stick
1024
8borne
by
1025
9Bloom
1026
10Diaconal Hat on Ashplant
1027
11borne
by
1028
12Stephen
1029
13
With what intonation secreto of what ⧼psa⧽psa commemorative psalm?
1030
14The ⸢3[57th,]57th, 113th, 113th,
3⸣ [57th,]57th, 113th, 113th,
modus peregrinus: In exitu Israel
de Egypto: domus
⸢3[
David
]
David
15
Jacob
15
Jacob
3⸣ [
David
]
David
15
Jacob
15
Jacob
de
1031 populo barbaro.
1029
13
With what intonation secreto of what ⧼psa⧽psa commemorative psalm?
1030
14The ⸢3[57th,]57th, 113th, 113th,
3⸣ [57th,]57th, 113th, 113th,
modus peregrinus: In exitu Israel
de Egypto: domus
⸢3[
David
]
David
15
Jacob
15
Jacob
3⸣ [
David
]
David
15
Jacob
15
Jacob
de
1031 populo barbaro.
1032
16
What did each do at the door of egress?
1033
17Bloom set the candlestick on the floor. Stephen put the hat on his head.
1032
16
What did each do at the door of egress?
1033
17Bloom set the candlestick on the floor. Stephen put the hat on his head.
1034
18
For what creature was the door of egress a door of ingress?
1035
19For a cat.
1034
18
For what creature was the door of egress a door of ingress?
1035
19For a cat.
1036
20
What spectacle confronted them when they, first the host, then the guest,
1037
21
emerged silently, doubly dark,∧silently, doubly dark,∧ from obscurity⸢(B)from obscurity(B)⸣ by a passage from the
22
rere of
1038 the house into the penumbra of⸢(B)the penumbra of(B)⸣ the garden?
1039
23The heaventree of ⸢⧼the⧽the
⸣ ⧼the⧽the
stars hung with humid nightblue fruit.
1040
1
With what meditations did Bloom accompany his demonstration to his
1041
2
companion of various constellations?
1042
3Meditations
of evolution⸢Cof evolutionC⸣
increasingly vaster:
of the ∧⧼invisible moon⧽invisible moon
4moon invisible
4moon invisible
∧⧼invisible moon⧽invisible moon
4moon invisible
4moon invisible
in
1043incipient
lunation, approaching perigee:⸢2of the ∧⧼invisible moon⧽invisible moon
4moon invisible
4moon invisible
∧⧼invisible moon⧽invisible moon
4moon invisible
4moon invisible
in
1043incipient
lunation, approaching perigee:2⸣
of the infinite
5lattiginous
1044scintillating uncondensed milky way,
discernible by daylight
6by an observer
1045placed at the lower end of a cylindrical vertical shaft
75000 ft deep sunk
1046from the surface towards the centre of the ⸢1[earth,]earth,
8earth:
8earth:
1⸣ [earth,]earth,
8earth:
8earth:
⸢Cdiscernible by daylight
6by an observer
1045placed at the lower end of a cylindrical vertical shaft
75000 ft deep sunk
1046from the surface towards the centre of the ⸢1[earth,]earth,
8earth:
8earth:
1⸣ [earth,]earth,
8earth:
8earth:
C⸣
of Sirius ⸢2[9]9 (alpha in Canis
1047Maior)
10 (alpha in Canis
1047Maior)
10
2⸣ [9]9 (alpha in Canis
1047Maior)
10 (alpha in Canis
1047Maior)
10
lightyears
⧼(57 bi⧽(57 bi
9(57,000,000,000,000⧼,000,000⧽,000,000 miles)⸢2
⧼(57 bi⧽(57 bi
9(57,000,000,000,000⧼,000,000⧽,000,000 miles)2⸣
distant and in volume 900
1048times the
10 dimension of our ⸢1[planet,]planet, planet: planet:
1⸣ [planet,]planet, planet: planet:
of ⸢1[Arcturus,]Arcturus, Arcturus: Arcturus:
1⸣ [Arcturus,]Arcturus, Arcturus: Arcturus:
of the
11precession of
1049equinoxes:⸢3of the
11precession of
1049equinoxes:3⸣
of Orion with belt
and sextuple sun theta⸢2and sextuple sun theta2⸣
and
12 nebula in which
1050 100 of our solar systems could be ⸢1[contained,]contained,
13contained:
13contained:
1⸣ [contained,]contained,
13contained:
13contained:
of ⸢1[moribund,]moribund, moribund and moribund and
1⸣ [moribund,]moribund, moribund and moribund and
of nascent
1051 new stars such as
14 Nova in ⸢1[1901,]1901, 1901: 1901:
1⸣ [1901,]1901, 1901: 1901:
of our system plunging towards the
1052 constellation
15 of ⸢1[Hercules,]Hercules, Hercules: Hercules:
1⸣ [Hercules,]Hercules, Hercules: Hercules:
of the parallax or parallactic drift of socalled
1053
16 fixed stars, in reality evermoving wanderers
from immeasurably remote
1054
17 eons to infinitely remote futures in comparison with which the years,
1055
18threescore
and ten, of allotted human life formed a ⸢(B)[period]period parenthesis parenthesis
(B)⸣ [period]period parenthesis parenthesis
19 of
1056 infinitesimal brevity.
1057
20
Were there obverse meditations of involution⸢Cof involutionC⸣ increasingly less vast?
1058
21Of the eons of geological periods recorded in the stratifications of the ⸢1[earth,]earth,
22 earth:
22 earth:
1⸣ [earth,]earth,
22 earth:
22 earth:
1059 of the myriad minute entomological
organic⸢1organic1⸣
existences
23 concealed in cavities
1060 of the earth, beneath removable stones, in hives
24 and mounds, of microbes,
1061 germs, bacteria, bacilli,
⸢1[spermatozoa,]spermatozoa,
25spermatozoa:
25spermatozoa:
1⸣ [spermatozoa,]spermatozoa,
25spermatozoa:
25spermatozoa:
of the
incalculable⸢CincalculableC⸣
trillions of
billions
1062of⸢2billions
1062of2⸣
millions of
26imperceptible⸢1
26imperceptible1⸣
molecules contained
by cohesion of molecular
1063affinity⸢Cby cohesion of molecular
1063affinityC⸣
in
27 a
single⸢CsingleC⸣
⸢1[pinhead,]pinhead, pinhead: pinhead:
1⸣ [pinhead,]pinhead, pinhead: pinhead:
of the universe of human serum
28 constellated
1064 with red and white bodies, themselves universes of void space
29 constellated
1065 with other bodies, ⸢1[each]each each, in continuity, each, in continuity,
1⸣ [each]each each, in continuity, each, in continuity,
its universe of
30 divisible component
1066 bodies of which
each⸢1each1⸣
was again divisible in divisions
31 of redivisible
1067 component bodies, dividends and divisors ever diminishing
32 without actual
1068 division till, if the progress were carried far enough,
nought
33nowhere⸢1
33nowhere1⸣
was
1069 never reached.
1057
20
Were there obverse meditations of involution⸢Cof involutionC⸣ increasingly less vast?
1058
21Of the eons of geological periods recorded in the stratifications of the ⸢1[earth,]earth,
22 earth:
22 earth:
1⸣ [earth,]earth,
22 earth:
22 earth:
1059 of the myriad minute entomological
organic⸢1organic1⸣
existences
23 concealed in cavities
1060 of the earth, beneath removable stones, in hives
24 and mounds, of microbes,
1061 germs, bacteria, bacilli,
⸢1[spermatozoa,]spermatozoa,
25spermatozoa:
25spermatozoa:
1⸣ [spermatozoa,]spermatozoa,
25spermatozoa:
25spermatozoa:
of the
incalculable⸢CincalculableC⸣
trillions of
billions
1062of⸢2billions
1062of2⸣
millions of
26imperceptible⸢1
26imperceptible1⸣
molecules contained
by cohesion of molecular
1063affinity⸢Cby cohesion of molecular
1063affinityC⸣
in
27 a
single⸢CsingleC⸣
⸢1[pinhead,]pinhead, pinhead: pinhead:
1⸣ [pinhead,]pinhead, pinhead: pinhead:
of the universe of human serum
28 constellated
1064 with red and white bodies, themselves universes of void space
29 constellated
1065 with other bodies, ⸢1[each]each each, in continuity, each, in continuity,
1⸣ [each]each each, in continuity, each, in continuity,
its universe of
30 divisible component
1066 bodies of which
each⸢1each1⸣
was again divisible in divisions
31 of redivisible
1067 component bodies, dividends and divisors ever diminishing
32 without actual
1068 division till, if the progress were carried far enough,
nought
33nowhere⸢1
33nowhere1⸣
was
1069 never reached.
1070
1
Why did he not elaborate these calculations to a more precise result?
1071
2Because ⧼he had learned⧽he had learned some years previously in 1886 when occupied
3 with the problem of
1072 the quadrature of the circle he had learned of the
4 existence of ∧⧼numbers⧽numbers a number
1073 computed
to a relative degree of
5accuracy⸢Cto a relative degree of
5accuracyC⸣
to be a number
1073 computed
to a relative degree of
5accuracy⸢Cto a relative degree of
5accuracyC⸣
to be
∧⧼numbers⧽numbers a number
1073 computed
to a relative degree of
5accuracy⸢Cto a relative degree of
5accuracyC⸣
to be a number
1073 computed
to a relative degree of
5accuracy⸢Cto a relative degree of
5accuracyC⸣
to be
of such ⸢C[magnitude,]magnitude, magnitude and of so
1074many places, magnitude and of so
1074many places,
C⸣ [magnitude,]magnitude, magnitude and of so
1074many places, magnitude and of so
1074many places,
6
e.g.,∧e.g.,∧
the
9th power of the
9th power of 9,
that,
the result having
1075been
7obtained,⸢(B)that,
the result having
1075been
7obtained,(B)⸣
33 closely printed volumes of 1000 pages each of
1076 innumerable
8 quires and reams of India paper would have to be
1077 requisitioned in order to
9 contain the complete tale of its printed ⸢(B)[integers.]integers.
⸢C[integers,]integers, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions,
C⸣ [integers,]integers, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions,
the nucleus of the
1080
12nebula of every digit of every series containing succinctly the potentiality of
1081
13being raised to the utmost kinetic elaboration of any power of any of its
1082
14powers.
⸢C[integers,]integers, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions,
C⸣ [integers,]integers, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions,
the nucleus of the
1080
12nebula of every digit of every series containing succinctly the potentiality of
1081
13being raised to the utmost kinetic elaboration of any power of any of its
1082
14powers.
(B)⸣ [integers.]integers.
⸢C[integers,]integers, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions,
C⸣ [integers,]integers, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions,
the nucleus of the
1080
12nebula of every digit of every series containing succinctly the potentiality of
1081
13being raised to the utmost kinetic elaboration of any power of any of its
1082
14powers.
⸢C[integers,]integers, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions,
C⸣ [integers,]integers, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions, integers of
1078
10units, tens, hundreds, thousands, tens of thousands, hundreds of thousands,
1079
11millions, tens of millions, hundreds of millions, billions,
the nucleus of the
1080
12nebula of every digit of every series containing succinctly the potentiality of
1081
13being raised to the utmost kinetic elaboration of any power of any of its
1082
14powers.
1083
15
Did he find the ⸢2[problem]problem problems problems 2⸣ [problem]problem problems problems of the inhabitability of the ∧⧼stars⧽stars
16
planets
16
planets ∧⧼stars⧽stars
16
planets
16
planets and their
1084 satellites by a race, given in species, ⸢Cby a race, given in species, C⸣ and of the
17
possible social and moral∧social and moral∧
1085redemption of said race by a redeemer,⸢2and of the
17
possible social and moral∧social and moral∧
1085redemption of said race by a redeemer,2⸣ easier
18
of solution?
1086
19Of a different order of difficulty. Conscious that the human ⸢(B)[organism]organism
20organism,
1087normally capable of sustaining an atmospheric pressure of 19
21tons,
20organism,
1087normally capable of sustaining an atmospheric pressure of 19
21tons,
(B)⸣ [organism]organism
20organism,
1087normally capable of sustaining an atmospheric pressure of 19
21tons,
20organism,
1087normally capable of sustaining an atmospheric pressure of 19
21tons,
when
1088 elevated to a considerable altitude in the terrestrial atmosphere
22 suffered
1089
with arithmetical progression of intensity,
according as the
23line of
1090demarcation between troposphere and stratosphere
was
24approximated,
⸢(B)
with arithmetical progression of intensity,
according as the
23line of
1090demarcation between troposphere and stratosphere
was
24approximated,
(B)⸣
1091
from nasal hemorrhage, impeded respiration and
25 vertigo, when proposing
1092 this problem for solution,
he had conjectured
as
26a working hypothesis⸢(B)as
26a working hypothesis(B)⸣
1093
which could not be proved impossible⸢C
which could not be proved impossibleC⸣
that ⧼an⧽an a
27 more
⸢1[ancient
]ancient
adaptable
adaptable
1⸣ [ancient
]ancient
adaptable
adaptable
and differently
1094
anatomically⸢(B)
anatomically(B)⸣
constructed
28 race of beings might subsist otherwise under
1095 Martian, Mercurial, Veneral,
29 Jovian, Saturnian, Neptunian or Uranian
1096
sufficient and equivalent⸢C
sufficient and equivalentC⸣
30 conditions, though
an apogean⸢1an apogean1⸣
humanity
of beings
1097created⸢1of beings
1097created1⸣
in varying
31forms
with
finite differences
resulting⸢2with
finite differences
resulting2⸣
similar to the
1098whole and to one
32another⸢Cin varying
31forms
with
finite differences
resulting⸢2with
finite differences
resulting2⸣
similar to the
1098whole and to one
32anotherC⸣
would probably there as here remain inalterably
1099
and
33inalienably⸢1
and
33inalienably1⸣
attached to
vanities, to⸢2vanities, to2⸣
vanities of ⸢2[vanities.]vanities. vanities and to
34all that is
1100vanity. vanities and to
34all that is
1100vanity.
2⸣ [vanities.]vanities. vanities and to
34all that is
1100vanity. vanities and to
34all that is
1100vanity.
1101
1
And the problem of possible redemption?
1102
2The minor was proved by the major.
1101
1
And the problem of possible redemption?
1102
2The minor was proved by the major.
1103
3
Which various features of the constellations were in turn considered?
1104
4The various colours significant of various degrees of vitality (white, yellow,
1105
5 crimson, ⸢1[dark red),]dark red),
vermilion,
cinnabar):
vermilion,
cinnabar):
1⸣ [dark red),]dark red),
vermilion,
cinnabar):
vermilion,
cinnabar):
their degrees of ⸢1[brilliancy,]brilliancy,
6brilliancy:
6brilliancy:
1⸣ [brilliancy,]brilliancy,
6brilliancy:
6brilliancy:
their magnitudes
1106 revealed up to and including the ⸢1[7th,]7th, 7th: 7th:
1⸣ [7th,]7th, 7th: 7th:
7 their ⸢1[positions,]positions, positions: positions:
1⸣ [positions,]positions, positions: positions:
the waggoner's ⸢1[star,]star, star: star:
1⸣ [star,]star, star: star:
1107 Walsingham ⸢1[way,]way,
8 way:
8 way:
1⸣ [way,]way,
8 way:
8 way:
the chariot of ⸢1[David,]David, David: David:
1⸣ [David,]David, David: David:
the annular cinctures
of ⸢1[Saturn,]Saturn,
9 Saturn:
9 Saturn:
1⸣ [Saturn,]Saturn,
9 Saturn:
9 Saturn:
⸢Cthe annular cinctures
of ⸢1[Saturn,]Saturn,
9 Saturn:
9 Saturn:
1⸣ [Saturn,]Saturn,
9 Saturn:
9 Saturn:
C⸣
1108 the condensation of spiral nebulae into ⸢1[suns,]suns,
10suns:
10suns:
1⸣ [suns,]suns,
10suns:
10suns:
the interdependent
gyrations
1109 of double ⸢1[suns,]suns, suns: suns:
1⸣ [suns,]suns, suns: suns:
the
11independent
synchronous discoveries of Galileo, Simon
1110 Marius, Piazzi, Le
12 Verrier, Herschel, ⸢1[Galle,]Galle, Galle: Galle:
1⸣ [Galle,]Galle, Galle: Galle:
the systematisations attempted
1111 by Bode
13 and Kepler of cubes of distances and squares of times of
1112
⸢1[revolution,]revolution,
14revolution:
14revolution:
1⸣ [revolution,]revolution,
14revolution:
14revolution:
the almost infinite compressibility of hirsute comets and their
1113
15 vast elliptical egressive and reentrant orbits from perihelion to ⸢1[aphelion,]aphelion,
16aphelion:
16aphelion:
1⸣ [aphelion,]aphelion,
16aphelion:
16aphelion:
the
1114 sidereal origin of meteoric ⸢1[stones,]stones, stones: stones:
1⸣ [stones,]stones, stones: stones:
the Libyan
17 floods on Mars about the
1115 period of the birth of the younger ⸢1[astroscopist,]astroscopist,
18astroscopist:
18astroscopist:
1⸣ [astroscopist,]astroscopist,
18astroscopist:
18astroscopist:
the annual recurrence of
1116 meteoric showers about the period
19 of the feast of S. ⸢1[Lawrence,]Lawrence,
Lawrence
(martyr, 10
1117August):
Lawrence
(martyr, 10
1117August):
1⸣ [Lawrence,]Lawrence,
Lawrence
(martyr, 10
1117August):
Lawrence
(martyr, 10
1117August):
the
20 monthly recurrence known as the new moon with the old
1118 moon in her ⸢1[arms,]arms,
21 arms:
21 arms:
1⸣ [arms,]arms,
21 arms:
21 arms:
the posited influence of celestial on human ⸢1[bodies,]bodies,
22bodies:
22bodies:
1⸣ [bodies,]bodies,
22bodies:
22bodies:
the
1119 appearance of a star
(1st
magnitude)⸢2(1st
magnitude)2⸣
of exceeding brilliancy
23dominating by
1120night and day⸢2
23dominating by
1120night and day2⸣
(a new luminous sun generated by the
24 collision and
1121 amalgamation in incandescence of two nonluminous
exsuns)
25 about the
1122 period of the birth of William Shakespeare over delta in the
26 recumbent
1123 neversetting constellation of ⸢1[Cassiopeia, a 9 years' wonder,]Cassiopeia, a 9 years' wonder,
⸢2[Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
2⸣ [Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
⸢2[Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
2⸣ [Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
1⸣ [Cassiopeia, a 9 years' wonder,]Cassiopeia, a 9 years' wonder,
⸢2[Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
2⸣ [Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
⸢2[Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
2⸣ [Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
the attendant phenomena of eclipses, solar and lunar,
from
1133
3immersion to emersion,⸢3from
1133
3immersion to emersion,3⸣
abatement of wind,
transit of shadow,⸢Ctransit of shadow,C⸣
4 taciturnity of
1134 winged creatures, emergence of nocturnal or crepuscular
5 animals,
1135
persistence
of infernal light,⸢2
persistence
of infernal light,2⸣
obscurity of terrestrial waters,
6 pallor of human
1136 beings.
1103
3
Which various features of the constellations were in turn considered?
1104
4The various colours significant of various degrees of vitality (white, yellow,
1105
5 crimson, ⸢1[dark red),]dark red),
vermilion,
cinnabar):
vermilion,
cinnabar):
1⸣ [dark red),]dark red),
vermilion,
cinnabar):
vermilion,
cinnabar):
their degrees of ⸢1[brilliancy,]brilliancy,
6brilliancy:
6brilliancy:
1⸣ [brilliancy,]brilliancy,
6brilliancy:
6brilliancy:
their magnitudes
1106 revealed up to and including the ⸢1[7th,]7th, 7th: 7th:
1⸣ [7th,]7th, 7th: 7th:
7 their ⸢1[positions,]positions, positions: positions:
1⸣ [positions,]positions, positions: positions:
the waggoner's ⸢1[star,]star, star: star:
1⸣ [star,]star, star: star:
1107 Walsingham ⸢1[way,]way,
8 way:
8 way:
1⸣ [way,]way,
8 way:
8 way:
the chariot of ⸢1[David,]David, David: David:
1⸣ [David,]David, David: David:
the annular cinctures
of ⸢1[Saturn,]Saturn,
9 Saturn:
9 Saturn:
1⸣ [Saturn,]Saturn,
9 Saturn:
9 Saturn:
⸢Cthe annular cinctures
of ⸢1[Saturn,]Saturn,
9 Saturn:
9 Saturn:
1⸣ [Saturn,]Saturn,
9 Saturn:
9 Saturn:
C⸣
1108 the condensation of spiral nebulae into ⸢1[suns,]suns,
10suns:
10suns:
1⸣ [suns,]suns,
10suns:
10suns:
the interdependent
gyrations
1109 of double ⸢1[suns,]suns, suns: suns:
1⸣ [suns,]suns, suns: suns:
the
11independent
synchronous discoveries of Galileo, Simon
1110 Marius, Piazzi, Le
12 Verrier, Herschel, ⸢1[Galle,]Galle, Galle: Galle:
1⸣ [Galle,]Galle, Galle: Galle:
the systematisations attempted
1111 by Bode
13 and Kepler of cubes of distances and squares of times of
1112
⸢1[revolution,]revolution,
14revolution:
14revolution:
1⸣ [revolution,]revolution,
14revolution:
14revolution:
the almost infinite compressibility of hirsute comets and their
1113
15 vast elliptical egressive and reentrant orbits from perihelion to ⸢1[aphelion,]aphelion,
16aphelion:
16aphelion:
1⸣ [aphelion,]aphelion,
16aphelion:
16aphelion:
the
1114 sidereal origin of meteoric ⸢1[stones,]stones, stones: stones:
1⸣ [stones,]stones, stones: stones:
the Libyan
17 floods on Mars about the
1115 period of the birth of the younger ⸢1[astroscopist,]astroscopist,
18astroscopist:
18astroscopist:
1⸣ [astroscopist,]astroscopist,
18astroscopist:
18astroscopist:
the annual recurrence of
1116 meteoric showers about the period
19 of the feast of S. ⸢1[Lawrence,]Lawrence,
Lawrence
(martyr, 10
1117August):
Lawrence
(martyr, 10
1117August):
1⸣ [Lawrence,]Lawrence,
Lawrence
(martyr, 10
1117August):
Lawrence
(martyr, 10
1117August):
the
20 monthly recurrence known as the new moon with the old
1118 moon in her ⸢1[arms,]arms,
21 arms:
21 arms:
1⸣ [arms,]arms,
21 arms:
21 arms:
the posited influence of celestial on human ⸢1[bodies,]bodies,
22bodies:
22bodies:
1⸣ [bodies,]bodies,
22bodies:
22bodies:
the
1119 appearance of a star
(1st
magnitude)⸢2(1st
magnitude)2⸣
of exceeding brilliancy
23dominating by
1120night and day⸢2
23dominating by
1120night and day2⸣
(a new luminous sun generated by the
24 collision and
1121 amalgamation in incandescence of two nonluminous
exsuns)
25 about the
1122 period of the birth of William Shakespeare over delta in the
26 recumbent
1123 neversetting constellation of ⸢1[Cassiopeia, a 9 years' wonder,]Cassiopeia, a 9 years' wonder,
⸢2[Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
2⸣ [Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
⸢2[Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
2⸣ [Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
1⸣ [Cassiopeia, a 9 years' wonder,]Cassiopeia, a 9 years' wonder,
⸢2[Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
2⸣ [Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
⸢2[Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
2⸣ [Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:]Cassiopiea, a nine years' wonder:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
27 Cassiopeia and of a star (2nd
28magnitude) of
1124similar origin but of
lesser brilliancy which had appeared in
29and
1125disappeared
from the constellation of the Corona Septentrionalis about
30the
1126period of the birth of Leopold Bloom and of other stars of (presumably)
1127
31similar origin which had (effectively or presumably) appeared in and
1128
32disappeared from the constellation of Andromeda about the period of the
1129
33birth of Stephen Dedalus, and in and from the constellation of Auriga some
1130
34years after the birth and death of Rudolph Bloom, junior, and in and from
1131
1other constellations some years before or after the birth or death of other
1132
2persons:
the attendant phenomena of eclipses, solar and lunar,
from
1133
3immersion to emersion,⸢3from
1133
3immersion to emersion,3⸣
abatement of wind,
transit of shadow,⸢Ctransit of shadow,C⸣
4 taciturnity of
1134 winged creatures, emergence of nocturnal or crepuscular
5 animals,
1135
persistence
of infernal light,⸢2
persistence
of infernal light,2⸣
obscurity of terrestrial waters,
6 pallor of human
1136 beings.
1137
7
His (Bloom's)⸢1(Bloom's)1⸣ logical ⸢2[conclusion?]conclusion? conclusion, having weighed the
8
matter and allowing
1138for possible error? conclusion, having weighed the
8
matter and allowing
1138for possible error? 2⸣ [conclusion?]conclusion? conclusion, having weighed the
8
matter and allowing
1138for possible error? conclusion, having weighed the
8
matter and allowing
1138for possible error?
1139
9That it was not a heaventree, not a heavengrot, not a heavenbeast, not a
1140
10heavenman.⸢2
1139
9That it was not a heaventree, not a heavengrot, not a heavenbeast, not a
1140
10heavenman.2⸣
That it was a Utopia,
⧼(⧽(there being no known method from
11the
1141known to the ⸢2[unknown,]unknown, unknown: unknown:
2⸣ [unknown,]unknown, unknown: unknown:
⸢1
⧼(⧽(there being no known method from
11the
1141known to the ⸢2[unknown,]unknown, unknown: unknown:
2⸣ [unknown,]unknown, unknown: unknown:
1⸣
an infinity
renderable equally
12finite by the
1142suppositious
apposition
of ⸢1[1]1 one one
1⸣ [1]1 one one
or more bodies equally of
13the same and
of⸢2of2⸣
1143different ⸢2[magnitudes,]magnitudes, magnitudes: magnitudes:
2⸣ [magnitudes,]magnitudes, magnitudes: magnitudes:
⸢Can infinity
renderable equally
12finite by the
1142suppositious
apposition
of ⸢1[1]1 one one
1⸣ [1]1 one one
or more bodies equally of
13the same and
of⸢2of2⸣
1143different ⸢2[magnitudes,]magnitudes, magnitudes: magnitudes:
2⸣ [magnitudes,]magnitudes, magnitudes: magnitudes:
C⸣
a mobility
of
14illusory forms⸢3of
14illusory forms3⸣
immobilised in space,
1144remobilised in ⸢2[air,]air, air: air:
2⸣ [air,]air, air: air:
⸢Ba mobility
of
14illusory forms⸢3of
14illusory forms3⸣
immobilised in space,
1144remobilised in ⸢2[air,]air, air: air:
2⸣ [air,]air, air: air:
B⸣
a past
15 which possibly ⧼no longer⧽no longer had ceased to exist
as a present⸢2as a present2⸣
1145 before its
16probable
⸢C
16probable
C⸣
spectators had entered
actual⸢CactualC⸣
present⸢2present2⸣
existence.
1146
17
Was he more convinced of the esthetic value of the spectacle?
1147
18Indubitably in consequence of the reiterated examples of poets in the
1148
19 delirium of ⧼love i⧽love i the frenzy of ⸢1[love]love attachment attachment
1⸣ [love]love attachment attachment
or in the abasement of
20 rejection
1149 invoking ⸢1[resplendent]resplendent ardent sympathetic ardent sympathetic
1⸣ [resplendent]resplendent ardent sympathetic ardent sympathetic
constellations or the
21 frigidity of the ∧⧼
△
⧽
△
∧⧼
△
⧽
△
⧼ea⧽ea
∧⧼satellite.⧽satellite. satellite of
1150 their ⧼e⧽e
planet.
satellite of
1150 their ⧼e⧽e
planet.
∧⧼satellite.⧽satellite. satellite of
1150 their ⧼e⧽e
planet.
satellite of
1150 their ⧼e⧽e
planet.
1151
22
Did he then accept as an article of belief⸢Cas an article of beliefC⸣ the theory of astrological
1152 ⸢C[influences?]influences?
23
influences upon sublunary disasters?
23
influences upon sublunary disasters? C⸣ [influences?]influences?
23
influences upon sublunary disasters?
23
influences upon sublunary disasters?
1153
24It seemed to him as∧as∧ possible of proof as of confutation and
25 the
1154 nomenclature employed in its ⧼geographi⧽geographi
⸢B[semelographical]semelographical
26selenographical
26selenographical
B⸣ [semelographical]semelographical
26selenographical
26selenographical
charts as attributable to
1155 verifiable intuition as to
27
⧼erroneous⧽erroneous fallacious analogy: the lake of dreams, the sea
of
1156 rains, the
28 gulf of dews, the ocean of fecundity.
1157
1
What special ⧼affinity⧽affinity affinities appeared to him to exist between the moon
2
and
1158 woman?
1159
3Her antiquity in preceding and surviving successive
tellurian⸢1tellurian1⸣
⸢1[generations,]generations,
4 generations:
4 generations:
1⸣ [generations,]generations,
4 generations:
4 generations:
1160 her nocturnal ⸢1[predominance,]predominance,
5predominance:
5predominance:
1⸣ [predominance,]predominance,
5predominance:
5predominance:
her satellitic ⸢1[dependence,]dependence, dependence: dependence:
1⸣ [dependence,]dependence, dependence: dependence:
her luminary
1161
⸢1[reflection,]reflection,
6 reflection:
6 reflection:
1⸣ [reflection,]reflection,
6 reflection:
6 reflection:
her constancy under all her phases, rising
and
7 setting by her
1162 appointed times, waxing and ⸢1[waning,]waning, waning: waning:
1⸣ [waning,]waning, waning: waning:
the
8forced⸢(B)
8forced(B)⸣
invariability of her ⸢1[aspect,]aspect, aspect: aspect:
1⸣ [aspect,]aspect, aspect: aspect:
1163
her indeterminate
9response to inaffirmative ⸢1[interrogation,]interrogation, interrogation: interrogation:
1⸣ [interrogation,]interrogation, interrogation: interrogation:
⸢C
her indeterminate
9response to inaffirmative ⸢1[interrogation,]interrogation, interrogation: interrogation:
1⸣ [interrogation,]interrogation, interrogation: interrogation:
C⸣
her potency
10 over
1164 effluent and refluent ⸢1[waters,]waters, waters: waters:
1⸣ [waters,]waters, waters: waters:
her power to enamour, to
11mortify, to invest
1165 with beauty,∧to invest
1165 with beauty,∧ to render insane, to incite to and aid ⸢1[delinquency,]delinquency,
12 delinquency:
12 delinquency:
1⸣ [delinquency,]delinquency,
12 delinquency:
12 delinquency:
⸢Cher power to enamour, to
11mortify, to invest
1165 with beauty,∧to invest
1165 with beauty,∧ to render insane, to incite to and aid ⸢1[delinquency,]delinquency,
12 delinquency:
12 delinquency:
1⸣ [delinquency,]delinquency,
12 delinquency:
12 delinquency:
C⸣
the tranquil
1166 inscrutability of her ⸢1[visage,]visage,
13 visage:
13 visage:
1⸣ [visage,]visage,
13 visage:
13 visage:
the terribility of her isolated dominant
1167
implacable∧
implacable∧
14resplendent ⸢1[propinquity,]propinquity, propinquity: propinquity:
1⸣ [propinquity,]propinquity, propinquity: propinquity:
⸢Bthe terribility of her isolated dominant
1167
implacable∧
implacable∧
14resplendent ⸢1[propinquity,]propinquity, propinquity: propinquity:
1⸣ [propinquity,]propinquity, propinquity: propinquity:
B⸣
her omens of tempest and of ⸢1[calm,]calm,
15 calm:
15 calm:
1⸣ [calm,]calm,
15 calm:
15 calm:
the
1168 stimulation of her light, her motion and her ⸢1[presence,]presence,
16 presence:
16 presence:
1⸣ [presence,]presence,
16 presence:
16 presence:
the admonition of her
1169 craters, her arid seas, her
17 silence: her splendour, when ⸢1[visible,]visible, visible: visible:
1⸣ [visible,]visible, visible: visible:
her
1170attraction,
when
18 invisible.
1171
19
What visible luminous sign attracted Bloom's, who attracted Stephen's,
1172
20
gaze?
1173
21
∧⧼The⧽The In the second storey (rere) of his (Bloom's)
house the
In the second storey (rere) of his (Bloom's)
house the
∧⧼The⧽The In the second storey (rere) of his (Bloom's)
house the
In the second storey (rere) of his (Bloom's)
house the
light of a
22 paraffin oil
1174 lamp with oblique shade projected on a screen of roller blind
23 supplied by
1175 Frank O'Hara, window blind, curtain pole and revolving
24shutter⸢1
24shutter1⸣
1176 manufacturer, 16 Aungier street.
1177
25
How did he elucidate the mystery of an invisible attractive⸢2attractive2⸣ person, his
26
wife
1178 Marion (Molly) Bloom, ⸢C[indicated]indicated denoted denoted C⸣ [indicated]indicated denoted denoted by a visible ⸢2[vigilant
27
luminous ]vigilant
27
luminous splendid splendid 2⸣ [vigilant
27
luminous ]vigilant
27
luminous splendid splendid sign, a lamp?
1179
28With indirect and direct verbal allusions or affirmations: with subdued
1180
29 affection and admiration: with description:
with impediment:
with
1181
30 suggestion.
1182
1
Both then were silent?
1183
2Silent, each contemplating the other in both mirrors of the
reciprocal⸢3reciprocal3⸣
3 flesh
1184 of
⸢3[his nothis]his nothis theirhisnothis theirhisnothis
3⸣ [his nothis]his nothis theirhisnothis theirhisnothis
⸢2
⸢3[his nothis]his nothis theirhisnothis theirhisnothis
3⸣ [his nothis]his nothis theirhisnothis theirhisnothis
2⸣
fellowfaces.
1185
4
Were they indefinitely inactive?
1186
5At Stephen's suggestion, at Bloom's instigation both, first Stephen, then
1187
6 Bloom, in penumbra urinated, their sides contiguous, their organs of
1188
7 micturition reciprocally rendered invisible by manual circumposition, their
1189
8 gazes, first Bloom's, then Stephen's, elevated to the projected luminous and
1190
9 semiluminous shadow.
1191
10
Similarly?
1192
11The trajectories of their, first sequent, then simultaneous, urinations were
1193
12 dissimilar: Bloom's longer, less irruent, ∧⧼a⧽a in the incomplete>incomplete< form
13 of the in the incomplete>incomplete< form
13 of the
∧⧼a⧽a in the incomplete>incomplete< form
13 of the in the incomplete>incomplete< form
13 of the
1194 bifurcated ∧⧼antepult⧽antepult
>⧼antepenultimate⧽antepenultimate penultimate penultimate
<⧼antepenultimate⧽antepenultimate penultimate penultimate
>⧼antepenultimate⧽antepenultimate penultimate penultimate
<⧼antepenultimate⧽antepenultimate penultimate penultimate
∧⧼antepult⧽antepult
>⧼antepenultimate⧽antepenultimate penultimate penultimate
<⧼antepenultimate⧽antepenultimate penultimate penultimate
>⧼antepenultimate⧽antepenultimate penultimate penultimate
<⧼antepenultimate⧽antepenultimate penultimate penultimate
14alphabetical⸢1
14alphabetical1⸣
letter,
who in his ultimate year at High
1195 School (1880) had
15 been capable of attaining the point of greatest altitude
1196 against the whole
16concurrent⸢2
16concurrent2⸣
strength of the institution,
210 scholars:
1197 Stephen's higher,
17 more sibilant, who in the ultimate hours of the previous
1198 day had augmented
18 by
diuretic⸢2diuretic2⸣
consumption an insistent vesical
pressure.
1199
19
What different problems presented themselves to each concerning the
1200
20
invisible audible collateral⸢BcollateralB⸣ organ of the other?
1201
21To Bloom: the problems of irritability, tumescence, rigidity, reactivity,
1202
22 dimension, sanitariness, pilosity.
1203
23
To
Stephen: the problem of the sacerdotal ⧼integra⌷
⧽integra⌷
integrity of Jesus
24circumcised
(1
1204January, holiday of obligation to hear mass and abstain
25 from unnecessary
1205 servile work) and the problem as to whether the divine
26 prepuce, the carnal
1206 bridal ring of the holy∧holy∧ Roman catholic apostolic
27 church, conserved in
1207 Calcata, were deserving of simple hyperduly or of
28 the ⸢2[4th]4th fourth fourth
2⸣ [4th]4th fourth fourth
degree of
1208 latria accorded to the abscission of
such⸢BsuchB⸣
29 divine
excrescences as⸢Bexcrescences asB⸣
hair and
1209 toenails.
1210
1
What celestial sign was by both simultaneously observed?
1211
2A star precipitated with great apparent velocity
across the firmament⸢1across the firmament1⸣
3 from
1212 Vega in the Lyre above the zenith beyond the stargroup of the Tress of
1213
4 Berenice towards the zodiacal sign of Leo.
1210
1
What celestial sign was by both simultaneously observed?
1211
2A star precipitated with great apparent velocity
across the firmament⸢1across the firmament1⸣
3 from
1212 Vega in the Lyre above the zenith beyond the stargroup of the Tress of
1213
4 Berenice towards the zodiacal sign of Leo.
1214
5
How did the centripetal remainer afford egress to the centrifugal
6
departer?
1215
7By inserting the barrel of an arruginated male key in the hole of an unstable
1216
8 female lock, obtaining a purchase on the ⸢1[handle]handle bow bow
1⸣ [handle]handle bow bow
of the key and
9 turning its
1217 wards from right to left, withdrawing a bolt from its staple,
10 pulling inward
1218 spasmodically an obsolescent unhinged door and revealing
11 an aperture for
1219 free egress and free ingress.
1214
5
How did the centripetal remainer afford egress to the centrifugal
6
departer?
1215
7By inserting the barrel of an arruginated male key in the hole of an unstable
1216
8 female lock, obtaining a purchase on the ⸢1[handle]handle bow bow
1⸣ [handle]handle bow bow
of the key and
9 turning its
1217 wards from right to left, withdrawing a bolt from its staple,
10 pulling inward
1218 spasmodically an obsolescent unhinged door and revealing
11 an aperture for
1219 free egress and free ingress.
1220
12
How did they take leave, one of the other, in separation?
1221
13Standing perpendicular at the same door and on different sides of its base,
1222
14 the lines of their
valedictory arms, meeting at any point and forming any
1223
15 angle less than the sum of two right angles.
1220
12
How did they take leave, one of the other, in separation?
1221
13Standing perpendicular at the same door and on different sides of its base,
1222
14 the lines of their
valedictory arms, meeting at any point and forming any
1223
15 angle less than the sum of two right angles.
1224
16
What sound accompanied the union of their tangent, the disunion of their
1225
17
(respectively) centrifugal and centripetal hands?
1226
18The sound of the peal of the hour of the night by the chime of the bells in
1227
19 the ⧼s⌷
⧽s⌷
church of Saint George.
1224
16
What sound accompanied the union of their tangent, the disunion of their
1225
17
(respectively) centrifugal and centripetal hands?
1226
18The sound of the peal of the hour of the night by the chime of the bells in
1227
19 the ⧼s⌷
⧽s⌷
church of Saint George.
1228
20
What echoes of that sound were by both and each heard?
1229
21By Stephen:
1230
22
Liliata rutilantium. Turma circumdet.
1231
23
Iubilantium
te virginum. Chorus excipiat.
1232
24By Bloom:
1233
25
Heigho, heigho,
1234
26
Heigho, heigho.
1228
20
What echoes of that sound were by both and each heard?
1229
21By Stephen:
1230
22
Liliata rutilantium. Turma circumdet.
1231
23
Iubilantium
te virginum. Chorus excipiat.
1232
24By Bloom:
1233
25
Heigho, heigho,
1234
26
Heigho, heigho.
1235
1
Where were the several members of the company which with Bloom that
1236
2
day at the bidding of that peal had travelled from ⧼Irishtown⧽Irishtown Sandymount
3
in the south
1237 to Glasnevin in the north?
1238
4Martin Cunningham (in bed), Jack Power (in bed), Simon Dedalus (in
1239
5 bed), Ned Lambert (in bed),
Tom Kernan (in bed),
Joe Hynes (in bed),
1240
6 John Henry Menton (in bed), Bernard Corrigan (in bed), Patsy Dignam (in
1241
7 bed), Paddy Dignam (in the grave).
1235
1
Where were the several members of the company which with Bloom that
1236
2
day at the bidding of that peal had travelled from ⧼Irishtown⧽Irishtown Sandymount
3
in the south
1237 to Glasnevin in the north?
1238
4Martin Cunningham (in bed), Jack Power (in bed), Simon Dedalus (in
1239
5 bed), Ned Lambert (in bed),
Tom Kernan (in bed),
Joe Hynes (in bed),
1240
6 John Henry Menton (in bed), Bernard Corrigan (in bed), Patsy Dignam (in
1241
7 bed), Paddy Dignam (in the grave).
1242
8
Alone, what did Bloom hear?
1243
9The double reverberation of retreating ⸢2[feet,]feet, feet on the heavenborn
10earth, feet on the heavenborn
10earth,
2⸣ [feet,]feet, feet on the heavenborn
10earth, feet on the heavenborn
10earth,
the
1244 double ⸢1[twang]twang vibration vibration
1⸣ [twang]twang vibration vibration
of a jew's harp in the resonant lane.
1245
1242
8
Alone, what did Bloom hear?
1243
9The double reverberation of retreating ⸢2[feet,]feet, feet on the heavenborn
10earth, feet on the heavenborn
10earth,
2⸣ [feet,]feet, feet on the heavenborn
10earth, feet on the heavenborn
10earth,
the
1244 double ⸢1[twang]twang vibration vibration
1⸣ [twang]twang vibration vibration
of a jew's harp in the resonant lane.
1245
11
Alone, what did Bloom feel?
1246
12The cold of interstellar space, thousands of degrees below
freezing point
13or⸢2freezing point
13or2⸣
1247 the
absolute⸢BabsoluteB⸣
zero of Fahrenheit, Centigrade or Réaumur: the
14 incipient
1248 intimations of proximate dawn.
1249
15
Of what did bellchime and handtouch and footstep and lonechill remind
1250
16
him?
1251
17Of companions now in various manners in different places defunct: Percy
1252
18 Apjohn (killed in action, Modder River),
Philip Gilligan (phthisis, Jervis
1253
19 Street hospital), Matthew F. Kane (accidental drowning, Dublin Bay),
1254
20 Philip Moisel (pyemia, Heytesbury street),
Michael Hart
(phthisis,
Mater
1255
21Misericordiae
hospital), Patrick Dignam
(apoplexy, Sandymount).
1249
15
Of what did bellchime and handtouch and footstep and lonechill remind
1250
16
him?
1251
17Of companions now in various manners in different places defunct: Percy
1252
18 Apjohn (killed in action, Modder River),
Philip Gilligan (phthisis, Jervis
1253
19 Street hospital), Matthew F. Kane (accidental drowning, Dublin Bay),
1254
20 Philip Moisel (pyemia, Heytesbury street),
Michael Hart
(phthisis,
Mater
1255
21Misericordiae
hospital), Patrick Dignam
(apoplexy, Sandymount).
1256
22
What prospect of what ⸢2[phenomenon]phenomenon phenomena phenomena 2⸣ [phenomenon]phenomenon phenomena phenomena inclined him to
23
remain?
1257
24The disparition of three final stars, the diffusion of daybreak, the
25 apparition
1258 of a new⧼,⧽,
⸢B[young sun.]young sun. solar disk. solar disk.
B⸣ [young sun.]young sun. solar disk. solar disk.
1259
1
Had he ever been a spectator of ⸢2[that phenomenon?]that phenomenon? those phenomena? those phenomena? 2⸣ [that phenomenon?]that phenomenon? those phenomena? those phenomena?
1260
2Once, in
1887, after a protracted∧protracted∧ performance of charades in the house of
1261
3 Luke Doyle, Kimmage,
he had awaited with patience the apparition of the
1262
4 diurnal phenomenon, seated on a wall, his gaze turned in the direction of
1263
5Mizrach,⸢2
1263
5Mizrach,2⸣
the east.
1264
6
He remembered the initial paraphenomena?
1265
7More active air, a matutinal distant cock, ecclesiastical clocks at various
1266
8 points, avine music, the isolated tread of an early wayfarer, the visible
1267
9 diffusion of the light of an invisible luminous body, the first golden limb of
1268
10 the resurgent ⸢B[sun]sun
∧⧼solar disk⧽solar disk sun sun
∧⧼solar disk⧽solar disk sun sun
∧⧼solar disk⧽solar disk sun sun
∧⧼solar disk⧽solar disk sun sun
B⸣ [sun]sun
∧⧼solar disk⧽solar disk sun sun
∧⧼solar disk⧽solar disk sun sun
∧⧼solar disk⧽solar disk sun sun
∧⧼solar disk⧽solar disk sun sun
perceptible low on the horizon.
1269
11
Did he remain?
1270
12With deep inspiration he returned, retraversing the garden, reentering the
1271
⸢1[passage.]passage.
13
passage,
reclosing the door.
13
passage,
reclosing the door.
1⸣ [passage.]passage.
13
passage,
reclosing the door.
13
passage,
reclosing the door.
With brief suspiration he
14 reassumed the candle,
1272 reascended the stairs, reapproached the door of the
15 front room, hallfloor,
1273 and ⸢1[entered.]entered. reentered. reentered.
1⸣ [entered.]entered. reentered. reentered.
1269
11
Did he remain?
1270
12With deep inspiration he returned, retraversing the garden, reentering the
1271
⸢1[passage.]passage.
13
passage,
reclosing the door.
13
passage,
reclosing the door.
1⸣ [passage.]passage.
13
passage,
reclosing the door.
13
passage,
reclosing the door.
With brief suspiration he
14 reassumed the candle,
1272 reascended the stairs, reapproached the door of the
15 front room, hallfloor,
1273 and ⸢1[entered.]entered. reentered. reentered.
1⸣ [entered.]entered. reentered. reentered.
1274
16
What suddenly arrested his ⧼progress⧽progress ingress?
⸢3[His]His
1275
17 The
1275
17 The
3⸣ [His]His
1275
17 The
1275
17 The
right temporal lobe
of the hollow sphere of his cranium⸢2of the hollow sphere of his cranium2⸣
came
18 into
1276 contact with a solid timber angle where, an infinitesimal but sensible
1277
19 fraction of a second later, a painful sensation was located in consequence of
1278
20antecedent
sensations transmitted and registered.
1279
21
Describe the alterations effected in the disposition of the articles of
1280
22
furniture.
1281
23A sofa upholstered in prune plush had been translocated from opposite the
1282
24 door to the ingleside near the compactly furled Union Jack (an alteration
1283
25 which he had frequently intended to ⸢1[execute),]execute), execute): execute):
1⸣ [execute),]execute), execute): execute):
the blue and
26 white checker
1284 inlaid majolicatopped table had been placed opposite the
27 door in the place
1285 vacated by the prune plush sofa⧼,⧽,: the walnut sideboard
28 (a projecting angle
1286 of which had
momentarily⸢1momentarily1⸣
arrested his ingress) had
29 been moved from its
1287 position beside the door to a more advantageous but
1 more perilous∧more advantageous but
1 more perilous∧ position
1288 in front of the door: two chairs had been moved
2 from right and left of the
1289 ingleside to the position originally occupied by the
3 blue and white checker
1290 inlaid majolicatopped table.
1291
4
Describe them.
1292
5One: a squat stuffed easychair , with
stout arms extended and back slanted
1293
6 to the rere,∧, with
stout arms extended and back slanted
1293
6 to the rere,∧
which,
⧼pushed⧽pushed repelled in recoil,
had
then⸢2then2⸣
upturned an
7 irregular fringe
1294 of a rectangular rug⧼.⧽. and
now⸢2now2⸣
displayed on its amply
8 upholstered seat a
1295 centralised diffusing and diminishing discolouration. The
9 other: a slender
1296 splayfoot chair∧chair∧ of glossy cane curves, placed directly
10 opposite the former,
1297 its frame ⧼bei⧽bei from top to ∧⧼middle⧽middle seat seat
∧⧼middle⧽middle seat seat
and from
11
∧⧼middle⧽middle seat seat
∧⧼middle⧽middle seat seat
to base being varnished dark
1298 brown, its ∧⧼middle⧽middle seat seat
∧⧼middle⧽middle seat seat
12 being a bright circle of white ⧼woven⧽woven plaited rush.
1299
13
What significances attached to these two chairs?
1300
14Significances of similitude, of posture, of symbolism, of circumstantial
1301
15 evidence, of testimonial supermanence.
1299
13
What significances attached to these two chairs?
1300
14Significances of similitude, of posture, of symbolism, of circumstantial
1301
15 evidence, of testimonial supermanence.
1302
16
What occupied the position originally occupied by the sideboard?
1303
17A vertical piano (Cadby) with exposed keyboard, its closed coffin
1304
18 supporting a pair of
long yellow ladies'
gloves and an emerald ashtray
1305
19 containing four consumed matches, a partly consumed ∧⧼cigarette,⧽cigarette,
20cigarette and
20cigarette and
∧⧼cigarette,⧽cigarette,
20cigarette and
20cigarette and
two
1306 discoloured ends of cigarettes, its musicrest supporting
21 the music
in the key
1307 of G natural>in the key
1307 of G natural< for voice and piano∧
in the key
1307 of G natural>in the key
1307 of G natural< for voice and piano∧ of Love's Old
22 Sweet Song (words by G.
1308 Clifton Bingham, composed by J. L. Molloy,
23 sung by Madam Antoinette
1309 Sterling) open at the last page with the final
24 indications
ad
libitum, forte,
1310 pedal,
animato,
sustained
pedal,
ritirando,
25 close.
1311
26
With what sensations did Bloom contemplate in rotation these objects?
1312
27With strain, elevating a candlestick: with pain,
feeling on his right temple a
1313
28
contused∧contused∧ tumescence: with attention, focussing
his gaze on a large dull
1314
1 passive and a
slender bright active:
with solicitation, bending and
1315
2downturning the upturned rugfringe:⸢2with solicitation, bending and
1315
2downturning the upturned rugfringe:2⸣
with amusement, remembering Dr
1316
3 Malachi Mulligan's scheme of colour containing the gradation of green:
1317
4 with pleasure, repeating the words and antecedent act and perceiving
1318
5 through various channels of internal sensibility the consequent and
1319
6 concomitant tepid pleasant diffusion of gradual discolouration.
1320
7
His next proceeding?
1321
8From an open box on the
majolicatopped table he extracted a black
1322
9 diminutive cone, ⸢1[1]1 one one
1⸣ [1]1 one one
inch in height, placed it on its circular base on a
10 small
1323 tin plate, placed his candlestick on the right corner of the mantelpiece,
1324
11 produced from his waistcoat a folded ⸢3[typed letter,]typed letter, page of prospectus
12(illustrated)
1325entitled Agendath Netaim, page of prospectus
12(illustrated)
1325entitled Agendath Netaim,
3⸣ [typed letter,]typed letter, page of prospectus
12(illustrated)
1325entitled Agendath Netaim, page of prospectus
12(illustrated)
1325entitled Agendath Netaim,
unfolded the ⸢3[folded letter,]folded letter,
13same,
13same,
3⸣ [folded letter,]folded letter,
13same,
13same,
examined it superficially,
1326 rolled it into a thin cylinder, ignited it in
14 the candleflame, applied it when
1327 ignited to the apex of the cone till the latter
15 reached the stage of rutilance,
1328
⧼th⧽th placed the cylinder in the basin of the
16 candlestick disposing its unconsumed
1329 part in such a manner as to facilitate
17 total combustion.
1330
18
What ⸢B[followed?]followed? followed this operation? followed this operation? B⸣ [followed?]followed? followed this operation? followed this operation?
⧼
1331
19From⧽
1331
19From
⸢B
⧼
1331
19From⧽
1331
19From
B⸣
The
truncated conical⸢Btruncated conicalB⸣
crater summit of the diminutive volcano
20 emitted a
1332 vertical and serpentine fume redolent of aromatic oriental incense.
1333
21
What homothetic⸢2homothetic2⸣ objects, other than the candlestick, stood on the
1334
22
mantelpiece?
1335
23A timepiece of striated
Connemara⸢BConnemaraB⸣
marble, stopped at the hour of
1336
24 4.46 a.m. on the 21 March 1896, matrimonial gift of Matthew ⸢1[Dillon,]Dillon,
25Dillon:
25Dillon:
1⸣ [Dillon,]Dillon,
25Dillon:
25Dillon:
a
1337 dwarf tree of glacial arborescence under a transparent∧transparent∧
26 bellshade,
1338 matrimonial gift of Luke and Caroline ⸢1[Doyle,]Doyle, Doyle: Doyle:
1⸣ [Doyle,]Doyle, Doyle: Doyle:
an
27 embalmed owl,
1339 matrimonial gift of Alderman John Hooper.
1340
28
What interchanges of looks took place between these three objects and
1341
29
Bloom?
1342
30In the mirror of the ⧼gild⧽gild giltbordered pierglass the undecorated back of
31 the
1343 dwarf tree regarded the upright back of the embalmed owl. Before the
1344
32 mirror the matrimonial gift of Alderman John Hooper with a clear
1345
1 melancholy wise bright motionless compassionate gaze regarded Bloom
1346
2 while Bloom with obscure tranquil profound motionless compassionated
1347
3 gaze regarded the matrimonial gift of Luke and Caroline Doyle.
1348
4
What composite asymmetrical⸢BasymmetricalB⸣ image in the mirror then attracted his
1349
5
attention?
1350
6The image of a solitary
(ipsorelative)⸢B(ipsorelative)B⸣
mutable∧mutable∧
(aliorelative)⸢B(aliorelative)B⸣
man.
1351
7
Why ⸢B[solitary?]solitary? solitary (ipsorelative)? solitary (ipsorelative)? B⸣ [solitary?]solitary? solitary (ipsorelative)? solitary (ipsorelative)?
1352
8
Brothers and sisters had he none.
1353
9
Yet that man's father was his grandfather's son.
1354
10
Why ⸢B[mutable?]mutable? mutable (aliorelative)? mutable (aliorelative)? B⸣ [mutable?]mutable? mutable (aliorelative)? mutable (aliorelative)?
1355
11From infancy to maturity he had resembled
his maternal procreatrix.
12 From
1356 maturity to senility he would increasingly resemble
his paternal
13procreator.
1357
14
What final visual impression was communicated to him by the mirror?
1358
15The optical∧optical∧ reflection of several inverted ⧼books⧽books volumes
∧⧼not⧽not
16improperly
16improperly
∧⧼not⧽not
16improperly
16improperly
arranged and
1359 not∧and
1359 not∧ in the order of their common letters⸢2
∧⧼not⧽not
16improperly
16improperly
∧⧼not⧽not
16improperly
16improperly
arranged and
1359 not∧and
1359 not∧ in the order of their common letters2⸣
with
17 scintillating titles∧with
17 scintillating titles∧ on the two
1360 bookshelves opposite.
1361
18
Catalogue these books.
1362
19Thom's Dublin Post Office Directory,
1886.
1363
20Denis Florence M‘Carthy's
Poetical Works
(copper beechleaf bookmark
21at
1364p. 5).⸢B(copper beechleaf bookmark
21at
1364p. 5).B⸣
1365
22Shakespeare's
Works
(dark crimson morocco, goldtooled).
1366
23The Useful Ready Reckoner
(brown cloth).
1367
24The Secret History of the Court of Charles II
(red ⸢B[cloth)]cloth) cloth, tooled
25binding).
cloth, tooled
25binding).
B⸣ [cloth)]cloth) cloth, tooled
25binding).
cloth, tooled
25binding).
1368
1The Child's Guide
(blue cloth).
1369
2The Beauties of Killarney
(wrappers).
1370
3
When We Were Boys
by William O'Brien M. P. (green cloth, slightly ⸢B[faded)]faded)
4 faded,
1371envelope bookmark at p. 217).
4 faded,
1371envelope bookmark at p. 217).
B⸣ [faded)]faded)
4 faded,
1371envelope bookmark at p. 217).
4 faded,
1371envelope bookmark at p. 217).
1372
5Thoughts from Spinoza
(maroon leather).
1373
6The Story of the Heavens
by Sir Robert Ball (blue cloth).
1374
7Ellis's
Three Trips to Madagascar
(brown cloth, title obliterated).
1375
8
The Stark‐Munro Letters
by A. Conan Doyle, property of
the⸢1the1⸣
City of
1376
9 Dublin Public Library, 106 Capel street,
lent 21 May (Whitsun Eve)
1377
10 1904, due 4 June 1904, 13 days overdue
(black cloth binding, bearing
1378
11 white letternumber
ticket).
1379
12Voyages in China
by “Viator” (recovered with brown paper, red ink
13title).
1380
1373
6The Story of the Heavens
by Sir Robert Ball (blue cloth).
1374
7Ellis's
Three Trips to Madagascar
(brown cloth, title obliterated).
1375
8
The Stark‐Munro Letters
by A. Conan Doyle, property of
the⸢1the1⸣
City of
1376
9 Dublin Public Library, 106 Capel street,
lent 21 May (Whitsun Eve)
1377
10 1904, due 4 June 1904, 13 days overdue
(black cloth binding, bearing
1378
11 white letternumber
ticket).
1379
12Voyages in China
by “Viator” (recovered with brown paper, red ink
13title).
1380
14Philosophy of the Talmud
(sewn pamphlet).
1381
15Lockhart's
Life of Napoleon
(cover wanting, marginal annotations⧼)⧽),
1382
16 minimising victories, aggrandising defeats of the protagonist).
1383
17Soll und Haben
by Gustav Freytag⸢3by Gustav Freytag3⸣
(black ⸢B[boards)]boards) boards,
Gothic
18characters,⸢3Gothic
18characters,3⸣
1384cigarette coupon bookmark at p. 24).
boards,
Gothic
18characters,⸢3Gothic
18characters,3⸣
1384cigarette coupon bookmark at p. 24).
B⸣ [boards)]boards) boards,
Gothic
18characters,⸢3Gothic
18characters,3⸣
1384cigarette coupon bookmark at p. 24).
boards,
Gothic
18characters,⸢3Gothic
18characters,3⸣
1384cigarette coupon bookmark at p. 24).
1385
⸢3[Hardiman's]Hardiman's
19 Hozier's
19 Hozier's
3⸣ [Hardiman's]Hardiman's
19 Hozier's
19 Hozier's
History of the Russo‐Turkish War
(brown
cloth,
202 volumes,⸢3
202 volumes,3⸣
with
1386 gummed label,
Garrison Library,
Governor's Parade,
21 Gibraltar, on ∧⧼reverse⧽reverse verso verso
∧⧼reverse⧽reverse verso verso
1387 of cover).
1388
22Laurence Bloomfield in Ireland by William Allingham (second edition,
1389
23 green cloth, gilt trefoil design, previous owner's name on recto of flyleaf
1390
24erased).
1385
⸢3[Hardiman's]Hardiman's
19 Hozier's
19 Hozier's
3⸣ [Hardiman's]Hardiman's
19 Hozier's
19 Hozier's
History of the Russo‐Turkish War
(brown
cloth,
202 volumes,⸢3
202 volumes,3⸣
with
1386 gummed label,
Garrison Library,
Governor's Parade,
21 Gibraltar, on ∧⧼reverse⧽reverse verso verso
∧⧼reverse⧽reverse verso verso
1387 of cover).
1388
22Laurence Bloomfield in Ireland by William Allingham (second edition,
1389
23 green cloth, gilt trefoil design, previous owner's name on recto of flyleaf
1390
24erased).
1391
25A Handbook of Astronomy
(cover, brown leather, detached, ⧼f⧽f 5
26 plates⧼)⧽),
1392 antique letterpress long primer, author's footnotes ⸢1[pica,]pica,
27nonpareil,
27nonpareil,
1⸣ [pica,]pica,
27nonpareil,
27nonpareil,
marginal
1393 clues
⸢1[brevier).
]brevier).
brevier, captions small pica).
brevier, captions small pica).
1⸣ [brevier).
]brevier).
brevier, captions small pica).
brevier, captions small pica).
1394
28The Hidden Life of Christ
(black boards).
1395
29In the Track of the Sun
(yellow cloth, titlepage
⸢3[missing).
]missing).
missing,
30recurrent title
1396intestation).
missing,
30recurrent title
1396intestation).
3⸣ [missing).
]missing).
missing,
30recurrent title
1396intestation).
missing,
30recurrent title
1396intestation).
1397
1Physical Strength and How to Obtain It
by Eugen
Sandow (red cloth).
1398
2Short but yet Plain Elements of Geometry
written in French by F. Ignat.
1399
3 Pardies and rendered into Engliſh
by John Harris D. D.
London,
4 printed
1400 for R. Knaplock at the Biſhop's
Head,
MDCCXI, with
5 dedicatory epiſtle
1401to his worthy friend Charles Cox, eſquire,
Member
6 of Parliament for the
1402 burgh of Southwark and having ink calligraphed
7 statement on the flyleaf
1403 certifying that the book was the property of
8 Michael Gallagher, dated
1404this
10th day of May 1822
and requeſting
the ⸢B[finder,]finder,
9
perſon
who should find it,
9
perſon
who should find it,
B⸣ [finder,]finder,
9
perſon
who should find it,
9
perſon
who should find it,
if
1405 the book should be loſt
or go
10aſtray,
to reſtore
it to Michael Gallagher,
1406carpenter, Dufery
Gate,
11Enniſcorthy,
county Wicklow, the fineſt
place in
1407 the world.
1408
12
What reflections occupied his mind during the process of ⧼rein⧽rein reversion of
13
the
1409 inverted volumes?
1410
14The necessity of order, a place for everything and everything in its
place:
1411
15 the deficient appreciation of literature possessed by females: the incongruity
1412
16 of an apple incuneated in a tumbler and of an umbrella inclined in a
1413
17
⧼closestool,⧽closestool, closestool: the insecurity of hiding any secret document
18 behind, beneath or
1414 between the pages of a book.
1415
19
Which volume was the largest in bulk?
⸢3[Hardiman's]Hardiman's
1416
20 Hozier's
1416
20 Hozier's
3⸣ [Hardiman's]Hardiman's
1416
20 Hozier's
1416
20 Hozier's
History
of the Russo‐Turkish War.
1417
1415
19
Which volume was the largest in bulk?
⸢3[Hardiman's]Hardiman's
1416
20 Hozier's
1416
20 Hozier's
3⸣ [Hardiman's]Hardiman's
1416
20 Hozier's
1416
20 Hozier's
History
of the Russo‐Turkish War.
1417
21
What among other data did the second volume of the work in question
1418
22
contain?
1419
23The name of a decisive battle (forgotten), frequently remembered by a
1420
24 decisive officer, major Brian Cooper Tweedy (remembered).
21
What among other data did the second volume of the work in question
1418
22
contain?
1419
23The name of a decisive battle (forgotten), frequently remembered by a
1420
24 decisive officer, major Brian Cooper Tweedy (remembered).
1421
1
Why, firstly and secondly, did he not consult the work in question?
1422
2Firstly, in order to exercise mnemotechnic: secondly, because after an
1423
3 interval of amnesia, when , seated
at the central table,∧, seated
at the central table,∧ about to consult the
1424
4 work in question, he remembered by mnemotechnic the name of the
1425
5 military ⧼engagement:⧽engagement: engagement, Plevna.
1426
6
What caused him consolation in his sitting posture?
1427
7The candour, nudity, pose, tranquility,
youth, grace, sex, counsel of a statue
1428
8 erect in the centre of the table, an image of Narcissus purchased by auction
1429
9 from P. A. Wren, 9 Bachelor's Walk.
1426
6
What caused him consolation in his sitting posture?
1427
7The candour, nudity, pose, tranquility,
youth, grace, sex, counsel of a statue
1428
8 erect in the centre of the table, an image of Narcissus purchased by auction
1429
9 from P. A. Wren, 9 Bachelor's Walk.
1430
10
What ⧼irr⧽irr caused him irritation in his sitting posture?
1431
11Inhibitory pressure of collar (size 17) and waistcoat (5 buttons), two
1432
12 articles of clothing superfluous in the costume of mature males and inelastic
1433
13 to alterations of mass by expansion.
1434
14
How was the irritation allayed?
1435
15He removed his collar, with contained black necktie and collapsible stud,
1436
16 from his neck to a position on the left of the table. He unbuttoned
1437
17 successively in reversed direction∧in reversed direction∧ waistcoat, trousers, shirt and vest along
1438
18 the medial line of irregular incrispated black hairs
extending in triangular
1439
19 convergence from the pelvic basin over the circumference of the abdomen
1440
20 and umbilicular fossicle along the medial line of nodes to the intersection of
1441
21 the sixth pectoral vertebrae,
thence produced both ways at right angles
22 and
1442 terminating in circles described about two equidistant points, right and
23 left,
1443 on the summits of the mammary prominences.
He unbraced
24successively
1444each of six minus one braced trouser buttons, arranged in
25pairs, of which
1445one incomplete.⸢2He unbraced
24successively
1444each of six minus one braced trouser buttons, arranged in
25pairs, of which
1445one incomplete.2⸣
1446
26
What involuntary actions followed?
1447
27He compressed between 2 fingers the flesh circumjacent to a cicatrice in
28 the
1448 left infracostal region below the diaphragm∧in
28 the
1448 left infracostal region below the diaphragm∧ resulting from a sting
29 inflicted 2
1449 weeks and 3 days previously (23 May 1904) by a bee. He
1 scratched
1450
imprecisely∧imprecisely∧ with his right hand, though insensible of prurition,
2 various
1451 points and surfaces of his partly exposed,
wholly abluted skin. He
3 inserted
1452 his left hand into the left lower pocket of his waistcoat and
4 extracted and
1453 replaced ⧼a shill⧽a shill a silver coin (1 shilling), placed there
5 (presumably) on the occasion
1454
(17
October 1903)∧
(17
October 1903)∧ of the interment of
6 Mrs Emily Sinico, Sydney Parade.
1455
7
Compile the budget for 16 June 1904.
1456 ⸢1[ Debtor ] Debtor
8
Debit
8
Debit 1⸣ [ Debtor ] Debtor
8
Debit
8
Debit Credit
1457
9
£ - s - d £ - s - d
1458
10
1 Pork kidney 0 - 0 - 3 Cash in Hand 0 - 4 - 9
1459
11
1 Copy Freeman's Journal 0 - 0 - 1 Commission recḍ Freeman's Journal 1 - 7 - 6
1460
12
1 Bath and Gratification 0 - 1 - 6 Loan (Stephen Dedalus) ⸢2[1 - 11 - 0]1 - 11 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 2⸣ [1 - 11 - 0]1 - 11 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 1 - 7 - 0
1461
13
Tramfare 0 - 0 - 1
1462
14
1 In Memoriam Patrick Dignam 0 - 5 - 0 ⸢3
14
1 In Memoriam Patrick Dignam 0 - 5 - 0 3⸣
1463
15
2 Banbury cakes 0 - 0 - 1
1464
16
1 Lunch 0 - 0 - 7
1465
17
1 Renewal fee for book 0 - 1 - 0
1466
18
1 Packet Notepaper and Envelopes 0 - 0 - 2
1467
19
1 Dinner and Gratification 0 - 2 - 0
1468
20
1 Postal Order and Stamp 0 - 2 - 8
1469
21
Tramfare 0 - 0 - 1
1470
22
1 Pig's Foot 0 - 0 - 4
1471
23
1 Sheep's Trotter 0 - 0 - 3
1472
24
1 Cake Fry's Plain Chocolate 0 - 1 - 0
1473
25
1 Square Soda Bread 0 - 0 - 4 ⸢C
22
1 Pig's Foot 0 - 0 - 4
1471
23
1 Sheep's Trotter 0 - 0 - 3
1472
24
1 Cake Fry's Plain Chocolate 0 - 1 - 0
1473
25
1 Square Soda Bread 0 - 0 - 4 C⸣
1474
26
1 Coffee and Bun 0 - 0 - 4
1475
27
Loan (Stephen Dedalus) refunded ⸢2[1 - 11 - 0]1 - 11 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 2⸣ [1 - 11 - 0]1 - 11 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 1 - 7 - 0
1476
28
Balance ⸢C[1 - 3 - 5]1 - 3 - 5 ⸢3[ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 3⸣ [ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 ⸢3[ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 3⸣ [ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 C⸣ [1 - 3 - 5]1 - 3 - 5 ⸢3[ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 3⸣ [ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 ⸢3[ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 3⸣ [ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6
1477
30
1478
31
£ ⸢2[3 - 3 - 3]3 - 3 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2⸣ [3 - 3 - 3]3 - 3 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 £ ⸢2[3 - 3 - 3]3 - 3 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2⸣ [3 - 3 - 3]3 - 3 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 ⸢B
1455
7
Compile the budget for 16 June 1904.
1456 ⸢1[ Debtor ] Debtor
8
Debit
8
Debit 1⸣ [ Debtor ] Debtor
8
Debit
8
Debit Credit
1457
9
£ - s - d £ - s - d
1458
10
1 Pork kidney 0 - 0 - 3 Cash in Hand 0 - 4 - 9
1459
11
1 Copy Freeman's Journal 0 - 0 - 1 Commission recḍ Freeman's Journal 1 - 7 - 6
1460
12
1 Bath and Gratification 0 - 1 - 6 Loan (Stephen Dedalus) ⸢2[1 - 11 - 0]1 - 11 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 2⸣ [1 - 11 - 0]1 - 11 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 1 - 7 - 0
1461
13
Tramfare 0 - 0 - 1
1462
14
1 In Memoriam Patrick Dignam 0 - 5 - 0 ⸢3
14
1 In Memoriam Patrick Dignam 0 - 5 - 0 3⸣
1463
15
2 Banbury cakes 0 - 0 - 1
1464
16
1 Lunch 0 - 0 - 7
1465
17
1 Renewal fee for book 0 - 1 - 0
1466
18
1 Packet Notepaper and Envelopes 0 - 0 - 2
1467
19
1 Dinner and Gratification 0 - 2 - 0
1468
20
1 Postal Order and Stamp 0 - 2 - 8
1469
21
Tramfare 0 - 0 - 1
1470
22
1 Pig's Foot 0 - 0 - 4
1471
23
1 Sheep's Trotter 0 - 0 - 3
1472
24
1 Cake Fry's Plain Chocolate 0 - 1 - 0
1473
25
1 Square Soda Bread 0 - 0 - 4 ⸢C
22
1 Pig's Foot 0 - 0 - 4
1471
23
1 Sheep's Trotter 0 - 0 - 3
1472
24
1 Cake Fry's Plain Chocolate 0 - 1 - 0
1473
25
1 Square Soda Bread 0 - 0 - 4 C⸣
1474
26
1 Coffee and Bun 0 - 0 - 4
1475
27
Loan (Stephen Dedalus) refunded ⸢2[1 - 11 - 0]1 - 11 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 2⸣ [1 - 11 - 0]1 - 11 - 0 1 - 7 - 0 1 - 7 - 0
1476
28
Balance ⸢C[1 - 3 - 5]1 - 3 - 5 ⸢3[ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 3⸣ [ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 ⸢3[ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 3⸣ [ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 C⸣ [1 - 3 - 5]1 - 3 - 5 ⸢3[ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 3⸣ [ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 ⸢3[ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 3⸣ [ 1 - 1 - 6 ] 1 - 1 - 6 0 - 16 - 6 0 - 16 - 6
1477
30
1478
31
£ ⸢2[3 - 3 - 3]3 - 3 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2⸣ [3 - 3 - 3]3 - 3 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 £ ⸢2[3 - 3 - 3]3 - 3 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2⸣ [3 - 3 - 3]3 - 3 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 2 - 19 - 3 B⸣
1479
32
Did the process of divestiture continue?
1480
33Sensible of a benignant persistent
ache in his footsoles he extended his foot
1481
34 to one side and observed the creases, protuberances and salient points
1482
35 caused by foot pressure in the course of walking repeatedly in ⧼v⧽v several
1483
36 different directions, then, inclined, he disnoded the laceknots, unhooked
1484
1 and loosened the laces, took off each of his two boots for the second time,
1485
2 detached the partially moistened ⧼s⧽s right sock through the fore part of
3 which
1486 the nail of his great toe had again effracted, raised his right foot
4 and, having
1487 unhooked a purple elastic sock suspender, took off his right
5 sock, placed his
1488
∧⧼right unclothed⧽right unclothed unclothed right unclothed right
∧⧼right unclothed⧽right unclothed unclothed right unclothed right
foot on the ⧼ledge⧽ledge
6 margin of the seat of his chair, picked at and
1489 gently lacerated the
7 protruding part of the great toenail, raised the part
1490 lacerated to his nostrils
8 and inhaled the odour of the quick, then,
with
1491satisfaction,
threw away the
9 lacerated ungual
fragment.
1492
10
Why with satisfaction?
1493
11Because the odour inhaled corresponded to other odours inhaled of other
1494
12ungual
fragments, picked and lacerated by Master Bloom, pupil of Mrs
1495
⸢B[Jowett's]Jowett's
13 Ellis's
13 Ellis's
B⸣ [Jowett's]Jowett's
13 Ellis's
13 Ellis's
juvenile school, patiently each night in the act of brief∧brief∧
14 genuflection
1496 and ∧⧼
△
⧽
△
∧⧼
△
⧽
△
nocturnal prayer and ambitious meditation.∧and ambitious meditation.∧
1497
15
In what ultimate ambition had all concurrent and consecutive ambitions
1498
16
now coalesced?
∧⧼
1499
17An⧽
1499
17An Not ⧼an⧽an to inherit
by right of primogeniture, gavelkind or borough
18English,⸢3by right of primogeniture, gavelkind or borough
18English,3⸣
or
1500possess
in perpetuity an
Not ⧼an⧽an to inherit
by right of primogeniture, gavelkind or borough
18English,⸢3by right of primogeniture, gavelkind or borough
18English,3⸣
or
1500possess
in perpetuity an
∧⧼
1499
17An⧽
1499
17An Not ⧼an⧽an to inherit
by right of primogeniture, gavelkind or borough
18English,⸢3by right of primogeniture, gavelkind or borough
18English,3⸣
or
1500possess
in perpetuity an
Not ⧼an⧽an to inherit
by right of primogeniture, gavelkind or borough
18English,⸢3by right of primogeniture, gavelkind or borough
18English,3⸣
or
1500possess
in perpetuity an
extensive demesne of ∧⧼100⧽100 a
19 sufficient number of a
19 sufficient number of
∧⧼100⧽100 a
19 sufficient number of a
19 sufficient number of
acres,
1501 roods and ⸢B[perches]perches perches, statute land ⸢3[measure,]measure,
20 measure (valuation £42),
20 measure (valuation £42),
3⸣ [measure,]measure,
20 measure (valuation £42),
20 measure (valuation £42),
of grazing turbary perches, statute land ⸢3[measure,]measure,
20 measure (valuation £42),
20 measure (valuation £42),
3⸣ [measure,]measure,
20 measure (valuation £42),
20 measure (valuation £42),
of grazing turbary
B⸣ [perches]perches perches, statute land ⸢3[measure,]measure,
20 measure (valuation £42),
20 measure (valuation £42),
3⸣ [measure,]measure,
20 measure (valuation £42),
20 measure (valuation £42),
of grazing turbary perches, statute land ⸢3[measure,]measure,
20 measure (valuation £42),
20 measure (valuation £42),
3⸣ [measure,]measure,
20 measure (valuation £42),
20 measure (valuation £42),
of grazing turbary
1502
∧⧼or⧽or
21surrounding a
21surrounding a
∧⧼or⧽or
21surrounding a
21surrounding a
baronial hall with gatelodge and carriage drive nor, on the
1503
22 other hand, a terracehouse or semidetached villa, described as Rus in Urbe
1504
23 or Qui si
sana,
but to purchase by private treaty in fee simple a thatched
1505
24
bungalowshaped∧bungalowshaped∧
2 storey⸢B2 storeyB⸣
dwellinghouse of southerly aspect,
25surmounted
1506by vane⧼,⧽, and lightning conductor,⸢1
25surmounted
1506by vane⧼,⧽, and lightning conductor,1⸣
connected with the
26earth,⸢2connected with the
26earth,2⸣
with porch
1507 covered by parasitic plants (ivy or Virginia creeper),
27halldoor, olive green,
1508with smart carriage finish and neat doorbrasses,
28stucco front with gilt
1509tracery at eaves and gable,⸢B
27halldoor, olive green,
1508with smart carriage finish and neat doorbrasses,
28stucco front with gilt
1509tracery at eaves and gable,B⸣
rising, if possible, upon a
29 gentle eminence
with
1510agreeable prospect from balcony with stone pillar
30parapet⸢Bwith
1510agreeable prospect from balcony with stone pillar
30parapetB⸣
over ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
unoccupied
1511and unoccupyable interjacent pastures⸢1over ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
unoccupied
1511and unoccupyable interjacent pastures1⸣
and
31 standing in 5 or 6 acres of its
1512 own ground,∧with porch
1507 covered by parasitic plants (ivy or Virginia creeper),
27halldoor, olive green,
1508with smart carriage finish and neat doorbrasses,
28stucco front with gilt
1509tracery at eaves and gable,⸢B
27halldoor, olive green,
1508with smart carriage finish and neat doorbrasses,
28stucco front with gilt
1509tracery at eaves and gable,B⸣
rising, if possible, upon a
29 gentle eminence
with
1510agreeable prospect from balcony with stone pillar
30parapet⸢Bwith
1510agreeable prospect from balcony with stone pillar
30parapetB⸣
over ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
unoccupied
1511and unoccupyable interjacent pastures⸢1over ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
unoccupied
1511and unoccupyable interjacent pastures1⸣
and
31 standing in 5 or 6 acres of its
1512 own ground,∧
at such a distance from the
32nearest public thoroughfare as to
1513render its houselights visible at night⧼,⧽,
1above and through a quickset
1514
hornbeam⸢1
hornbeam1⸣
hedge of topiary cutting,⸢Bat such a distance from the
32nearest public thoroughfare as to
1513render its houselights visible at night⧼,⧽,
1above and through a quickset
1514
hornbeam⸢1
hornbeam1⸣
hedge of topiary cutting,B⸣
2 situate at a given point not less than 1
1515 statute mile from the periphery of the
3 metropolis, within a time limit of not
1516 more than
15 minutes from tram or
4 train >⧼line, rising, if possible, upon a gentle eminen⧽line, rising, if possible, upon a gentle eminen
line
line
<⧼line, rising, if possible, upon a gentle eminen⧽line, rising, if possible, upon a gentle eminen
line
line
∧within a time limit of not
1516 more than
15 minutes from tram or
4 train >⧼line, rising, if possible, upon a gentle eminen⧽line, rising, if possible, upon a gentle eminen
line
line
<⧼line, rising, if possible, upon a gentle eminen⧽line, rising, if possible, upon a gentle eminen
line
line
∧
(e.g.,
5 Dundrum, south, or
1517 Sutton, north, both localities∧localities∧ equally reported by
6 trial to resemble
the
1518 terrestrial poles in being ⸢⧼mild and⧽mild and
⸣ ⧼mild and⧽mild and
favourable
7 climates for phthisical
subjects), ⸢⧼standing in 5 or 6 acres of its own
8 ground,⧽standing in 5 or 6 acres of its own
8 ground,
⸣ ⧼standing in 5 or 6 acres of its own
8 ground,⧽standing in 5 or 6 acres of its own
8 ground,
the
1519 premises to be held under feefarm grant,
lease 999 years, the
9messuage
to
1520 consist of 1 ⸢B[drawingroom,]drawingroom, drawingroom with baywindow
10(2 lancets), thermometer
1521affixed, drawingroom with baywindow
10(2 lancets), thermometer
1521affixed,
B⸣ [drawingroom,]drawingroom, drawingroom with baywindow
10(2 lancets), thermometer
1521affixed, drawingroom with baywindow
10(2 lancets), thermometer
1521affixed,
1 sittingroom,
4 bedrooms, ⸢1[bathroom
11(hot and cold),]bathroom
11(hot and cold), 2 servants'
rooms, 2 servants'
rooms,
1⸣ [bathroom
11(hot and cold),]bathroom
11(hot and cold), 2 servants'
rooms, 2 servants'
rooms,
tiled kitchen with
1522 close range and
12 scullery, lounge hall fitted with linen wallpresses,
fumed
1523oak sectional
13bookcase containing the Encyclopaedia Britannica
and New
1524Century
14Dictionary,
⸢Cfumed
1523oak sectional
13bookcase containing the Encyclopaedia Britannica
and New
1524Century
14Dictionary,
C⸣
transverse obsolete∧obsolete∧ medieval and oriental weapons,⸢Btransverse obsolete∧obsolete∧ medieval and oriental weapons,B⸣
1525
15 dinner ⸢B[gong]gong gong, alabaster
lamp,
∧lamp,
∧
bowl pendant,
vulcanite
16automatic∧
16automatic∧ telephone
1526receiver with adjacent directory,
⸢1vulcanite
16automatic∧
16automatic∧ telephone
1526receiver with adjacent directory,
1⸣
∧⧼m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,⧽m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
∧⧼m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,⧽m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
gong, alabaster
lamp,
∧lamp,
∧
bowl pendant,
vulcanite
16automatic∧
16automatic∧ telephone
1526receiver with adjacent directory,
⸢1vulcanite
16automatic∧
16automatic∧ telephone
1526receiver with adjacent directory,
1⸣
∧⧼m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,⧽m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
∧⧼m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,⧽m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
B⸣ [gong]gong gong, alabaster
lamp,
∧lamp,
∧
bowl pendant,
vulcanite
16automatic∧
16automatic∧ telephone
1526receiver with adjacent directory,
⸢1vulcanite
16automatic∧
16automatic∧ telephone
1526receiver with adjacent directory,
1⸣
∧⧼m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,⧽m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
∧⧼m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,⧽m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
gong, alabaster
lamp,
∧lamp,
∧
bowl pendant,
vulcanite
16automatic∧
16automatic∧ telephone
1526receiver with adjacent directory,
⸢1vulcanite
16automatic∧
16automatic∧ telephone
1526receiver with adjacent directory,
1⸣
∧⧼m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,⧽m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
∧⧼m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,⧽m⌷l
17
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
∧⧼timepiece⧽timepiece clock, clock,
guaranteed timekeeper, with cathedraltoned chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
18handtufted
Axminster⸢1Axminster1⸣
carpet with cream
1527 ground and trellis border,
19
⧼lootable⧽lootable loo table with pillar and claw legs, hearth with
1528
massive⸢1
massive1⸣
20 firebrasses and ormolu mantel
chronometer⸢1chronometer1⸣
clock, guaranteed
1529 timekeeper
21 with cathedral chime,
barometer with hygrographic chart,⸢Cbarometer with hygrographic chart,C⸣
1530
[B
and]
and
22 comfortable
lounge settees and⸢1lounge settees and1⸣
corner
⧼
△
⧽
△
⸢B
⧼
△
⧽
△
B⸣
∧⧼fitments,⧽fitments,
⸢1[fitments]fitments
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
1⸣ [fitments]fitments
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
and
1532cuspidors⸢Cand
1532cuspidorsC⸣
(club style, ∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
leather, gloss renewable with a
1533 minimum of labour∧with a
1533 minimum of labour∧
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
linseed oil and vinegar)⸢B(club style, ∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
leather, gloss renewable with a
1533 minimum of labour∧with a
1533 minimum of labour∧
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
linseed oil and vinegar)B⸣
and pyramidically
1534 prismatic central
27 chandelier lustre,
⸢1[fitments]fitments
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
1⸣ [fitments]fitments
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
and
1532cuspidors⸢Cand
1532cuspidorsC⸣
(club style, ∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
leather, gloss renewable with a
1533 minimum of labour∧with a
1533 minimum of labour∧
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
linseed oil and vinegar)⸢B(club style, ∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
leather, gloss renewable with a
1533 minimum of labour∧with a
1533 minimum of labour∧
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
linseed oil and vinegar)B⸣
and pyramidically
1534 prismatic central
27 chandelier lustre,
∧⧼fitments,⧽fitments,
⸢1[fitments]fitments
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
1⸣ [fitments]fitments
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
and
1532cuspidors⸢Cand
1532cuspidorsC⸣
(club style, ∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
leather, gloss renewable with a
1533 minimum of labour∧with a
1533 minimum of labour∧
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
linseed oil and vinegar)⸢B(club style, ∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
leather, gloss renewable with a
1533 minimum of labour∧with a
1533 minimum of labour∧
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
linseed oil and vinegar)B⸣
and pyramidically
1534 prismatic central
27 chandelier lustre,
⸢1[fitments]fitments
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
1⸣ [fitments]fitments
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
23fitments, upholstered in ruby plush
1531with good springing and sunk centre,
24three banner Japanese screen
and
1532cuspidors⸢Cand
1532cuspidorsC⸣
(club style, ∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
leather, gloss renewable with a
1533 minimum of labour∧with a
1533 minimum of labour∧
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
linseed oil and vinegar)⸢B(club style, ∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
∧⧼coffee⧽coffee rich
25winecoloured rich
25winecoloured
leather, gloss renewable with a
1533 minimum of labour∧with a
1533 minimum of labour∧
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
∧⧼with⧽with
26by use of
26by use of
linseed oil and vinegar)B⸣
and pyramidically
1534 prismatic central
27 chandelier lustre,
bentwood perch with
fingertame parrot
1535(∧⧼select⧽select
28expurgated
28expurgated
∧⧼select⧽select
28expurgated
28expurgated
language),⸢Cbentwood perch with
fingertame parrot
1535(∧⧼select⧽select
28expurgated
28expurgated
∧⧼select⧽select
28expurgated
28expurgated
language),C⸣
embossed ⧼stucco ceiling with crown⧽stucco ceiling with crown mural
29paper at 10/‐ per dozen with
1536transverse swags of ∧⧼red⧽red carmine carmine
∧⧼red⧽red carmine carmine
floral
30design and top crown frieze, staircase,
1537three
continuous⸢1continuous1⸣
flights at
31successive⸢1
31successive1⸣
right angles, of varnished
cleargrained⸢1cleargrained1⸣
1538
∧⧼
oak⧽
oak oak, treads
32 and risers,
newel,⸢1newel,1⸣
balusters and handrail, oak, treads
32 and risers,
newel,⸢1newel,1⸣
balusters and handrail,
∧⧼
oak⧽
oak oak, treads
32 and risers,
newel,⸢1newel,1⸣
balusters and handrail, oak, treads
32 and risers,
newel,⸢1newel,1⸣
balusters and handrail,
with steppedup panel
1539
⸢1[dado:]dado:
33dado, dressed with camphorated wax:
33dado, dressed with camphorated wax:
1⸣ [dado:]dado:
33dado, dressed with camphorated wax:
33dado, dressed with camphorated wax:
bathroom, hot and ⸢1[cold,]cold, cold
34supply, cold
34supply,
1⸣ [cold,]cold, cold
34supply, cold
34supply,
1540reclining and shower:⸢Bembossed ⧼stucco ceiling with crown⧽stucco ceiling with crown mural
29paper at 10/‐ per dozen with
1536transverse swags of ∧⧼red⧽red carmine carmine
∧⧼red⧽red carmine carmine
floral
30design and top crown frieze, staircase,
1537three
continuous⸢1continuous1⸣
flights at
31successive⸢1
31successive1⸣
right angles, of varnished
cleargrained⸢1cleargrained1⸣
1538
∧⧼
oak⧽
oak oak, treads
32 and risers,
newel,⸢1newel,1⸣
balusters and handrail, oak, treads
32 and risers,
newel,⸢1newel,1⸣
balusters and handrail,
∧⧼
oak⧽
oak oak, treads
32 and risers,
newel,⸢1newel,1⸣
balusters and handrail, oak, treads
32 and risers,
newel,⸢1newel,1⸣
balusters and handrail,
with steppedup panel
1539
⸢1[dado:]dado:
33dado, dressed with camphorated wax:
33dado, dressed with camphorated wax:
1⸣ [dado:]dado:
33dado, dressed with camphorated wax:
33dado, dressed with camphorated wax:
bathroom, hot and ⸢1[cold,]cold, cold
34supply, cold
34supply,
1⸣ [cold,]cold, cold
34supply, cold
34supply,
1540reclining and shower:B⸣
water closet ⸢1[with]with on mezzanine
35provided with opaque
1541singlepane oblong window, on mezzanine
35provided with opaque
1541singlepane oblong window,
1⸣ [with]with on mezzanine
35provided with opaque
1541singlepane oblong window, on mezzanine
35provided with opaque
1541singlepane oblong window,
tipup seat,
bracket
36lamp, brass tierod and
brace,
1542armrests, footstool⸢Cbracket
36lamp, brass tierod and
brace,
1542armrests, footstoolC⸣
and artistic oleograph
1on inner face of ⸢C[door,]door, door: ditto,
1543plain: servants'
apartments with
2separate sanitary and hygienic necessaries
1544for cook, general and
3betweenmaid (salary,
rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,⸢1rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,1⸣
annual bonus
(£1)
⸢1
(£1)
1⸣
1546and retiring
5allowance
(based on the 65 system)⸢1(based on the 65 system)1⸣
after 30 years' service),
door: ditto,
1543plain: servants'
apartments with
2separate sanitary and hygienic necessaries
1544for cook, general and
3betweenmaid (salary,
rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,⸢1rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,1⸣
annual bonus
(£1)
⸢1
(£1)
1⸣
1546and retiring
5allowance
(based on the 65 system)⸢1(based on the 65 system)1⸣
after 30 years' service),
C⸣ [door,]door, door: ditto,
1543plain: servants'
apartments with
2separate sanitary and hygienic necessaries
1544for cook, general and
3betweenmaid (salary,
rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,⸢1rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,1⸣
annual bonus
(£1)
⸢1
(£1)
1⸣
1546and retiring
5allowance
(based on the 65 system)⸢1(based on the 65 system)1⸣
after 30 years' service),
door: ditto,
1543plain: servants'
apartments with
2separate sanitary and hygienic necessaries
1544for cook, general and
3betweenmaid (salary,
rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,⸢1rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,1⸣
annual bonus
(£1)
⸢1
(£1)
1⸣
1546and retiring
5allowance
(based on the 65 system)⸢1(based on the 65 system)1⸣
after 30 years' service),
⸢Band artistic oleograph
1on inner face of ⸢C[door,]door, door: ditto,
1543plain: servants'
apartments with
2separate sanitary and hygienic necessaries
1544for cook, general and
3betweenmaid (salary,
rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,⸢1rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,1⸣
annual bonus
(£1)
⸢1
(£1)
1⸣
1546and retiring
5allowance
(based on the 65 system)⸢1(based on the 65 system)1⸣
after 30 years' service),
door: ditto,
1543plain: servants'
apartments with
2separate sanitary and hygienic necessaries
1544for cook, general and
3betweenmaid (salary,
rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,⸢1rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,1⸣
annual bonus
(£1)
⸢1
(£1)
1⸣
1546and retiring
5allowance
(based on the 65 system)⸢1(based on the 65 system)1⸣
after 30 years' service),
C⸣ [door,]door, door: ditto,
1543plain: servants'
apartments with
2separate sanitary and hygienic necessaries
1544for cook, general and
3betweenmaid (salary,
rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,⸢1rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,1⸣
annual bonus
(£1)
⸢1
(£1)
1⸣
1546and retiring
5allowance
(based on the 65 system)⸢1(based on the 65 system)1⸣
after 30 years' service),
door: ditto,
1543plain: servants'
apartments with
2separate sanitary and hygienic necessaries
1544for cook, general and
3betweenmaid (salary,
rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,⸢1rising by biennial unearned
1545increments of £2, with
4comprehensive fidelity insurance,1⸣
annual bonus
(£1)
⸢1
(£1)
1⸣
1546and retiring
5allowance
(based on the 65 system)⸢1(based on the 65 system)1⸣
after 30 years' service),
B⸣
1547
pantry,
6buttery, larder, refrigerator,⸢1pantry,
6buttery, larder, refrigerator,1⸣
outoffices, coal and wood cellarage
1548 with
7 winebin
(still and sparkling vintages)⸢B(still and sparkling vintages)B⸣
for distinguished guests, if
1549
⸢B[entertained,]entertained,
8 entertained to dinner (evening dress),
8 entertained to dinner (evening dress),
B⸣ [entertained,]entertained,
8 entertained to dinner (evening dress),
8 entertained to dinner (evening dress),
carbon monoxide⸢Ccarbon monoxideC⸣
9 gas
supply⸢3supply3⸣
1550 throughout.
1551
10
What facilities of transit were desirable?
11When citybound frequent connection by train or tram from their
12 respective intermediate station or terminal. When countrybound
13 velocipedes, a chainless freewheel roadster cycle with side basketcar
14 attached, or draught conveyance, a donkey with wicker trap or smart
15 phaeton with good working cob.
1551
10
What facilities of transit were desirable?
11When citybound frequent connection by train or tram from their
12 respective intermediate station or terminal. When countrybound
13 velocipedes, a chainless freewheel roadster cycle with side basketcar
14 attached, or draught conveyance, a donkey with wicker trap or smart
15 phaeton with good working cob.
1551
10
What facilities of transit were desirable?
11When citybound frequent connection by train or tram from their
12 respective intermediate station or terminal. When countrybound
13 velocipedes, a chainless freewheel roadster cycle with side basketcar
14 attached, or draught conveyance, a donkey with wicker trap or smart
15 phaeton with good working cob.
1551
10
What facilities of transit were desirable?
11When citybound frequent connection by train or tram from their
12 respective intermediate station or terminal. When countrybound
13 velocipedes, a chainless freewheel roadster cycle with side basketcar
14 attached, or draught conveyance, a donkey with wicker trap or smart
15 phaeton with good working cob.
16
What additional attractions might the grounds contain?
1552
17As addenda, a tennis and fives court,
a shrubbery,
⸢1a shrubbery,
1⸣
a glass summerhouse
1553
18 with tropical palms, equipped in the best botanical manner, a rockery with
1554
19 waterspray,
a beehive arranged on humane principles, oval ∧⧼flowerpots⧽flowerpots
20flowerbeds in
1555 rectangular grassplots
20flowerbeds in
1555 rectangular grassplots
∧⧼flowerpots⧽flowerpots
20flowerbeds in
1555 rectangular grassplots
20flowerbeds in
1555 rectangular grassplots
set with eccentric ellipses
of scarlet
21and chrome
1556tulips,
⸢Ca beehive arranged on humane principles, oval ∧⧼flowerpots⧽flowerpots
20flowerbeds in
1555 rectangular grassplots
20flowerbeds in
1555 rectangular grassplots
∧⧼flowerpots⧽flowerpots
20flowerbeds in
1555 rectangular grassplots
20flowerbeds in
1555 rectangular grassplots
set with eccentric ellipses
of scarlet
21and chrome
1556tulips,
C⸣
blue scillas,
crocuses, polyanthus, sweet William,
22sweet
pea, lily of
1557the valley
(bulbs
obtainable
from sir James W.
Mackey
23(Limited)
wholesale
1558and retail
seed and bulb merchants
and ⧼nurseryman,⧽nurseryman,
24nurserymen,
agents
for chemical
1559manures, 23 Sackville street,
upper),
⸢1blue scillas,
crocuses, polyanthus, sweet William,
22sweet
pea, lily of
1557the valley
(bulbs
obtainable
from sir James W.
Mackey
23(Limited)
wholesale
1558and retail
seed and bulb merchants
and ⧼nurseryman,⧽nurseryman,
24nurserymen,
agents
for chemical
1559manures, 23 Sackville street,
upper),
1⸣
25 an orchard,
[Ba]a
kitchen garden and
[Ba]a
vinery,
1560
[B
all]
all
protected ∧⧼from⧽from
26against
26against
∧⧼from⧽from
26against
26against
illegal trespassers by glasstopped mural ⸢B[enclosures.]enclosures. enclosures,
27a
1561lumbershed with padlock for various
inventoried⸢1inventoried1⸣
implements. enclosures,
27a
1561lumbershed with padlock for various
inventoried⸢1inventoried1⸣
implements.
B⸣ [enclosures.]enclosures. enclosures,
27a
1561lumbershed with padlock for various
inventoried⸢1inventoried1⸣
implements. enclosures,
27a
1561lumbershed with padlock for various
inventoried⸢1inventoried1⸣
implements.
1562
1
As?
1563
2Eeltraps, lobsterpots, fishingrods, hatchet,
steelyard,⸢2steelyard,2⸣
grindstone,
1564
3 clodcrusher, swatheturner, carriagesack, telescope ladder,
10 tooth rake,⸢110 tooth rake,1⸣
1565
4 washing clogs, haytedder, tumbling rake, billhook, paintpot, brush, hoe and
1566
5 so on.
1562
1
As?
1563
2Eeltraps, lobsterpots, fishingrods, hatchet,
steelyard,⸢2steelyard,2⸣
grindstone,
1564
3 clodcrusher, swatheturner, carriagesack, telescope ladder,
10 tooth rake,⸢110 tooth rake,1⸣
1565
4 washing clogs, haytedder, tumbling rake, billhook, paintpot, brush, hoe and
1566
5 so on.
1567
6
What improvements might be subsequently introduced?
1568
7A rabbitry and fowlrun,
a dovecote,
a botanical∧botanical∧ conservatory,⸢1a botanical∧botanical∧ conservatory,1⸣
2
8hammocks
1569(lady's and gentleman's),⸢Ba dovecote,
a botanical∧botanical∧ conservatory,⸢1a botanical∧botanical∧ conservatory,1⸣
2
8hammocks
1569(lady's and gentleman's),B⸣
a sundial shaded and sheltered by
9 laburnum or
1570 lilac trees, ⸢B[a]a an exotically an exotically
B⸣ [a]a an exotically an exotically
harmonically accorded Japanese
10 tinkle ⸢B[gatebell,]gatebell, gatebell
1571affixed to left lateral gatepost, gatebell
1571affixed to left lateral gatepost,
B⸣ [gatebell,]gatebell, gatebell
1571affixed to left lateral gatepost, gatebell
1571affixed to left lateral gatepost,
a capacious
11 waterbutt,
a lawnmower with
1572side delivery and grassbox,
⸢1a lawnmower with
1572side delivery and grassbox,
1⸣
a
12 lawnsprinkler with hydraulic hose.
1573
13
What facilities of transit were desirable?
1574
14When citybound frequent connection by train or tram from their respective
1575
15 intermediate station or terminal. When countrybound velocipedes,
a
1576
16 chainless freewheel roadster cycle with side basketcar attached, or draught
1577
17 conveyance, a donkey with wicker trap or smart phaeton with good
1578
18 working ⸢2[cob.]cob. solidungular cob (roan gelding , 14 h∧, 14 h∧). solidungular cob (roan gelding , 14 h∧, 14 h∧).
2⸣ [cob.]cob. solidungular cob (roan gelding , 14 h∧, 14 h∧). solidungular cob (roan gelding , 14 h∧, 14 h∧).
1573
13
What facilities of transit were desirable?
1574
14When citybound frequent connection by train or tram from their respective
1575
15 intermediate station or terminal. When countrybound velocipedes,
a
1576
16 chainless freewheel roadster cycle with side basketcar attached, or draught
1577
17 conveyance, a donkey with wicker trap or smart phaeton with good
1578
18 working ⸢2[cob.]cob. solidungular cob (roan gelding , 14 h∧, 14 h∧). solidungular cob (roan gelding , 14 h∧, 14 h∧).
2⸣ [cob.]cob. solidungular cob (roan gelding , 14 h∧, 14 h∧). solidungular cob (roan gelding , 14 h∧, 14 h∧).
1579
19
What might be the name of this erigible or erected⸢2erigible or erected2⸣ residence?
1580
20Bloom Cottage. Saint Leopold's. Flowerville.
1581
21
Could Bloom of 7 Eccles street foresee Bloom of Flowerville?
1582
22In loose allwool garments with Harris tweed cap, price ⸢1[8s/6d,]8s/6d, 8/6, 8/6,
1⸣ [8s/6d,]8s/6d, 8/6, 8/6,
and
23useful⸢1
23useful1⸣
1583 garden boots
with elastic gussets⸢Bwith elastic gussetsB⸣
and wateringcan,
planting
24aligned young
1584firtrees,
syringing, pruning, staking,
⸢1syringing, pruning, staking,
1⸣
sowing hayseed,⸢(B)planting
24aligned young
1584firtrees,
syringing, pruning, staking,
⸢1syringing, pruning, staking,
1⸣
sowing hayseed,(B)⸣
25 trundling a weedladen
1585 wheelbarrow without excessive fatigue at sunset
26 amid the scent of
1586 newmown ⸢1[hay.]hay. hay, ameliorating the soil, multiplying
27wisdom, achieving
1587longevity. hay, ameliorating the soil, multiplying
27wisdom, achieving
1587longevity.
1⸣ [hay.]hay. hay, ameliorating the soil, multiplying
27wisdom, achieving
1587longevity. hay, ameliorating the soil, multiplying
27wisdom, achieving
1587longevity.
1588
1
What ∧⧼mental recreations⧽mental recreations ⸢B[mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits B⸣ [mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits ⸢B[mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits B⸣ [mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits ∧⧼mental recreations⧽mental recreations ⸢B[mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits B⸣ [mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits ⸢B[mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits B⸣ [mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits ⸢1[were]were was was 1⸣ [were]were was was simultaneously ⸢B[possible?]possible? ⸢1[possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? 1⸣ [possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? ⸢1[possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? 1⸣ [possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? B⸣ [possible?]possible? ⸢1[possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? 1⸣ [possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? ⸢1[possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? 1⸣ [possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible?
1589
4Snapshot photography, comparative study of religions, folklore relative to
1590
5 various amatory and superstitious practices, contemplation of the celestial
1591
6 constellations.
1588
1
What ∧⧼mental recreations⧽mental recreations ⸢B[mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits B⸣ [mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits ⸢B[mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits B⸣ [mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits ∧⧼mental recreations⧽mental recreations ⸢B[mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits B⸣ [mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits ⸢B[mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits B⸣ [mental occupations]mental occupations syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits syllabus of
2
intellectual⸢1syllabus of
2
intellectual1⸣ pursuits ⸢1[were]were was was 1⸣ [were]were was was simultaneously ⸢B[possible?]possible? ⸢1[possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? 1⸣ [possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? ⸢1[possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? 1⸣ [possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? B⸣ [possible?]possible? ⸢1[possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? 1⸣ [possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? ⸢1[possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible? 1⸣ [possible
3
as mental occupation?]possible
3
as mental occupation? possible? possible?
1589
4Snapshot photography, comparative study of religions, folklore relative to
1590
5 various amatory and superstitious practices, contemplation of the celestial
1591
6 constellations.
1592
7
What lighter recreations?
1593
8Outdoor: garden and fieldwork, cycling on level macadamised
9causeways,
1594 ascents of moderately high hills, natation in secluded fresh
10water and
1595unmolested river boating
in secure wherry or light curricle
11with kedge
1596anchor⸢1in secure wherry or light curricle
11with kedge
1596anchor1⸣
on reaches free from weirs and rapids ( ⸢1[summer]summer
12period of estivation
12period of estivation
1⸣ [summer]summer
12period of estivation
12period of estivation
),
1597vespertinal perambulation or equestrian
13circumprocession with inspection
1598of sterile landscape and contrastingly
14agreeable cottagers'
fires of smoking
1599
peat⸢1
peat1⸣
turves ( ⸢1[winter]winter period of
15hibernation period of
15hibernation
1⸣ [winter]winter period of
15hibernation period of
15hibernation
). Indoor:⸢(B)
1593
8Outdoor: garden and fieldwork, cycling on level macadamised
9causeways,
1594 ascents of moderately high hills, natation in secluded fresh
10water and
1595unmolested river boating
in secure wherry or light curricle
11with kedge
1596anchor⸢1in secure wherry or light curricle
11with kedge
1596anchor1⸣
on reaches free from weirs and rapids ( ⸢1[summer]summer
12period of estivation
12period of estivation
1⸣ [summer]summer
12period of estivation
12period of estivation
),
1597vespertinal perambulation or equestrian
13circumprocession with inspection
1598of sterile landscape and contrastingly
14agreeable cottagers'
fires of smoking
1599
peat⸢1
peat1⸣
turves ( ⸢1[winter]winter period of
15hibernation period of
15hibernation
1⸣ [winter]winter period of
15hibernation period of
15hibernation
). Indoor:(B)⸣
discussion in tepid∧tepid∧ security of
1600unsolved
16historical and criminal problems: lecture of ⧼unexpunged⧽unexpunged unexpurgated
17exotic
1601
erotic⸢2
erotic2⸣
masterpieces:⸢1discussion in tepid∧tepid∧ security of
1600unsolved
16historical and criminal problems: lecture of ⧼unexpunged⧽unexpunged unexpurgated
17exotic
1601
erotic⸢2
erotic2⸣
masterpieces:1⸣
⸢1[House]House house house
1⸣ [House]House house house
carpentry with
[3a]a
toolbox
18 containing hammer, awl,
1602 nails, screws, tintacks, gimlet, tweezers, bullnose
19 plane and turnscrew.
1592
7
What lighter recreations?
1593
8Outdoor: garden and fieldwork, cycling on level macadamised
9causeways,
1594 ascents of moderately high hills, natation in secluded fresh
10water and
1595unmolested river boating
in secure wherry or light curricle
11with kedge
1596anchor⸢1in secure wherry or light curricle
11with kedge
1596anchor1⸣
on reaches free from weirs and rapids ( ⸢1[summer]summer
12period of estivation
12period of estivation
1⸣ [summer]summer
12period of estivation
12period of estivation
),
1597vespertinal perambulation or equestrian
13circumprocession with inspection
1598of sterile landscape and contrastingly
14agreeable cottagers'
fires of smoking
1599
peat⸢1
peat1⸣
turves ( ⸢1[winter]winter period of
15hibernation period of
15hibernation
1⸣ [winter]winter period of
15hibernation period of
15hibernation
). Indoor:⸢(B)
1593
8Outdoor: garden and fieldwork, cycling on level macadamised
9causeways,
1594 ascents of moderately high hills, natation in secluded fresh
10water and
1595unmolested river boating
in secure wherry or light curricle
11with kedge
1596anchor⸢1in secure wherry or light curricle
11with kedge
1596anchor1⸣
on reaches free from weirs and rapids ( ⸢1[summer]summer
12period of estivation
12period of estivation
1⸣ [summer]summer
12period of estivation
12period of estivation
),
1597vespertinal perambulation or equestrian
13circumprocession with inspection
1598of sterile landscape and contrastingly
14agreeable cottagers'
fires of smoking
1599
peat⸢1
peat1⸣
turves ( ⸢1[winter]winter period of
15hibernation period of
15hibernation
1⸣ [winter]winter period of
15hibernation period of
15hibernation
). Indoor:(B)⸣
discussion in tepid∧tepid∧ security of
1600unsolved
16historical and criminal problems: lecture of ⧼unexpunged⧽unexpunged unexpurgated
17exotic
1601
erotic⸢2
erotic2⸣
masterpieces:⸢1discussion in tepid∧tepid∧ security of
1600unsolved
16historical and criminal problems: lecture of ⧼unexpunged⧽unexpunged unexpurgated
17exotic
1601
erotic⸢2
erotic2⸣
masterpieces:1⸣
⸢1[House]House house house
1⸣ [House]House house house
carpentry with
[3a]a
toolbox
18 containing hammer, awl,
1602 nails, screws, tintacks, gimlet, tweezers, bullnose
19 plane and turnscrew.
1603
20
Might he become a gentleman ⸢B[farmer?]farmer? farmer of field produce and live
21
stock? farmer of field produce and live
21
stock? B⸣ [farmer?]farmer? farmer of field produce and live
21
stock? farmer of field produce and live
21
stock?
1604
22Not impossibly, with 1 or 2 stripper cows, 1 pike of upland hay and
1605
23 requisite farming implements, e.g., an end‐to‐end churn, a turnip pulper etc.
1606
24
What would be his civic functions and⸢Bcivic functions andB⸣ social status among the county
1607
25
families and landed gentry?
⸢2[Successively,
]Successively,
1608
26
Arranged successively
1608
26
Arranged successively
2⸣ [Successively,
]Successively,
1608
26
Arranged successively
1608
26
Arranged successively
in ascending
powers of⸢2powers of2⸣
27hierarchical order,⸢Bin ascending
powers of⸢2powers of2⸣
27hierarchical order,B⸣
that of
1609 gardener, groundsman, cultivator, breeder, and
28 at the zenith of his career,
1610 resident magistrate or justice of the peace with a
29 family crest and coat of
1611 arms and appropriate classical ⸢B[motto.]motto.
motto
30(Semper paratus), duly recorded in
1612the court directory (Bloom, Leopold P.,
31M. P., P. C., K. P., L. L. D.
1613(honoris causa),
∧
31M. P., P. C., K. P., L. L. D.
1613(honoris causa),
∧
Bloomville, Dundrum) and
1mentioned in
court and⸢2court and2⸣
1614fashionable intelligence (Mr and Mrs Leopold
2Bloom have left Kingstown
1615for England).
motto
30(Semper paratus), duly recorded in
1612the court directory (Bloom, Leopold P.,
31M. P., P. C., K. P., L. L. D.
1613(honoris causa),
∧
31M. P., P. C., K. P., L. L. D.
1613(honoris causa),
∧
Bloomville, Dundrum) and
1mentioned in
court and⸢2court and2⸣
1614fashionable intelligence (Mr and Mrs Leopold
2Bloom have left Kingstown
1615for England).
B⸣ [motto.]motto.
motto
30(Semper paratus), duly recorded in
1612the court directory (Bloom, Leopold P.,
31M. P., P. C., K. P., L. L. D.
1613(honoris causa),
∧
31M. P., P. C., K. P., L. L. D.
1613(honoris causa),
∧
Bloomville, Dundrum) and
1mentioned in
court and⸢2court and2⸣
1614fashionable intelligence (Mr and Mrs Leopold
2Bloom have left Kingstown
1615for England).
motto
30(Semper paratus), duly recorded in
1612the court directory (Bloom, Leopold P.,
31M. P., P. C., K. P., L. L. D.
1613(honoris causa),
∧
31M. P., P. C., K. P., L. L. D.
1613(honoris causa),
∧
Bloomville, Dundrum) and
1mentioned in
court and⸢2court and2⸣
1614fashionable intelligence (Mr and Mrs Leopold
2Bloom have left Kingstown
1615for England).
1616
3
What course of action did he outline for himself in such capacity?
1617
4A course that lay between undue clemency and excessive
⸢2[rigour,
]rigour,
5rigour:
5rigour:
2⸣ [rigour,
]rigour,
5rigour:
5rigour:
⧼
△
⧽
△
⸢B
⧼
△
⧽
△
B⸣
the
1618 dispensation
in a heterogeneous society of arbitrary ⸢2[classes]classes
6 classes, incessantly
1619rearranged in terms of greater and lesser
7social inequality,
6 classes, incessantly
1619rearranged in terms of greater and lesser
7social inequality,
2⸣ [classes]classes
6 classes, incessantly
1619rearranged in terms of greater and lesser
7social inequality,
6 classes, incessantly
1619rearranged in terms of greater and lesser
7social inequality,
⸢Bin a heterogeneous society of arbitrary ⸢2[classes]classes
6 classes, incessantly
1619rearranged in terms of greater and lesser
7social inequality,
6 classes, incessantly
1619rearranged in terms of greater and lesser
7social inequality,
2⸣ [classes]classes
6 classes, incessantly
1619rearranged in terms of greater and lesser
7social inequality,
6 classes, incessantly
1619rearranged in terms of greater and lesser
7social inequality,
B⸣
of unbiassed
1620
homogeneous indisputable⸢B
homogeneous indisputableB⸣
justice,
8 tempered with mitigants⧼,⧽,
of the widest
1621
possible∧
possible∧ latitude⸢Bof the widest
1621
possible∧
possible∧ latitudeB⸣
but exactable
9 to the uttermost ⸢1[farthing.]farthing. farthing with confiscation
of
1622estate, real and
10personal,⸢2of
1622estate, real and
10personal,2⸣
to the crown. farthing with confiscation
of
1622estate, real and
10personal,⸢2of
1622estate, real and
10personal,2⸣
to the crown.
1⸣ [farthing.]farthing. farthing with confiscation
of
1622estate, real and
10personal,⸢2of
1622estate, real and
10personal,2⸣
to the crown. farthing with confiscation
of
1622estate, real and
10personal,⸢2of
1622estate, real and
10personal,2⸣
to the crown.
Loyal to the ⸢B[core with]core with highest
constituted⸢1constituted1⸣
1623
11power in the land, actuated by highest
constituted⸢1constituted1⸣
1623
11power in the land, actuated by
B⸣ [core with]core with highest
constituted⸢1constituted1⸣
1623
11power in the land, actuated by highest
constituted⸢1constituted1⸣
1623
11power in the land, actuated by
an innate love of rectitude his aims would
12 be
1624 the strict maintenance of public order, the repression of many abuses
1625
13 though not of∧of∧ all ⸢2[simultaneously,]simultaneously, simultaneously (every measure of
14reform or retrenchment
1626being a preliminary solution to be contained
by
15fluxion⸢3by
15fluxion3⸣
in the final
1627solution), simultaneously (every measure of
14reform or retrenchment
1626being a preliminary solution to be contained
by
15fluxion⸢3by
15fluxion3⸣
in the final
1627solution),
2⸣ [simultaneously,]simultaneously, simultaneously (every measure of
14reform or retrenchment
1626being a preliminary solution to be contained
by
15fluxion⸢3by
15fluxion3⸣
in the final
1627solution), simultaneously (every measure of
14reform or retrenchment
1626being a preliminary solution to be contained
by
15fluxion⸢3by
15fluxion3⸣
in the final
1627solution),
the upholding of the letter of the law
16 (common, statute and law
1628 merchant) against
all traversers in covin∧in covin∧
and
17trespassers⸢2and
17trespassers2⸣
acting in
1629contravention of bylaws and regulations, all
18resuscitators (by
trespass and
1630petty larceny of kindlings)
∧of kindlings)
∧
of venville
19rights, obsolete by desuetude,⸢1all traversers in covin∧in covin∧
and
17trespassers⸢2and
17trespassers2⸣
acting in
1629contravention of bylaws and regulations, all
18resuscitators (by
trespass and
1630petty larceny of kindlings)
∧of kindlings)
∧
of venville
19rights, obsolete by desuetude,1⸣
all
1631
orotund⸢1
orotund1⸣
instigators of international
20 persecution, all ∧⧼perpetrators⧽perpetrators perpetuators perpetuators
∧⧼perpetrators⧽perpetrators perpetuators perpetuators
of
1632 international
21 animosities,
all menial molestors of domestic conviviality,⸢2all menial molestors of domestic conviviality,2⸣
all
1633
recalcitrant⸢1
recalcitrant1⸣
22 violators of domestic connubiality.
1634
23
Prove that he had loved rectitude from his earliest youth.
1635
24To Master
Percy Apjohn at High School in 1880 he had divulged his
1636
25 disbelief in the tenets of the Irish (protestant) church (to which his father
1637
26Rudolf
Virag (later
Rudolph Bloom)
had been converted from the ⸢2[Israelitish]Israelitish
27 Israelitic
27 Israelitic
2⸣ [Israelitish]Israelitish
27 Israelitic
27 Israelitic
1638 faith and communion in 1865 by the Society for
28 promoting Christianity
1639 among the jews)∧(to which his father
1637
26Rudolf
Virag (later
Rudolph Bloom)
had been converted from the ⸢2[Israelitish]Israelitish
27 Israelitic
27 Israelitic
2⸣ [Israelitish]Israelitish
27 Israelitic
27 Israelitic
1638 faith and communion in 1865 by the Society for
28 promoting Christianity
1639 among the jews)∧
subsequently abjured
by him
in
29favour of Roman
1640catholicism⸢1in
29favour of Roman
1640catholicism1⸣
∧⧼on⧽on at at
∧⧼on⧽on at at
the ∧⧼occasion⧽occasion epoch epoch
∧⧼occasion⧽occasion epoch epoch
of and
30 with a view to∧and
30 with a view to∧ his ∧⧼marriage⧽marriage matrimony matrimony
∧⧼marriage⧽marriage matrimony matrimony
in ⸢1[1888 in favour of Roman
31catholicism.]1888 in favour of Roman
31catholicism. 1888. 1888.
1⸣ [1888 in favour of Roman
31catholicism.]1888 in favour of Roman
31catholicism. 1888. 1888.
To
1641 Daniel Magrane and Francis Wade∧and Francis Wade∧ in 1882
32 during a juvenile friendship
1642 (terminated by the premature emigration of the
33 former) he had advocated
1643 during nocturnal perambulations
the political
1theory of colonial (e.g.
1644 Canadian)∧(e.g.
1644 Canadian)∧ expansion and⸢3the political
1theory of colonial (e.g.
1644 Canadian)∧(e.g.
1644 Canadian)∧ expansion and3⸣
the evolutionary
2 theories of Charles Darwin,
1645 expounded in The Descent of Man and The
3 Origin of Species.
In 1885 he
1646had publicly expressed his adherence to
4
the collective and national>and national<
1647 economic programme advocated by James
5 Fintan Lalor, John Fisher
1648 Murray, ⸢[John Fisher Murray,]John Fisher Murray,
⸣ [John Fisher Murray,]John Fisher Murray,
John Mitchel,
6 J. F. X. O'Brien and others,∧the collective and national>and national<
1647 economic programme advocated by James
5 Fintan Lalor, John Fisher
1648 Murray, ⸢[John Fisher Murray,]John Fisher Murray,
⸣ [John Fisher Murray,]John Fisher Murray,
John Mitchel,
6 J. F. X. O'Brien and others,∧ the agrarian policy of
1649 Michael Davitt, the
7 constitutional agitation of ⧼the⧽the
⧼William Ewart Gladstone (later th⧽William Ewart Gladstone (later th
8 Charles Stewart Parnell
1650 (M. P. for Cork City), the programme of peace,
9 retrenchment and reform
1651 of William Ewart Gladstone (M. P. for ⸢2[Midlothian)]Midlothian)
10 Midlothian, N. B.)
10 Midlothian, N. B.)
2⸣ [Midlothian)]Midlothian)
10 Midlothian, N. B.)
10 Midlothian, N. B.)
and, in support
1652 of his political∧political∧
11 convictions, had climbed up into a secure position ⧼on a⧽on a amid the
1653
12 ramifications of a tree on Northumberland road to see the entrance
1654
13(2 February
1888)⸢2
13(2 February
1888)2⸣
into the capital of a demonstrative torchlight
14 procession
1655
of 20.000 torchbearers,
divided into 120 trade corporations,
15bearing
2.000
1656
torches
⸢2
of 20.000 torchbearers,
divided into 120 trade corporations,
15bearing
2.000
1656
torches
2⸣
in escort of ⸢2[Viscount]Viscount the marquess of the marquess of
2⸣ [Viscount]Viscount the marquess of the marquess of
Ripon
16 and (honest)
John Morley.
1657⧼
17
Was his ambition practically∧practically∧ realisable?⧽
17
Was his ambition practically∧practically∧ realisable? ⸣
1657⧼
17
Was his ambition practically∧practically∧ realisable?⧽
17
Was his ambition practically∧practically∧ realisable?
⸢⧼
18Yes.⧽
18Yes.
⸣ ⧼
18Yes.⧽
18Yes.
19
How much and how did he propose to pay for this country residence?
1658
20As per prospectus of the ∧⧼Irish Civil Servants⧽Irish Civil Servants
⸢3[Irish Civil Service]Irish Civil Service
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
3⸣ [Irish Civil Service]Irish Civil Service
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
⸢3[Irish Civil Service]Irish Civil Service
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
3⸣ [Irish Civil Service]Irish Civil Service
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
∧⧼Irish Civil Servants⧽Irish Civil Servants
⸢3[Irish Civil Service]Irish Civil Service
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
3⸣ [Irish Civil Service]Irish Civil Service
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
⸢3[Irish Civil Service]Irish Civil Service
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
3⸣ [Irish Civil Service]Irish Civil Service
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
21Industrious Foreign Acclimatised Nationalised
1659Friendly Stateaided
22 Building Society (incorporated 1874), a maximum of
1660 £60 per
annum,
23being
1⁄6 of an assured income,
derived from giltedged
1661securities,⸢Bderived from giltedged
1661securities,B⸣
24 representing at 5% simple interest ⸢1[a]a on on
1⸣ [a]a on on
capital of
⸢B[£1200,]£1200, £1200
25(estimate
1662of price at 20 years' purchase), £1200
25(estimate
1662of price at 20 years' purchase),
B⸣ [£1200,]£1200, £1200
25(estimate
1662of price at 20 years' purchase), £1200
25(estimate
1662of price at 20 years' purchase),
of which
1⁄3 to be paid ∧⧼by the
26 society to the⧽by the
26 society to the
∧⧼by the
26 society to the⧽by the
26 society to the
on acquisition and the
1663 balance in the form of
annual⸢3annual3⸣
rent,
27viz.
£800 plus 21⁄2% interest on the same,
1664 repayable quarterly∧quarterly∧ in equal
28 annual
⸢1[rates
]rates
instalments
instalments
1⸣ [rates
]rates
instalments
instalments
until extinction
by
1665amortisation⸢1by
1665amortisation1⸣
of loan
29 advanced for purchase ⧼or till⧽or till within a period of 20 years,
1666 amounting to an
30 annual rental of £64, headrent included, the titledeeds to
1667 remain in
31 possession of the lender or lenders with a saving clause
1668 envisaging forced
32 sale, foreclosure and mutual compensation in the event of
1669 protracted failure
33 to pay the ⧼term⌷
⧽term⌷
terms assigned,
otherwise the messuage to
1670 become the
1 absolute property of the tenant occupier upon expiry of the
1671 period of years
2 stipulated.
1672
3
What rapid but insecure means to opulence might facilitate immediate
1673
4
purchase?
1674
5A private wireless telegraph ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
which would transmit by dot and dash
6 system
1675 the result of a national
⧼han⧽han equine handicap (flat or
7steeplechase)⸢1
⧼han⧽han equine handicap (flat or
7steeplechase)1⸣
of
⸢3[3
]3
1
1
3⸣ [3
]3
1
1
or more
1676miles and furlongs⸢2of
⸢3[3
]3
1
1
3⸣ [3
]3
1
1
or more
1676miles and furlongs2⸣
won by an outsider
8 at odds of 50 to 1 at
16773 hr 8 m p.m.
at Ascot (Greenwich
time),
the
9 message being received and
1678 available for betting purposes in Dublin∧in Dublin∧ at
102.59 p.m.
(Dunsink time).
The
1679unexpected discovery of ⧼an o⧽an o an object
11of great monetary value (precious
stone,
1680
⸢2[black Mauritius postage stamp,]black Mauritius postage stamp,
12valuable adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧
postage
stamps (7 schilling,
mauve,
1681
13imperforate, Hamburg, 1866: 4 pence, rose, blue
paper,
perforate, Great
1682
14Britain, 1855: 1 franc, stone, official, rouletted, diagonal surcharge,
1683
15Luxemburg,
1878),
12valuable adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧
postage
stamps (7 schilling,
mauve,
1681
13imperforate, Hamburg, 1866: 4 pence, rose, blue
paper,
perforate, Great
1682
14Britain, 1855: 1 franc, stone, official, rouletted, diagonal surcharge,
1683
15Luxemburg,
1878),
2⸣ [black Mauritius postage stamp,]black Mauritius postage stamp,
12valuable adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧
postage
stamps (7 schilling,
mauve,
1681
13imperforate, Hamburg, 1866: 4 pence, rose, blue
paper,
perforate, Great
1682
14Britain, 1855: 1 franc, stone, official, rouletted, diagonal surcharge,
1683
15Luxemburg,
1878),
12valuable adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧
postage
stamps (7 schilling,
mauve,
1681
13imperforate, Hamburg, 1866: 4 pence, rose, blue
paper,
perforate, Great
1682
14Britain, 1855: 1 franc, stone, official, rouletted, diagonal surcharge,
1683
15Luxemburg,
1878),
antique ⧼historical⧽historical dynastical ring, unique relic)
in
16unusual
1684repositories or by unusual means: from the air (dropped by an
17eagle in
1685flight), by fire (amid
the carbonised remains of an incendiated
18edifice), in
1686the sea (amid flotsam, jetsam, lagan and derelict), on earth (in
19the gizzard
1687of a comestible
fowl). A Spanish prisoner's donation of a
20distant treasure of
1688valuables or
specie or⸢3specie or3⸣
bullion lodged with a solvent
21 banking corporation
1689 100 years previously at 5% compound interest∧or
specie or⸢3specie or3⸣
bullion lodged with a solvent
21 banking corporation
1689 100 years previously at 5% compound interest∧ of the
22collective worth of
1690£5,000,000 stg
(five million pounds sterling). A contract
23with an
1691inconsiderate contractee for the delivery of 32 consignments of
24some given
1692commodity in consideration of cash payment on delivery per
25delivery
at the
1693
initial∧
initial∧ rate of 1⁄4d
to be increased ⧼automatically⧽automatically constantly
26in the∧the∧ geometrical progression
1694of 2 (1⁄4d,
1⁄2d,
1d, 2d, 4d, 8d,
1s 4d,
2s 8d
27to 32 terms).
⸢BThe
1679unexpected discovery of ⧼an o⧽an o an object
11of great monetary value (precious
stone,
1680
⸢2[black Mauritius postage stamp,]black Mauritius postage stamp,
12valuable adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧
postage
stamps (7 schilling,
mauve,
1681
13imperforate, Hamburg, 1866: 4 pence, rose, blue
paper,
perforate, Great
1682
14Britain, 1855: 1 franc, stone, official, rouletted, diagonal surcharge,
1683
15Luxemburg,
1878),
12valuable adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧
postage
stamps (7 schilling,
mauve,
1681
13imperforate, Hamburg, 1866: 4 pence, rose, blue
paper,
perforate, Great
1682
14Britain, 1855: 1 franc, stone, official, rouletted, diagonal surcharge,
1683
15Luxemburg,
1878),
2⸣ [black Mauritius postage stamp,]black Mauritius postage stamp,
12valuable adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧
postage
stamps (7 schilling,
mauve,
1681
13imperforate, Hamburg, 1866: 4 pence, rose, blue
paper,
perforate, Great
1682
14Britain, 1855: 1 franc, stone, official, rouletted, diagonal surcharge,
1683
15Luxemburg,
1878),
12valuable adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧adhesive or ⧼en⧽en
impressed∧
postage
stamps (7 schilling,
mauve,
1681
13imperforate, Hamburg, 1866: 4 pence, rose, blue
paper,
perforate, Great
1682
14Britain, 1855: 1 franc, stone, official, rouletted, diagonal surcharge,
1683
15Luxemburg,
1878),
antique ⧼historical⧽historical dynastical ring, unique relic)
in
16unusual
1684repositories or by unusual means: from the air (dropped by an
17eagle in
1685flight), by fire (amid
the carbonised remains of an incendiated
18edifice), in
1686the sea (amid flotsam, jetsam, lagan and derelict), on earth (in
19the gizzard
1687of a comestible
fowl). A Spanish prisoner's donation of a
20distant treasure of
1688valuables or
specie or⸢3specie or3⸣
bullion lodged with a solvent
21 banking corporation
1689 100 years previously at 5% compound interest∧or
specie or⸢3specie or3⸣
bullion lodged with a solvent
21 banking corporation
1689 100 years previously at 5% compound interest∧ of the
22collective worth of
1690£5,000,000 stg
(five million pounds sterling). A contract
23with an
1691inconsiderate contractee for the delivery of 32 consignments of
24some given
1692commodity in consideration of cash payment on delivery per
25delivery
at the
1693
initial∧
initial∧ rate of 1⁄4d
to be increased ⧼automatically⧽automatically constantly
26in the∧the∧ geometrical progression
1694of 2 (1⁄4d,
1⁄2d,
1d, 2d, 4d, 8d,
1s 4d,
2s 8d
27to 32 terms).
B⸣
A prepared scheme
1695
based on a study of the laws of
28 probability∧based on a study of the laws of
28 probability∧ to break the bank at Monte
1696 Carlo. A solution of the secular
29 problem of the quadrature of the circle,
1697
government⸢2
government2⸣
premium
£1,000,000
30 sterling.
1698
1
Was vast wealth acquirable through industrial channels?
1699
2The reclamation of dunams of∧dunams of∧ waste arenary∧arenary∧
soil,
proposed in the
1700
3 prospectus of Agendath Netaim, Bleibtreustrasse, Berlin, W. 15, by the
1701
4 cultivation of orange plantations and melonfields and reafforestation∧and reafforestation∧. The
1702
5 utilisation of waste paper, fells of sewer rodents, human excrement
1703
6 possessing chemical properties, in
[1the]the
view of the vast production of the
7 first,
1704 vast number of the second and immense quantity of the third, every
8 normal
1705 human being of average vitality and appetite producing ⸢3[annually]annually
9annually, cancelling
1706byproducts of water,
9annually, cancelling
1706byproducts of water,
3⸣ [annually]annually
9annually, cancelling
1706byproducts of water,
9annually, cancelling
1706byproducts of water,
a sum total of ⸢3[3 cwt]3 cwt 80 lbs.
10(mixed animal and vegetable
1707diet), 80 lbs.
10(mixed animal and vegetable
1707diet),
3⸣ [3 cwt]3 cwt 80 lbs.
10(mixed animal and vegetable
1707diet), 80 lbs.
10(mixed animal and vegetable
1707diet),
to be multiplied by ⸢3[
4,235,000,
]
4,235,000,
114,386,035,
114,386,035,
3⸣ [
4,235,000,
]
4,235,000,
114,386,035,
114,386,035,
the total population of Ireland
1708 according to
census returns of 1901.
1709
12
13
Were there schemes of wider scope?
1710
14A scheme
to be formulated and submitted for approval to the harbour
1711
15 commissioners ⧼an⌷
⧽an⌷
for the exploitation of white coal
(hydraulic
16 power),
1712 obtained
by hydroelectric plant⸢2by hydroelectric plant2⸣
at
peak of tide at⸢Cpeak of tide atC⸣
Dublin bar
17 or
at head of
1713water at⸢Cat head of
1713water atC⸣
Poulaphouca or Powerscourt
or catchment
18basins of main streams⸢2or catchment
18basins of main streams2⸣
1714 for the economic production of
19500,000 W. H. P.
of⸢3
19500,000 W. H. P.
of3⸣
electricity. A scheme
1715 to enclose the peninsular delta
20 of the North Bull at Dollymount and ∧⧼transform⧽transform erect
1716 on erect
1716 on
∧⧼transform⧽transform erect
1716 on erect
1716 on
∧⧼it⧽it
⧼from⧽from the
21 space of the foreland,
>of the foreland,
<
used for
⧼from⧽from the
21 space of the foreland,
>of the foreland,
<
used for
∧⧼it⧽it
⧼from⧽from the
21 space of the foreland,
>of the foreland,
<
used for
⧼from⧽from the
21 space of the foreland,
>of the foreland,
<
used for
⧼a⧽a golf links and ⧼ringle r⧽ringle r rifle ⸢2[ranges]ranges
22 ranges, an
1717asphalted esplanade with
22 ranges, an
1717asphalted esplanade with
2⸣ [ranges]ranges
22 ranges, an
1717asphalted esplanade with
22 ranges, an
1717asphalted esplanade with
casinos, booths, shooting
23 galleries, hotels,
1718 boardinghouses, readingrooms, establishments for mixed
24 bathing. A
1719 scheme for the use of dogvans and goatvans for the delivery of
25 early
1720 morning milk.
A scheme for the development of Irish tourist traffic
26in and
1721 around Dublin∧
26in and
1721 around Dublin∧ by means of petrolpropelled riverboats, plying
27in the fluvial
1722fairway⸢3
27in the fluvial
1722fairway3⸣
between Island bridge and Ringsend,∧plying
27in the fluvial
1722fairway⸢3
27in the fluvial
1722fairway3⸣
between Island bridge and Ringsend,∧
∧⧼
28charabancs⧽
28charabancs charabancs, narrow gauge
1723 local railways, charabancs, narrow gauge
1723 local railways,
∧⧼
28charabancs⧽
28charabancs charabancs, narrow gauge
1723 local railways, charabancs, narrow gauge
1723 local railways,
and
[Ccoastwise]coastwise
29pleasure steamers⧼.⧽.
for coastwise navigation⸢Cfor coastwise navigationC⸣
(10/‐ per
1724person per day,
30guide
(trilingual)⸢3(trilingual)3⸣
included).
⸢BA scheme for the development of Irish tourist traffic
26in and
1721 around Dublin∧
26in and
1721 around Dublin∧ by means of petrolpropelled riverboats, plying
27in the fluvial
1722fairway⸢3
27in the fluvial
1722fairway3⸣
between Island bridge and Ringsend,∧plying
27in the fluvial
1722fairway⸢3
27in the fluvial
1722fairway3⸣
between Island bridge and Ringsend,∧
∧⧼
28charabancs⧽
28charabancs charabancs, narrow gauge
1723 local railways, charabancs, narrow gauge
1723 local railways,
∧⧼
28charabancs⧽
28charabancs charabancs, narrow gauge
1723 local railways, charabancs, narrow gauge
1723 local railways,
and
[Ccoastwise]coastwise
29pleasure steamers⧼.⧽.
for coastwise navigation⸢Cfor coastwise navigationC⸣
(10/‐ per
1724person per day,
30guide
(trilingual)⸢3(trilingual)3⸣
included).
B⸣
A scheme for the repristination
1725 of
31 passenger and goods traffics over Irish waterways, when freed from
1726
32 weedbeds. A scheme to connect by tramline the Cattle Market (North
1727
33 Circular road and Prussia street)
with the quays (Sheriff street, lower,
and
1728
34 East Wall),
parallel with the Link line railway laid (in conjunction with
1 the
1729 Great Southern and Western railway line)∧(in conjunction with
1 the
1729 Great Southern and Western railway line)∧ between the cattle park,
2Liffey
1730junction, and terminus of Midland Great Western Railway
43 to 45
3North
1731Wall, in proximity to the terminal stations or Dublin branches of
4Great
1732Central Railway,
Midland Railway of England, City of Dublin
5Steam
1733Packet Company, Lancashire and
Yorkshire Railway
Company,
6Dublin
1734and Glasgow Steam Packet Company, Glasgow,
Dublin and
7Londonderry
1735Steam Packet Company (Laird line),
British and Irish Steam
8Packet
1736Company, Dublin and Morecambe Steamers, London and North
9Western
1737Railway Company,
Dublin
Port and Docks Board Landing Sheds
10and
1738transit sheds of Palgrave, Murphy and Company, steamship owners,
11agents
1739for steamers from Mediterranean, Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium
12and
1740Holland and for Liverpool Underwriters' Association,⸢Bparallel with the Link line railway laid (in conjunction with
1 the
1729 Great Southern and Western railway line)∧(in conjunction with
1 the
1729 Great Southern and Western railway line)∧ between the cattle park,
2Liffey
1730junction, and terminus of Midland Great Western Railway
43 to 45
3North
1731Wall, in proximity to the terminal stations or Dublin branches of
4Great
1732Central Railway,
Midland Railway of England, City of Dublin
5Steam
1733Packet Company, Lancashire and
Yorkshire Railway
Company,
6Dublin
1734and Glasgow Steam Packet Company, Glasgow,
Dublin and
7Londonderry
1735Steam Packet Company (Laird line),
British and Irish Steam
8Packet
1736Company, Dublin and Morecambe Steamers, London and North
9Western
1737Railway Company,
Dublin
Port and Docks Board Landing Sheds
10and
1738transit sheds of Palgrave, Murphy and Company, steamship owners,
11agents
1739for steamers from Mediterranean, Spain, Portugal, France, Belgium
12and
1740Holland and for Liverpool Underwriters' Association,B⸣
the cost of
13
acquired
1741 rolling stock
for animal transport and of∧acquired
1741 rolling stock
for animal transport and of∧ additional mileage
14 operated by the
1742 Dublin United Tramways Company, limited, to be covered
15 by graziers'
1743 fees.
1744 ⸢1[Was it possible to contract for these several schemes?]Was it possible to contract for these several schemes?
16
∧⧼Presupposing⧽Presupposing
17
Positing
17
Positing ∧⧼Presupposing⧽Presupposing
17
Positing
17
Positing what protasis ⧼was⧽was would the contraction for such several
18
schemes
1745become a natural and necessary apodosis?
16
∧⧼Presupposing⧽Presupposing
17
Positing
17
Positing ∧⧼Presupposing⧽Presupposing
17
Positing
17
Positing what protasis ⧼was⧽was would the contraction for such several
18
schemes
1745become a natural and necessary apodosis? 1⸣ [Was it possible to contract for these several schemes?]Was it possible to contract for these several schemes?
16
∧⧼Presupposing⧽Presupposing
17
Positing
17
Positing ∧⧼Presupposing⧽Presupposing
17
Positing
17
Positing what protasis ⧼was⧽was would the contraction for such several
18
schemes
1745become a natural and necessary apodosis?
16
∧⧼Presupposing⧽Presupposing
17
Positing
17
Positing ∧⧼Presupposing⧽Presupposing
17
Positing
17
Positing what protasis ⧼was⧽was would the contraction for such several
18
schemes
1745become a natural and necessary apodosis?
1746
19Given
a guarantee equal to the sum sought,⸢Ca guarantee equal to the sum sought,C⸣
the support , by deed of gift
20and
1747transfer vouchers⸢1
20and
1747transfer vouchers1⸣
during donor's lifetime or by bequest after donor's
1748
21 painless extinction,∧, by deed of gift
20and
1747transfer vouchers⸢1
20and
1747transfer vouchers1⸣
during donor's lifetime or by bequest after donor's
1748
21 painless extinction,∧ of eminent financiers (Blum Pasha, Rothschild,
1749
22 Guggenheim, Hirsch, Montefiore, Morgan, Rockefeller) possessing
1750
23 fortunes in 6 figures , amassed
during a successful life,∧, amassed
during a successful life,∧ and joining
24 capital
1751 with opportunity the thing required was done.
1752
25
What eventuality would render him independent of such [1aliorelative]aliorelative
26
wealth?
1753
27The independent discovery of ⸢1[an ipsorelative]an ipsorelative a a
1⸣ [an ipsorelative]an ipsorelative a a
goldseam of
28 inexhaustible ore.
1752
25
What eventuality would render him independent of such [1aliorelative]aliorelative
26
wealth?
1753
27The independent discovery of ⸢1[an ipsorelative]an ipsorelative a a
1⸣ [an ipsorelative]an ipsorelative a a
goldseam of
28 inexhaustible ore.
1754
1
For what reason did he meditate on schemes so difficult of realisation?
1755
2It was one of his axioms that similar meditations or the automatic relation
1756
3 to himself of a narrative concerning himself or tranquil recollection of the
1757
4 past when practised habitually before retiring for the night alleviated
1758
5fatigue and produced as a result sound repose and renovated vitality.
1759
6
His justifications?
1760
7As a physicist he had learned that of ⧼our⧽our the 70 years of complete human
8 life at
1761least
2⁄7, viz.
20 years are
passed in sleep. As a philosopher he knew
9 that at
1762 the termination of any allotted life only an infinitesimal part of any
10 person's
1763 desires has been realised. As a ⧼physi⌷
⧽physi⌷
physiologist he believed in
11 the artificial
1764 placation of malignant agencies chiefly operative during
12 somnolence.
1765
13
What did he fear?
1766
14The committal
of homicide or suicide during sleep by an aberration of the
1767
15 light of reason, the incommensurable categorical intelligence situated in the
1768
16 cerebral convolutions.
1769
17
What were habitually his final meditations?
1770
18Of some one sole unique advertisement to cause passers to stop in wonder,
1771
19 a poster novelty, with all extraneous accretions excluded, reduced to its
1772
20 simplest and most efficient terms not exceeding the span of casual vision and
1773
⸢B[possessing]possessing
21 congruous with
21 congruous with
B⸣ [possessing]possessing
21 congruous with
21 congruous with
the velocity of modern life.
1774
22
What did the first drawer unlocked contain?
1775
23A Vere Foster's handwriting copybook, property of Milly (Millicent)
1776
24 Bloom,∧property of Milly (Millicent)
1776
24 Bloom,∧ certain pages of which bore diagram drawings,
marked Papli,
1777
25 which showed a large globular head with 5 hairs erect, 2 eyes in profile, the
1778
26 trunk full front with ⧼three⧽three 3 large buttons, 1 triangular foot: 2 fading
1779
27 photographs of queen Alexandra of England and of Maud Branscombe,
1780
28 actress and
professional⸢1professional1⸣
beauty: a Yuletide card, bearing on it a pictorial
1781
29 representation of a parasitic plant, the legend Mizpah, the date Xmas 1892,
1782
1 the name of the senders:
from Mr + Mrs
M. Comerford, the versicle: May
1783
2 this Yuletide bring to thee, Joy and peace and welcome glee: a butt of
1784 red
3 partly liquefied sealing wax, obtained from the stores department of
1785 Messrs
4 Hely's, Ltd.,
89, 90, and 91 Dame street:
a box containing the
1786remainder
5of a gross of gilt “J” pennibs, obtained from same department of
1787same
6firm:⸢3a box containing the
1786remainder
5of a gross of gilt “J” pennibs, obtained from same department of
1787same
6firm:3⸣
an old sandglass which rolled containing sand which rolled: a
1788 sealed
7 prophecy (never unsealed)∧(never unsealed)∧ written by Leopold Bloom in 1886
1789concerning
8 the consequences of the passing into law of William Ewart
1790 Gladstone's
9 Home Rule
bill of 1886 (never passed into law): a bazaar
1791ticket,
no
2004,
10 of S. Kevin's Charity Fair, price 6d,
100 prizes:
an infantile
1792epistle, dated,
11small em monday, reading: capital pee Papli comma capital
1793aitch How are
12you note of interrogation capital eye I am very well full stop
1794new paragraph
13signature with flourishes capital em Milly no stop:⸢(B)an infantile
1792epistle, dated,
11small em monday, reading: capital pee Papli comma capital
1793aitch How are
12you note of interrogation capital eye I am very well full stop
1794new paragraph
13signature with flourishes capital em Milly no stop:(B)⸣
a cameo
1795 brooch,
14 property of Ellen Bloom ∧⧼, deceased,⧽, deceased,
∧⧼, deceased,⧽, deceased,
(born Higgins) , deceased∧, deceased∧:
△
⸢C
△
C⸣
15a cameo
1796 scarfpin, property of Rudolph Bloom (born Virag), deceased:
3
16 typewritten
1797 letters, addressee, Henry Flower, ℅. P. O.
Westland Row,
17 addresser,
1798 Martha Clifford, ℅. P. O.
Dolphin's Barn: the
transliterated⸢1transliterated1⸣
18 name and
1799 address of the addresser of the 3 letters in reversed
alphabetic
1800
⸢3[cipher, Nzigsz Xoruuliw, Wloksrmh Yzim:]cipher, Nzigsz Xoruuliw, Wloksrmh Yzim:
19
⧼crypot⧽crypot
⧼crytogram⧽crytogram
20boustrophedonic
punctated quadrilinear∧quadrilinear∧ cryptogram (vowels
21suppressed)
1801N. IGS./WI. UU. OX/W. OKS. MH/ Y. IM:
19
⧼crypot⧽crypot
⧼crytogram⧽crytogram
20boustrophedonic
punctated quadrilinear∧quadrilinear∧ cryptogram (vowels
21suppressed)
1801N. IGS./WI. UU. OX/W. OKS. MH/ Y. IM:
3⸣ [cipher, Nzigsz Xoruuliw, Wloksrmh Yzim:]cipher, Nzigsz Xoruuliw, Wloksrmh Yzim:
19
⧼crypot⧽crypot
⧼crytogram⧽crytogram
20boustrophedonic
punctated quadrilinear∧quadrilinear∧ cryptogram (vowels
21suppressed)
1801N. IGS./WI. UU. OX/W. OKS. MH/ Y. IM:
19
⧼crypot⧽crypot
⧼crytogram⧽crytogram
20boustrophedonic
punctated quadrilinear∧quadrilinear∧ cryptogram (vowels
21suppressed)
1801N. IGS./WI. UU. OX/W. OKS. MH/ Y. IM:
a press
22 cutting from an
1802 English weekly periodical Modern Society, subject ⧼the⧽the
23 corporal chastisement in
1803girls'
schools: a pink ribbon which had festooned
24 an Easter egg in the year
1804 1899: two partly uncoiled rubber preservatives
25 with reserve pockets,
1805 purchased by post from Box ⸢3[320,]320, 32, 32,
3⸣ [320,]320, 32, 32,
P. O.,
26 Charing Cross, London, W. C.:
1806 1 pack of 1 dozen creamlaid ⸢B[envelopes,]envelopes,
27envelopes and feintruled
notepaper,
1807watermarked,
27envelopes and feintruled
notepaper,
1807watermarked,
B⸣ [envelopes,]envelopes,
27envelopes and feintruled
notepaper,
1807watermarked,
27envelopes and feintruled
notepaper,
1807watermarked,
now reduced by 3:
28 some assorted Austrian‐Hungarian coins:
1808 2 coupons of the Royal and
29 Privileged Hungarian Lottery:
a lowpower
1809 magnifying glass: 2 erotic
30 photocards showing
a buccal coition between
1810
nude∧nude∧
señorita
⧼(full face,
31 eyes direct⧽(full face,
31 eyes direct (rere presentation, superior position)⸢B
⧼(full face,
31 eyes direct⧽(full face,
31 eyes direct (rere presentation, superior position)B⸣
and nude torero
⧼
△
⧽
△
32(fore
1811presentation, inferior position)⸢B
⧼
△
⧽
△
32(fore
1811presentation, inferior position)B⸣
b
anal violation by male religious
33 (fully
1812
⸢B[clothed)]clothed)
clothed, eyes abject)
clothed, eyes abject)
B⸣ [clothed)]clothed)
clothed, eyes abject)
clothed, eyes abject)
∧by male religious
33 (fully
1812
⸢B[clothed)]clothed)
clothed, eyes abject)
clothed, eyes abject)
B⸣ [clothed)]clothed)
clothed, eyes abject)
clothed, eyes abject)
∧ of female religious (partly ⸢B[clothed),]clothed),
34 clothed, eyes direct),
34 clothed, eyes direct),
B⸣ [clothed),]clothed),
34 clothed, eyes direct),
34 clothed, eyes direct),
1813purchased
by post from Box ⸢3[320,]320, 32, 32,
3⸣ [320,]320, 32, 32,
35 P. O., Charing Cross, London, W. C.:
a
1814 press cutting of ⧼ca⧽ca recipe for
36 renovation of old ⧼hats⧽hats tan boots: a 1d
adhesive⸢1adhesive1⸣
stamp,
1815 lavender, of the
1 reign of Queen Victoria: a chart of the
measurements of
1816 Leopold Bloom ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
2compiled
before,
during and after 2 months'
consecutive use
1817 of
3 Sandow‐Whiteley's pulley exerciser (men's
15/‐, athlete's
20/‐)
viz.
4 chest
181828 in
and 291⁄2 in,
biceps 9 in
and 10 in,
forearm 81⁄2 in
and 9 in,
thigh
510 in
1819and
12 in,
calf
11 in
and 12 in:
1 prospectus of ⧼the⧽the
The
6 Wonderworker, the
1820 world's greatest remedy for rectal complaints,
direct
7 from Wonderworker,
1821Coventry
House, South Place, London E C,
8 addressed (erroneously)
to
1822 Mrs L. Bloom with brief accompanying note
9commencing (erroneously):
1823Dear Madam.
1824⧼
10
What advantages did the prospectus claim for this remedy.⧽
10
What advantages did the prospectus claim for this remedy. Quote the
11
textual terms in which the prospectus claimed ⸢C[for this remedy notable
12
advantages. ]for this remedy notable
12
advantages. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. C⸣ [for this remedy notable
12
advantages. ]for this remedy notable
12
advantages. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. Quote the
11
textual terms in which the prospectus claimed ⸢C[for this remedy notable
12
advantages. ]for this remedy notable
12
advantages. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. C⸣ [for this remedy notable
12
advantages. ]for this remedy notable
12
advantages. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. ∧
1824⧼
10
What advantages did the prospectus claim for this remedy.⧽
10
What advantages did the prospectus claim for this remedy. Quote the
11
textual terms in which the prospectus claimed ⸢C[for this remedy notable
12
advantages. ]for this remedy notable
12
advantages. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. C⸣ [for this remedy notable
12
advantages. ]for this remedy notable
12
advantages. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. Quote the
11
textual terms in which the prospectus claimed ⸢C[for this remedy notable
12
advantages. ]for this remedy notable
12
advantages. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. C⸣ [for this remedy notable
12
advantages. ]for this remedy notable
12
advantages. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy. advantages for this
1825thaumaturgic remedy.
1826
13It heals and soothes while you sleep, in case of trouble in breaking wind,
1827
14 assists nature in the most formidable way,
insuring
instant relief in
1828
15 discharge of gases, keeping parts clean and free natural action, an initial
1829
16 outlay of 7/6 making a new man of you and life worth living. Ladies find
1830
17
⧼w⧽w Wonderworker especially useful, a pleasant surprise when they note
1831
18 delightful result like a cool drink of fresh spring water on a sultry summer's
1832
19 day. Recommend it to your lady and gentlemen friends, lasts a lifetime.
1833
20 Insert long round end. Wonderworker.
1834
21
Were there testimonials?
1835
22Numerous. From ⧼clergymen,⧽clergymen, clergyman, British naval
officer, wellknown
23 author, city
1836 man, hospital nurse, lady, mother of five, absentminded beggar.
1837
24
How did absentminded beggar's concluding⸢2concluding2⸣ testimonial conclude?
1838
25What a pity the government did not supply our men with wonderworkers
1839
26 during the South African campaign! What a relief it would have been!
1840
1
What object did Bloom add to this collection of objects?
1841
2A
>⧼3rd⧽3rd 4th 4th
<⧼3rd⧽3rd 4th 4th
∧
>⧼3rd⧽3rd 4th 4th
<⧼3rd⧽3rd 4th 4th
∧ typewritten letter received by Henry Flower
(let H. F. be
3L. B.)⸢3(let H. F. be
3L. B.)3⸣
from
1842 Martha
⸢3[Clifford.
]Clifford.
Clifford (find M. C.).
Clifford (find M. C.).
3⸣ [Clifford.
]Clifford.
Clifford (find M. C.).
Clifford (find M. C.).
1843
4
What pleasant reflection accompanied this action?
1844
5The reflection that, apart from the letter in question, his
magnetic⸢3magnetic3⸣
face,
6 form
1845 and address had been favourably received during the course of the
1846
7 preceding day by a wife (Mrs Josephine Breen, born Josie Powell),
a
8 nurse,
1847 Miss Callan (Christian name unknown),
a maid, Gertrude
(Gerty,
9family
1848 name unknown).
1849
10
What possibility suggested itself?
1850
11The possibility of ⧼executing⧽executing exercising virile power of fascination in the
12not
immediate
1851 future after an ⧼elegant⧽elegant expensive repast in a private
13 apartment in the company of an
1852 elegant courtesan, of corporal beauty,
14 moderately mercenary, variously
1853 instructed, a lady by origin.
1854
15
What did the 2nd drawer contain?
1855
16Documents: the birth certificate of Leopold Paula Bloom: an endowment
1856
17assurance⸢3
17assurance3⸣
policy of ⸢3[£100]£100 £500 £500
3⸣ [£100]£100 £500 £500
∧of ⸢3[£100]£100 £500 £500
3⸣ [£100]£100 £500 £500
∧ in the Scottish Widows'
Assurance
18Society,
1857 intestated Millicent
(Milly) Bloom, ⸢3[payable]payable coming into force coming into force
3⸣ [payable]payable coming into force coming into force
19 at ⸢3[21 years:]21 years: 25 years as with
1858profit policy of £430, £462‐10‐0 and £500 at
2060 years or death, 65 years or
1859death and death, respectively, or with profit
21policy (paidup) of
1860£299‐10‐0 together with cash payment of £133‐10‐0, at
22option: 25 years as with
1858profit policy of £430, £462‐10‐0 and £500 at
2060 years or death, 65 years or
1859death and death, respectively, or with profit
21policy (paidup) of
1860£299‐10‐0 together with cash payment of £133‐10‐0, at
22option:
3⸣ [21 years:]21 years: 25 years as with
1858profit policy of £430, £462‐10‐0 and £500 at
2060 years or death, 65 years or
1859death and death, respectively, or with profit
21policy (paidup) of
1860£299‐10‐0 together with cash payment of £133‐10‐0, at
22option: 25 years as with
1858profit policy of £430, £462‐10‐0 and £500 at
2060 years or death, 65 years or
1859death and death, respectively, or with profit
21policy (paidup) of
1860£299‐10‐0 together with cash payment of £133‐10‐0, at
22option:
a bank passbook
1861 issued by the Ulster Bank, College Green branch
23 showing statement of
1862 ℀ for halfyear
ending 31 December 1903, balance in
24 depositor's favour:
1863 £18‐14‐6 (eighteen pounds, fourteen shillings and
25 sixpence, sterling)∧(eighteen pounds, fourteen shillings and
25 sixpence, sterling)∧, net
1864 personalty:
certificate of possession of
£900,
26Canadian 4% (inscribed)
1865government stock (free of stamp duty):⸢3certificate of possession of
£900,
26Canadian 4% (inscribed)
1865government stock (free of stamp duty):3⸣
dockets
27 of the Catholic Cemeteries'
1866
(Glasnevin)∧(Glasnevin)∧ Committee, relative to a
28 graveplot purchased: a local∧local∧
⧼presscutting⧽presscutting press
1867 cutting concerning
29 change of name by deedpoll.
1868
1
Quote the textual terms of this notice.
1869
2I, Rudolph
Virag, now resident at no
52 Clanbrassil street, Dublin,
1870
3 formerly of Szombathely in the kingdom of Hungary,
hereby give notice
1871
4 that I have assumed and intend henceforth upon all occasions and at all
1872
5 times to be known by the name of Rudolph Bloom.
1873
6
What other objects relative to Rudolph Bloom (born Virag) were in the 2nd
1874
7
drawer?
1875
8An indistinct daguerreotype
of Rudolf
Virag and his father Leopold
9 Virag
1876 executed in the year 1852 in the portrait atelier of their (respectively)
10 1st
1877
and
2nd cousin, Stefan Virag of Szesfehervar, Hungary. ⧼A letter⧽A letter An
11 ancient
1878haggadah
book in which a pair of hornrimmed convex spectacles
12 inserted
1879 marked the passage of thanksgiving in the ritual prayers for
13 Pessach
1880 (Passover): a photocard of the Queen's Hotel, Ennis, proprietor,
14 Rudolph
1881 Bloom: an envelope addressed:
To My
Dear Son Leopold.
1882
15
What fractions of phrases did the lecture of those five whole words
16
evoke?
1883
17Tomorrow will be a week that I received .... it is no use Leopold to be ....
1884
18with
your dear mother ... that is not more to stand ... to her ... all for me is
1885
19 out ... be kind to Athos, Leopold .... my dear son ... always ... of me ... das
1886
20 Herz ... Gott ... dein ...
1882
15
What fractions of phrases did the lecture of those five whole words
16
evoke?
1883
17Tomorrow will be a week that I received .... it is no use Leopold to be ....
1884
18with
your dear mother ... that is not more to stand ... to her ... all for me is
1885
19 out ... be kind to Athos, Leopold .... my dear son ... always ... of me ... das
1886
20 Herz ... Gott ... dein ...
1887
21
What reminiscences of a human subject suffering from progressive
1888
22
melancholia⸢2of a human subject suffering from progressive
1888
22
melancholia2⸣ did these objects evoke in Bloom?
1889
23An old man,
∧⧼widowed,⧽widowed, widower, widower,
∧⧼widowed,⧽widowed, widower, widower,
unkempt of
hair, in bed, with head
24 covered, sighing:
1890 an infirm dog, Athos:
⸢1[veronal,]veronal, aconite, aconite,
1⸣ [veronal,]veronal, aconite, aconite,
resorted to by
25
increasing doses of∧increasing doses of∧ grains and
1891 scruples as a palliative of recrudescent
26 neuralgia: the face in death of a
1892
septuagenarian,⸢B
septuagenarian,B⸣
suicide by poison.
1893
1
Why did Bloom ⧼f⧽f experience a sentiment of remorse?
1894
2Because in immature impatience he had treated with disrespect certain
1895
3
⸢⧼paternal⧽paternal
⸣ ⧼paternal⧽paternal
beliefs and practices.
1896
4
As?
1897
5The prohibition of the use of fleshmeat and milk at one meal:
the
1898
6hebdomadary
symposium of incoordinately abstract, perfervidly concrete
1899
7mercantile ⧼coexreligionists:⧽coexreligionists: coexreligionist excompatriots:⸢2the
1898
6hebdomadary
symposium of incoordinately abstract, perfervidly concrete
1899
7mercantile ⧼coexreligionists:⧽coexreligionists: coexreligionist excompatriots:2⸣
the
8 circumcision of male infants:
1900the supernatural character of Judaic
9 scripture:
the ineffability of the
1901tetragrammaton:⸢3the ineffability of the
1901tetragrammaton:3⸣
the sanctity of the
10 sabbath.
1902
11
How did these beliefs and practices now appear to him?
1903
12Not more ⧼irr⧽irr rational than they had then appeared, not less rational than
13 other
1904 beliefs and practices now appeared.
1905
14
What first reminiscence had he of Rudolph Bloom (deceased)?
1906
15Rudolph Bloom (deceased) narrated to his son Leopold Bloom (aged 6)∧(aged 6)∧ a
1907
16 retrospective arrangement of migrations and settlements in and between
1908
17 Dublin, London, Florence, Milan,
Vienna, Budapest,
⸢1Vienna, Budapest,
1⸣
Szombathely
with
1909
18 statements of satisfaction (his grandfather having seen Maria Theresia,
1910
19 empress of Austria, queen of Hungary), with commercial advice (having
1911
20 taken care of pence, the pounds having taken care of themselves). Leopold
1912
21 Bloom (aged 6)∧(aged 6)∧ had accompanied these
narrations by constant
22 consultation
1913 of a geographical map of Europe (political) and by suggestions
23 for the
1914 establishment of affiliated business premises in the various centres
1915
24 mentioned.
1916
25
Had time equally but differently obliterated the memory of these migrations
1917
26
in narrator and listener?
1918
27In narrator by the access of years and in consequence of the use of narcotic
1919
28 toxin: in listener by the access of years and in consequence of the action of
1920
29 distraction upon vicarious experiences.
1921
1
What idiosyncracies of the narrator were concomitant products of
1922
2
amnesia?
1923
3Occasionally he ate ⧼with hatted⧽with hatted without having previously removed his
4 hat.
1924 Occasionally he drank voraciously the juice of gooseberry
fool from an
1925
5 inclined plate. Occasionally he removed from his lips the traces of food by
1926
6 means of a lacerated envelope or other
accessible⸢3accessible3⸣
fragment of paper.
1927
7
What two phenomena of senescence⸢Bof senescenceB⸣ were more frequent?
1928
8The myopic digital calculation of coins, eructation consequent upon
1929
9 repletion.
1930
10
What object offered partial consolation for these reminiscences?
1931
11The endowment policy, the bank passbook,
the certificate of the possession
1932
12 of scrip.
1933 ⸢2[From what reverse of fortune did these supports protect their possessor?]From what reverse of fortune did these supports protect their possessor?
13
14
Reduce Bloom by cross multiplication of reverses of fortune, from which
1934
15
these supports protected him, and by elimination of all positive values to a
1935
16
negligible negative irrational unreal quantity.
13
14
Reduce Bloom by cross multiplication of reverses of fortune, from which
1934
15
these supports protected him, and by elimination of all positive values to a
1935
16
negligible negative irrational unreal quantity. 2⸣ [From what reverse of fortune did these supports protect their possessor?]From what reverse of fortune did these supports protect their possessor?
13
14
Reduce Bloom by cross multiplication of reverses of fortune, from which
1934
15
these supports protected him, and by elimination of all positive values to a
1935
16
negligible negative irrational unreal quantity.
13
14
Reduce Bloom by cross multiplication of reverses of fortune, from which
1934
15
these supports protected him, and by elimination of all positive values to a
1935
16
negligible negative irrational unreal quantity.
1936
17Successively, in descending helotic ⸢1[order,]order, order: order:
1⸣ [order,]order, order: order:
⸢C
1936
17Successively, in descending helotic ⸢1[order,]order, order: order:
1⸣ [order,]order, order: order:
C⸣
[CMendicancy: that
18of the sandwichman, distributor of throwaways, nocturnal vagrant,
19maimed sailor, blind stripling, bailiff's man.]Mendicancy: that
18of the sandwichman, distributor of throwaways, nocturnal vagrant,
19maimed sailor, blind stripling, bailiff's man.
Poverty: that of the outdoor
1937
20
⧼commerce⧽commerce hawker of imitation jewellery, the dun for the recovery of bad
21 and doubtful
1938 debts, the poor rate and deputy cess ⸢B[collector.]collector.
⧼collector,
22 the⧽collector,
22 the collector.
⧼collector,
22 the⧽collector,
22 the collector.
B⸣ [collector.]collector.
⧼collector,
22 the⧽collector,
22 the collector.
⧼collector,
22 the⧽collector,
22 the collector.
1939
Mendicancy: that of the
fraudulent bankrupt with
23 negligible assets∧with
23 negligible assets∧ paying 1⁄4d
in the £,
∧
fraudulent bankrupt with
23 negligible assets∧with
23 negligible assets∧ paying 1⁄4d
in the £,
∧
1940sandwichman, distributor of
24throwaways, nocturnal vagrant,
insinuating
1941sycophant,⸢2insinuating
1941sycophant,2⸣
maimed sailor,
25blind stripling, superannuated∧superannuated∧ bailiff's ∧⧼man.⧽man. man,
1942
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,⸢2
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,2⸣
eccentric public laughingstock
1943 seated on bench of
27 public park under
discarded⸢2discarded2⸣
perforated umbrella. man,
1942
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,⸢2
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,2⸣
eccentric public laughingstock
1943 seated on bench of
27 public park under
discarded⸢2discarded2⸣
perforated umbrella.
∧⧼man.⧽man. man,
1942
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,⸢2
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,2⸣
eccentric public laughingstock
1943 seated on bench of
27 public park under
discarded⸢2discarded2⸣
perforated umbrella. man,
1942
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,⸢2
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,2⸣
eccentric public laughingstock
1943 seated on bench of
27 public park under
discarded⸢2discarded2⸣
perforated umbrella.
⸢CMendicancy: that of the
fraudulent bankrupt with
23 negligible assets∧with
23 negligible assets∧ paying 1⁄4d
in the £,
∧
fraudulent bankrupt with
23 negligible assets∧with
23 negligible assets∧ paying 1⁄4d
in the £,
∧
1940sandwichman, distributor of
24throwaways, nocturnal vagrant,
insinuating
1941sycophant,⸢2insinuating
1941sycophant,2⸣
maimed sailor,
25blind stripling, superannuated∧superannuated∧ bailiff's ∧⧼man.⧽man. man,
1942
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,⸢2
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,2⸣
eccentric public laughingstock
1943 seated on bench of
27 public park under
discarded⸢2discarded2⸣
perforated umbrella. man,
1942
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,⸢2
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,2⸣
eccentric public laughingstock
1943 seated on bench of
27 public park under
discarded⸢2discarded2⸣
perforated umbrella.
∧⧼man.⧽man. man,
1942
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,⸢2
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,2⸣
eccentric public laughingstock
1943 seated on bench of
27 public park under
discarded⸢2discarded2⸣
perforated umbrella. man,
1942
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,⸢2
marfeast, lickplate,
26spoilsport, pickthank,2⸣
eccentric public laughingstock
1943 seated on bench of
27 public park under
discarded⸢2discarded2⸣
perforated umbrella.
C⸣
1944
Destitution: the
28inmate of Old Man's House (Royal Hospital),
1945Kilmainham, the inmate of
29Simpson's Hospital for reduced but respectable
1946men permanently disabled
30by gout or want of sight. Nadir of misery: the
1947aged impotent disfranchised
31ratesupported moribund lunatic pauper.⸢B
Destitution: the
28inmate of Old Man's House (Royal Hospital),
1945Kilmainham, the inmate of
29Simpson's Hospital for reduced but respectable
1946men permanently disabled
30by gout or want of sight. Nadir of misery: the
1947aged impotent disfranchised
31ratesupported moribund lunatic pauper.B⸣
1948
1
With which attendant indignities?
1949
2The ∧⧼contempt⧽contempt
unsympathetic⸢BunsympatheticB⸣
indifference
unsympathetic⸢BunsympatheticB⸣
indifference
∧⧼contempt⧽contempt
unsympathetic⸢BunsympatheticB⸣
indifference
unsympathetic⸢BunsympatheticB⸣
indifference
of previously amiable
3 females, the contempt
1950 of
muscular⸢2muscular2⸣
males, the ⧼recept⧽recept acceptance of
4 fragments of bread, the simulated
1951 ignorance of casual acquaintances, the
5 latration of illegitimate
unlicensed⸢2unlicensed2⸣
1952 vagabond dogs, the infantile discharge
6 of
decomposed⸢BdecomposedB⸣
vegetable ⸢C[missiles.]missiles. missiles,
1953worth little or nothing,
7nothing or less than nothing. missiles,
1953worth little or nothing,
7nothing or less than nothing.
C⸣ [missiles.]missiles. missiles,
1953worth little or nothing,
7nothing or less than nothing. missiles,
1953worth little or nothing,
7nothing or less than nothing.
1954
8
By what could such a situation be precluded?
1955
9By ⸢C[decease:]decease: decease (change of state): decease (change of state):
C⸣ [decease:]decease: decease (change of state): decease (change of state):
by ⸢C[departure.]departure. departure
10(change of place). departure
10(change of place).
C⸣ [departure.]departure. departure
10(change of place). departure
10(change of place).
1956
11
Which preferably?
1957
12The ⸢1[latter.]latter. latter, by the line of least resistance. latter, by the line of least resistance.
1⸣ [latter.]latter. latter, by the line of least resistance. latter, by the line of least resistance.
1958
13
What considerations rendered ∧⧼it⧽it departure departure ∧⧼it⧽it departure departure not entirely undesirable?
1959
14Constant cohabitation impeding mutual toleration of personal defects. The
1960
15 habit of independent purchase increasingly cultivated.
The necessity to
1961
16counteract by impermanent sojourn the permanence of arrest.⸢1The necessity to
1961
16counteract by impermanent sojourn the permanence of arrest.1⸣
1962
17
What considerations rendered ∧⧼it⧽it departure departure ∧⧼it⧽it departure departure not irrational?
1963
18The parties concerned , uniting,∧, uniting,∧ had increased and multiplied, which
19 being
1964 done, ⧼and⧽and offspring produced and educed to maturity, the parties, if
20
∧⧼still united,⧽still united,
not
1965 disunited
not
1965 disunited
∧⧼still united,⧽still united,
not
1965 disunited
not
1965 disunited
[1for increase and multiplication]for increase and multiplication
were obliged
21 to ⸢B[reunite]reunite
⸢1[reunite,]reunite,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
1⸣ [reunite,]reunite,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
which was
1966
22absurd,
⸢1[reunite,]reunite,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
1⸣ [reunite,]reunite,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
which was
1966
22absurd,
B⸣ [reunite]reunite
⸢1[reunite,]reunite,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
1⸣ [reunite,]reunite,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
which was
1966
22absurd,
⸢1[reunite,]reunite,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
1⸣ [reunite,]reunite,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
reunite
for increase and multiplication,
which was
1966
22absurd,
to form
by reunion⸢1by reunion1⸣
the original couple of uniting∧uniting∧ parties,
23 which was
1967
⸢B[absurd.]absurd.
impossible.
impossible.
B⸣ [absurd.]absurd.
impossible.
impossible.
1968
24
What considerations rendered ∧⧼it⧽it departure departure ∧⧼it⧽it departure departure desirable?
1969
25The attractive character of certain localities in Ireland and ⸢B[abroad.]abroad.
26abroad, as
1970represented in general geographical maps of polychrome design
1 or in
1971special ordnance survey charts by employment of scale numerals and
1972
2hachures.
26abroad, as
1970represented in general geographical maps of polychrome design
1 or in
1971special ordnance survey charts by employment of scale numerals and
1972
2hachures.
B⸣ [abroad.]abroad.
26abroad, as
1970represented in general geographical maps of polychrome design
1 or in
1971special ordnance survey charts by employment of scale numerals and
1972
2hachures.
26abroad, as
1970represented in general geographical maps of polychrome design
1 or in
1971special ordnance survey charts by employment of scale numerals and
1972
2hachures.
1973⧼
3
As?⧽
3
As? In Ireland? In Ireland? ∧
1973⧼
3
As?⧽
3
As? In Ireland? In Ireland?
∧⧼
1974
4In Ireland: the⧽
1974
4In Ireland: the The The
∧⧼
1974
4In Ireland: the⧽
1974
4In Ireland: the The The
cliffs of Moher, the windy wilds of Connemara,
5 lough Neagh with
1975 submerged petrified city, the Giant's Causeway, Fort
6 Camden and Fort
1976 Carlisle, the Golden Vale of Tipperary,
the islands of
7 Aran, the pastures of
1977 royal Meath, Brigid's elm in Kildare, the Queen's
8 Island shipyard in
1978 Belfast, the Salmon Leap, the lakes of Killarney.
1979
9
Abroad?
∧⧼
1980
10Ceylon,⧽
1980
10Ceylon,
Ceylon
(with spicegardens supplying tea to ⸢1[Tom Kernan),]Tom Kernan),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
1⸣ [Tom Kernan),]Tom Kernan),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
Ceylon
(with spicegardens supplying tea to ⸢1[Tom Kernan),]Tom Kernan),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
1⸣ [Tom Kernan),]Tom Kernan),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
1980
10Ceylon,⧽
1980
10Ceylon,
Ceylon
(with spicegardens supplying tea to ⸢1[Tom Kernan),]Tom Kernan),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
1⸣ [Tom Kernan),]Tom Kernan),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
Ceylon
(with spicegardens supplying tea to ⸢1[Tom Kernan),]Tom Kernan),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
1⸣ [Tom Kernan),]Tom Kernan),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
11Thomas Kernan, agent for
1981Pulbrook, Robertson
and Co, 2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧2 Mincing Lane,
12 London, E. C.,
∧
5 Dame
1982
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
∧⧼
street)⧽
street)
street,
Dublin),
street,
Dublin),
⸢3[the temple of
13Jerusalem (where meeting was convened from year to year),]the temple of
13Jerusalem (where meeting was convened from year to year), Jerusalem, the
14holy city
(with mosque of Omar and gate of
1983Damascus, goal of
15aspiration), Jerusalem, the
14holy city
(with mosque of Omar and gate of
1983Damascus, goal of
15aspiration),
3⸣ [the temple of
13Jerusalem (where meeting was convened from year to year),]the temple of
13Jerusalem (where meeting was convened from year to year), Jerusalem, the
14holy city
(with mosque of Omar and gate of
1983Damascus, goal of
15aspiration), Jerusalem, the
14holy city
(with mosque of Omar and gate of
1983Damascus, goal of
15aspiration),
the straits of Gibraltar (the unique
1984 birthplace of Marion
16 Tweedy), the Parthenon (containing statues of
nude
1985
⧼Greek⧽Greek Grecian
17divinities),
the Wall street money market (which controlled
1986 international
18 finance), the Plaza de Toros at La Linea, Spain (where
1987 O'Hara of the
19 Camerons had slain the bull), Niagara (over which no
1988 human being had
20 passed with impunity), the land of the Eskimos
(eaters of
1989 soap), the
21 forbidden country of Thibet (from which no traveller returns),
1990 the bay of
22 Naples (to see which was to die), the Dead Sea.
1991
23
Under what ⧼guidance?⧽guidance? guidance, following what signs?
1992
24At sea, septentrional, by night the polestar, located at the point of
1993
25 intersection of the right line from beta to alpha in ⧼the⧽the Ursa Maior
26 produced
1994
and divided externally at omega⸢2
and divided externally at omega2⸣
and the hypotenuse of the
27 rightangled
1995 triangle formed by the line alpha omega so produced and the
28 line alpha
1996 delta of Ursa Maior.
On land, meridional, a bispherical moon,
29revealed
in
1997 imperfect varying phases of lunation through
the ∧⧼rere⧽rere
30posterior
30posterior
∧⧼rere⧽rere
30posterior
30posterior
interstice of the
1998 imperfectly occluded skirt of a carnose negligent
31 perambulating female, a
1999 pillar of the cloud by day.
1991
23
Under what ⧼guidance?⧽guidance? guidance, following what signs?
1992
24At sea, septentrional, by night the polestar, located at the point of
1993
25 intersection of the right line from beta to alpha in ⧼the⧽the Ursa Maior
26 produced
1994
and divided externally at omega⸢2
and divided externally at omega2⸣
and the hypotenuse of the
27 rightangled
1995 triangle formed by the line alpha omega so produced and the
28 line alpha
1996 delta of Ursa Maior.
On land, meridional, a bispherical moon,
29revealed
in
1997 imperfect varying phases of lunation through
the ∧⧼rere⧽rere
30posterior
30posterior
∧⧼rere⧽rere
30posterior
30posterior
interstice of the
1998 imperfectly occluded skirt of a carnose negligent
31 perambulating female, a
1999 pillar of the cloud by day.
2000
1
What public advertisement would divulge the occultation of the departed?
2001
2£5 reward,
lost, stolen or strayed from his residence 7 Eccles street,⸢Blost, stolen or strayed from his residence 7 Eccles street,B⸣
3 missing
2002 gent about 40,
answering to the name of Bloom,
Leopold
4(Poldy),⸢Banswering to the name of Bloom,
Leopold
4(Poldy),B⸣
height
20035 ft ⸢3[81⁄2]81⁄2 91⁄2 91⁄2
3⸣ [81⁄2]81⁄2 91⁄2 91⁄2
inches,
full build, olive complexion, may
5 have since grown a beard,
2004 when last seen was wearing a black suit. Above
6 sum will be paid for
2005 information leading to his discovery.
2006
7
By what name⧽
2006
7
By what name What universal ⸢2[denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations 2⸣ [denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations What universal ⸢2[denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations 2⸣ [denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations ∧⧼
2006
7
By what name⧽
2006
7
By what name What universal ⸢2[denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations 2⸣ [denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations What universal ⸢2[denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations 2⸣ [denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations would be ∧⧼he known?⧽he known? ⸢2[his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? 2⸣ [his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? ⸢2[his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? 2⸣ [his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? ∧⧼he known?⧽he known? ⸢2[his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? 2⸣ [his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? ⸢2[his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? 2⸣ [his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity?
2008
10Assumed by any∧by any∧ or known to∧known to∧ none. Everyman or Noman.
2006
7
By what name⧽
2006
7
By what name What universal ⸢2[denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations 2⸣ [denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations What universal ⸢2[denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations 2⸣ [denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations ∧⧼
2006
7
By what name⧽
2006
7
By what name What universal ⸢2[denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations 2⸣ [denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations What universal ⸢2[denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations 2⸣ [denomination]denomination binomial
8
denominations binomial
8
denominations would be ∧⧼he known?⧽he known? ⸢2[his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? 2⸣ [his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? ⸢2[his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? 2⸣ [his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? ∧⧼he known?⧽he known? ⸢2[his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? 2⸣ [his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? ⸢2[his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? 2⸣ [his?]his? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity? his as entity and
2007
9
nonentity?
2008
10Assumed by any∧by any∧ or known to∧known to∧ none. Everyman or Noman.
2009
11
What tributes his?
2010
12Honour and gifts∧and gifts∧ of strangers, the friends of Everyman.
A ⸢C[bride]bride
13nymph
13nymph
C⸣ [bride]bride
13nymph
13nymph
2011 immortal, ⸢1[Beauty,]Beauty, beauty, beauty,
1⸣ [Beauty,]Beauty, beauty, beauty,
the bride of Noman.
2009
11
What tributes his?
2010
12Honour and gifts∧and gifts∧ of strangers, the friends of Everyman.
A ⸢C[bride]bride
13nymph
13nymph
C⸣ [bride]bride
13nymph
13nymph
2011 immortal, ⸢1[Beauty,]Beauty, beauty, beauty,
1⸣ [Beauty,]Beauty, beauty, beauty,
the bride of Noman.
2012
14
Would the departed never ∧⧼anywhere somehow⧽anywhere somehow nowhere nohow nowhere nohow ∧⧼anywhere somehow⧽anywhere somehow nowhere nohow nowhere nohow
15
reappear?
2013
16Ever he would ⸢3[wander]wander wander, selfcompelled, wander, selfcompelled,
3⸣ [wander]wander wander, selfcompelled, wander, selfcompelled,
to the extreme limit of his
17 cometary
2014 orbit, beyond the fixed stars and variable suns and telescopic
18 planets,
2015 astronomical waifs and strays⧼.⧽.,
to the extreme boundary of
19space,
⸢Cto the extreme boundary of
19space,
C⸣
passing
2016 from land to land, among peoples, amid events.
20 Somewhere imperceptibly
2017he
would hear
and
somehow ⸢3[reluctantly]reluctantly
21reluctantly, suncompelled,
21reluctantly, suncompelled,
3⸣ [reluctantly]reluctantly
21reluctantly, suncompelled,
21reluctantly, suncompelled,
⸢Bsomehow ⸢3[reluctantly]reluctantly
21reluctantly, suncompelled,
21reluctantly, suncompelled,
3⸣ [reluctantly]reluctantly
21reluctantly, suncompelled,
21reluctantly, suncompelled,
B⸣
obey the summons
2018 of recall. ⸢C[Disappearing]Disappearing
22Whence, disappearing
22Whence, disappearing
C⸣ [Disappearing]Disappearing
22Whence, disappearing
22Whence, disappearing
from the constellation of the Northern
2019 Crown he
23 would somehow reappear reborn above delta in the constellation
2020 of
24 Cassiopeia and after incalculable eons of peregrination return an
2021
25estranged⸢2
25estranged2⸣
avenger, a wreaker of justice on malefactors, a dark crusader, a
2022
26 sleeper awakened, with financial resources
(by supposition)⸢B(by supposition)B⸣
surpassing
2023
27 those of Rothschild or
the silver king.
2024
1
What would render such return irrational?
2025
2An unsatisfactory equation between an exodus and return in time through
2026
3 reversible space and an exodus and return in space through irreversible
2027
4 time.
2024
1
What would render such return irrational?
2025
2An unsatisfactory equation between an exodus and return in time through
2026
3 reversible space and an exodus and return in space through irreversible
2027
4 time.
2028
5
What play of forces, inducing inertia,⸢2play of forces, inducing inertia,2⸣ rendered departure ⸢C[undesirable
6
and irrational?]undesirable
6
and irrational? undesirable? undesirable? C⸣ [undesirable
6
and irrational?]undesirable
6
and irrational? undesirable? undesirable?
2029
7The lateness of the hour,
rendering ⸢3[procrastinatory,]procrastinatory, procrastinatory: procrastinatory:
3⸣ [procrastinatory,]procrastinatory, procrastinatory: procrastinatory:
⸢Brendering ⸢3[procrastinatory,]procrastinatory, procrastinatory: procrastinatory:
3⸣ [procrastinatory,]procrastinatory, procrastinatory: procrastinatory:
B⸣
8 the obscurity of the
2030 night,
rendering ⸢3[invisible,]invisible,
invisible:
invisible:
3⸣ [invisible,]invisible,
invisible:
invisible:
⸢Brendering ⸢3[invisible,]invisible,
invisible:
invisible:
3⸣ [invisible,]invisible,
invisible:
invisible:
B⸣
the
9 uncertainty of thoroughfares,
rendering
2031
⸢3[perilous,]perilous,
perilous:
perilous:
3⸣ [perilous,]perilous,
perilous:
perilous:
⸢Brendering
2031
⸢3[perilous,]perilous,
perilous:
perilous:
3⸣ [perilous,]perilous,
perilous:
perilous:
B⸣
the
10 necessity for repose,
obviating ⸢3[movement,]movement, movement: movement:
3⸣ [movement,]movement, movement: movement:
⸢Bobviating ⸢3[movement,]movement, movement: movement:
3⸣ [movement,]movement, movement: movement:
B⸣
the proximity
11 of ∧⧼a⧽a an
2032 occupied an
2032 occupied
∧⧼a⧽a an
2032 occupied an
2032 occupied
bed,
obviating
⸢3[research,
]research,
research:
research:
3⸣ [research,
]research,
research:
research:
⸢Bobviating
⸢3[research,
]research,
research:
research:
3⸣ [research,
]research,
research:
research:
B⸣
the
12 anticipation of warmth (human)
2033 tempered with coolness ⸢B[(linen).](linen).
13(linen),
obviating desire and rendering ⸢3[desirable.]desirable. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire.
3⸣ [desirable.]desirable. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire.
13(linen),
obviating desire and rendering ⸢3[desirable.]desirable. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire.
3⸣ [desirable.]desirable. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire.
B⸣ [(linen).](linen).
13(linen),
obviating desire and rendering ⸢3[desirable.]desirable. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire.
3⸣ [desirable.]desirable. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire.
13(linen),
obviating desire and rendering ⸢3[desirable.]desirable. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire.
3⸣ [desirable.]desirable. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire. desirable:
2034the statue of
14Narcissus, sound without echo, desired desire.
2035
15
What advantages were possessed by an occupied, as distinct from an
2036
16
unoccupied bed?
2037
17The removal of nocturnal solitude,
the superior quality of human (mature
2038
18female) to inhuman (hotwaterjar) calefaction,⸢Cthe superior quality of human (mature
2038
18female) to inhuman (hotwaterjar) calefaction,C⸣
the stimulation of matutinal
2039
19 contact, the economy ∧⧼in⧽in of of
∧⧼in⧽in of of
mangling done on the premises in the case of
2040
20 trousers accurately folded and placed lengthwise between the spring
2041
21 mattress
(striped)⸢B(striped)B⸣
and the woollen ⸢B[mattress.]mattress. mattress (biscuit
22section). mattress (biscuit
22section).
B⸣ [mattress.]mattress. mattress (biscuit
22section). mattress (biscuit
22section).
2042
23
What past∧past∧ consecutive ⸢1[causes]causes causes, before rising preapprehended, causes, before rising preapprehended, 1⸣ [causes]causes causes, before rising preapprehended, causes, before rising preapprehended,
24
of
2043 accumulated⸢C accumulatedC⸣ fatigue did Bloom, before rising, silently ⸢C[enumerate?]enumerate?
25
recapitulate?
25
recapitulate? C⸣ [enumerate?]enumerate?
25
recapitulate?
25
recapitulate?
2044
26The preparation of ⸢3[breakfast,]breakfast, breakfast (burnt offering): breakfast (burnt offering):
3⸣ [breakfast,]breakfast, breakfast (burnt offering): breakfast (burnt offering):
intestinal
27congestion and
2045premeditative ⸢3[defecation,]defecation, defecation (holy of holies): defecation (holy of holies):
3⸣ [defecation,]defecation, defecation (holy of holies): defecation (holy of holies):
⸢1intestinal
27congestion and
2045premeditative ⸢3[defecation,]defecation, defecation (holy of holies): defecation (holy of holies):
3⸣ [defecation,]defecation, defecation (holy of holies): defecation (holy of holies):
1⸣
28 the ⸢3[bath,]bath, bath (rite of John): bath (rite of John):
3⸣ [bath,]bath, bath (rite of John): bath (rite of John):
the
2046
⸢3[funeral,]funeral,
funeral (rite of Samuel):
funeral (rite of Samuel):
3⸣ [funeral,]funeral,
funeral (rite of Samuel):
funeral (rite of Samuel):
29 the advertisement of Alexander ⸢3[Keyes,]Keyes, Keyes (Urim and
2047Thummim): Keyes (Urim and
2047Thummim):
3⸣ [Keyes,]Keyes, Keyes (Urim and
2047Thummim): Keyes (Urim and
2047Thummim):
30 the unsubstantial ⸢3[lunch,]lunch, lunch (rite of Melchisedek): lunch (rite of Melchisedek):
3⸣ [lunch,]lunch, lunch (rite of Melchisedek): lunch (rite of Melchisedek):
the visit to
2048
31 museum and national ⸢3[library,]library, library (holy place): library (holy place):
3⸣ [library,]library, library (holy place): library (holy place):
the bookhunt along
1 Bedford
2049 row, Merchants'
Arch,
Wellington ⸢3[Quay,]Quay, Quay (Simchath
2Torah): Quay (Simchath
2Torah):
3⸣ [Quay,]Quay, Quay (Simchath
2Torah): Quay (Simchath
2Torah):
∧the bookhunt along
1 Bedford
2049 row, Merchants'
Arch,
Wellington ⸢3[Quay,]Quay, Quay (Simchath
2Torah): Quay (Simchath
2Torah):
3⸣ [Quay,]Quay, Quay (Simchath
2Torah): Quay (Simchath
2Torah):
∧ the music in
2050 the Ormond ⸢3[Hotel,]Hotel, Hotel (Shira Shirim): Hotel (Shira Shirim):
3⸣ [Hotel,]Hotel, Hotel (Shira Shirim): Hotel (Shira Shirim):
the
3 altercation
with a truculent
2051troglodyte⸢3with a truculent
2051troglodyte3⸣
in Bernard Kiernan's ⸢3[premises,]premises,
4premises (holocaust):
4premises (holocaust):
3⸣ [premises,]premises,
4premises (holocaust):
4premises (holocaust):
a blank period of
2052 time including a cardrive, a visit to
5 a house of mourning, a ⸢3[leavetaking,]leavetaking, leavetaking
2053(wilderness): leavetaking
2053(wilderness):
3⸣ [leavetaking,]leavetaking, leavetaking
2053(wilderness): leavetaking
2053(wilderness):
the
6 eroticism produced
by feminine ⸢3[exhibitionism,]exhibitionism, exhibitionism (rite of
2054
7Onan): exhibitionism (rite of
2054
7Onan):
3⸣ [exhibitionism,]exhibitionism, exhibitionism (rite of
2054
7Onan): exhibitionism (rite of
2054
7Onan):
the prolonged delivery of Mrs Mina ⸢3[Purefoy,]Purefoy, Purefoy (heave
8offering): Purefoy (heave
8offering):
3⸣ [Purefoy,]Purefoy, Purefoy (heave
8offering): Purefoy (heave
8offering):
the
2055 visit to the ∧⧼brothel⧽brothel disorderly house disorderly house
∧⧼brothel⧽brothel disorderly house disorderly house
of Mrs Bella Cohen,
9
∧⧼81⧽81 82 82
∧⧼81⧽81 82 82
Tyrone street, lower,
2056 and subsequent brawl
and chance
10medley⸢2and chance
10medley2⸣
in Beaver ⸢3[street,]street, street (Armageddon): street (Armageddon):
3⸣ [street,]street, street (Armageddon): street (Armageddon):
2057 nocturnal
11 perambulation to and from the cabman's shelter, Butt ⸢3[Bridge.]Bridge. Bridge
2058
12(∧⧼peace offering⧽peace offering
atonement
atonement
∧⧼peace offering⧽peace offering
atonement
atonement
). Bridge
2058
12(∧⧼peace offering⧽peace offering
atonement
atonement
∧⧼peace offering⧽peace offering
atonement
atonement
).
3⸣ [Bridge.]Bridge. Bridge
2058
12(∧⧼peace offering⧽peace offering
atonement
atonement
∧⧼peace offering⧽peace offering
atonement
atonement
). Bridge
2058
12(∧⧼peace offering⧽peace offering
atonement
atonement
∧⧼peace offering⧽peace offering
atonement
atonement
).
2059
13
What selfimposed⸢3selfimposed3⸣ enigma did Bloom about to rise in order to go so as to
2060
14
conclude lest he should not conclude involuntarily apprehend?
2061
15The cause of a brief sharp unforeseen heard loud lone crack emitted by the
2062
16 insentient material of a strainveined timber table.
13
What selfimposed⸢3selfimposed3⸣ enigma did Bloom about to rise in order to go so as to
2060
14
conclude lest he should not conclude involuntarily apprehend?
2061
15The cause of a brief sharp unforeseen heard loud lone crack emitted by the
2062
16 insentient material of a strainveined timber table.
2063
17
What selfinvolved⸢3selfinvolved3⸣ enigma did Bloom risen, going, gathering
18
multicoloured
2064 multiform multitudinous garments, voluntarily
19
apprehending, not
2065 comprehend?
2066
20Who was M‘Intosh?
2063
17
What selfinvolved⸢3selfinvolved3⸣ enigma did Bloom risen, going, gathering
18
multicoloured
2064 multiform multitudinous garments, voluntarily
19
apprehending, not
2065 comprehend?
2066
20Who was M‘Intosh?
2067
21
What selfevident⸢3selfevident3⸣ enigma pondered with ⸢C[sporadic]sporadic desultory desultory C⸣ [sporadic]sporadic desultory desultory
22
constancy during 30
2068years did Bloom now, having effected natural∧natural∧
23
obscurity by the extinction of
2069 artificial light, silently suddenly comprehend?
2070
24Where was Moses when the candle went out?
2067
21
What selfevident⸢3selfevident3⸣ enigma pondered with ⸢C[sporadic]sporadic desultory desultory C⸣ [sporadic]sporadic desultory desultory
22
constancy during 30
2068years did Bloom now, having effected natural∧natural∧
23
obscurity by the extinction of
2069 artificial light, silently suddenly comprehend?
2070
24Where was Moses when the candle went out?
2071
25
What imperfections in a perfect day did Bloom, walking, charged with
2072
26
collected articles of recently disvested male wearing apparel,⸢Bcharged with
2072
26
collected articles of recently disvested male wearing apparel,B⸣ ⸢B[silently]silently
27
silently,
2073successively,
27
silently,
2073successively, B⸣ [silently]silently
27
silently,
2073successively,
27
silently,
2073successively, enumerate?
2074
28A ∧⧼temporary⧽temporary provisional provisional
∧⧼temporary⧽temporary provisional provisional
failure to obtain renewal of an advertisement:
29 to obtain a
2075 certain quantity of tea from Thomas Kernan (agent
for
1 Pulbrook,
2076 Robertson and Co,
5 Dame Street,
Dublin,
and⸢15 Dame Street,
Dublin,
and1⸣
2⸢222⸣
Mincing
2Lane,
London
2077E. C.):
to certify the presence or absence of posterior
3rectal orifice in the
2078case of Hellenic female divinities:
⸢1to certify the presence or absence of posterior
3rectal orifice in the
2078case of Hellenic female divinities:
1⸣
to obtain admission
4 (gratuitous or paid)
2079 to the performance of Leah by Mrs Bandmann
Palmer
5 at the Gaiety
2080Theatre,
⸢3[46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
3⸣ [46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
49⸢1
⸢3[46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
3⸣ [46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
491⸣
South ⸢1[Anne]Anne King King
1⸣ [Anne]Anne King King
street.
2081
6
What impression of an absent face did Bloom, arrested, silently recall?
2082
7The face of her father, the late Major Brian Cooper Tweedy, Royal Dublin
2083
8 Fusiliers, of Gibraltar and Rehoboth, Dolphin's Barn.
2084
9
What recurrent impressions of the same were possible by hypothesis?
2085
10Retreating, at the terminus of the Great Northern Railway, Amiens street,
2086
11 with constant uniform acceleration, along parallel lines meeting at infinity,
2087
12 if produced: along parallel lines, reproduced from infinity, with constant
2088
13 uniform retardation, at the terminus of the Great Northern
Railway,
2089
14 Amiens street, returning.
2084
9
What recurrent impressions of the same were possible by hypothesis?
2085
10Retreating, at the terminus of the Great Northern Railway, Amiens street,
2086
11 with constant uniform acceleration, along parallel lines meeting at infinity,
2087
12 if produced: along parallel lines, reproduced from infinity, with constant
2088
13 uniform retardation, at the terminus of the Great Northern
Railway,
2089
14 Amiens street, returning.
2090
15
What miscellaneous effects of female⸢Bmiscellaneous effects of femaleB⸣ personal ⸢B[objects]objects wearing
16
apparel wearing
16
apparel B⸣ [objects]objects wearing
16
apparel wearing
16
apparel were
2091 perceived by him?
2092
17A pair of
new inodorous halfsilk black ladies'
⸢3[stockings,]stockings, hose, hose,
3⸣ [stockings,]stockings, hose, hose,
a pair of
18 new violet
2093 garters, a pair of outsize ladies' drawers of India mull, cut on
19 generous
2094 lines, redolent of opoponax, jessamine and Muratti's Turkish
20 cigarettes and
2095 containing a long bright steel safety pin, folded curvilinear, a
21 camisole of
2096 batiste with thin lace border, ⸢1[a short blue silk petticoat,]a short blue silk petticoat,
⸢2[a
22blue]a
22blue
an
an
2⸣ [a
22blue]a
22blue
an
an
accordion underskirt of blue silk moirette,
⸢2[a
22blue]a
22blue
an
an
2⸣ [a
22blue]a
22blue
an
an
accordion underskirt of blue silk moirette,
1⸣ [a short blue silk petticoat,]a short blue silk petticoat,
⸢2[a
22blue]a
22blue
an
an
2⸣ [a
22blue]a
22blue
an
an
accordion underskirt of blue silk moirette,
⸢2[a
22blue]a
22blue
an
an
2⸣ [a
22blue]a
22blue
an
an
accordion underskirt of blue silk moirette,
2097 all these objects
23 being disposed irregularly on the top of ⧼an⧽an a rectangular
2098 trunk, quadruple
24 battened, having capped corners,∧having capped corners,∧ with multicoloured
2099 labels, initialled on
25 its fore side in white lettering B. C. T. (Brian Cooper
2100 Tweedy).
2101
26
What impersonal objects were perceived?
2102
27A commode, one leg fractured, totally∧totally∧ covered ∧⧼with⧽with by by
∧⧼with⧽with by by
square
28cretonne cutting,
2103apple design, on which rested a
lady's⸢3lady's3⸣
black straw ∧⧼
29ladies'⧽
29ladies'
[3lady's]lady's
[3lady's]lady's
∧⧼
29ladies'⧽
29ladies'
[3lady's]lady's
[3lady's]lady's
hat.⸢B
2102
27A commode, one leg fractured, totally∧totally∧ covered ∧⧼with⧽with by by
∧⧼with⧽with by by
square
28cretonne cutting,
2103apple design, on which rested a
lady's⸢3lady's3⸣
black straw ∧⧼
29ladies'⧽
29ladies'
[3lady's]lady's
[3lady's]lady's
∧⧼
29ladies'⧽
29ladies'
[3lady's]lady's
[3lady's]lady's
hat.B⸣
Orangekeyed ware,
2104 bought of Henry Price,
1 basket, fancy goods, chinaware and ironmongery
2105manufacturer,
⸢3[21 to]21 to
221, 22,
221, 22,
3⸣ [21 to]21 to
221, 22,
221, 22,
23 Moore street,
disposed ∧⧼regularly⧽regularly irregularly irregularly
∧⧼regularly⧽regularly irregularly irregularly
on the
2106
3 washstand and floor∧and floor∧
and consisting of basin, soapdish and brushtray
4 (on
2107 the washstand , together∧, together∧), pitcher and night article (on the floor,
5 separate).
2108
6
Bloom's acts?
2109
7He deposited the articles of clothing on a chair, removed his ⸢3[other]other
8remaining
8remaining
3⸣ [other]other
8remaining
8remaining
2110 articles of clothing, took from beneath the bolster at the head of
9 the bed a
2111 folded long white nightshirt, inserted his head and arms into the
10 proper
2112 apertures of the nightshirt, removed a pillow from the head to the
11 foot of
2113 the bed, prepared the bedlinen accordingly and entered the bed.
2114
12
How?
2115
13With circumspection, as invariably when entering an abode (his own or not
2116
14 his own): with solicitude, the snakespiral springs of the mattress being old,
2117
15 the brass quoits and pendent viper radii loose
and tremulous under stress
2118
16 and strain∧under stress
2118
16 and strain∧: prudently, as entering a lair or ambush of lust or adders:
17lightly,
2119 the less to disturb: reverently, the bed of conception and
of⸢1of1⸣
⧼birth
18 and dea⧽birth
18 and dea birth, of
2120consummation
of marriage and
of⸢1of1⸣
breach of marriage,
19 of ⸢1[sleep,]sleep, sleep and sleep and
1⸣ [sleep,]sleep, sleep and sleep and
of
2121 death.
2122
20
What did his limbs, when gradually extended, encounter?
2123
21New clean bedlinen, ⧼the presence of⧽the presence of additional odours, the presence of a
22 human form,
2124 female, hers, the imprint of a human form, male, not his, some
23 crumbs,
2125 some flakes of potted meat, recooked, which he removed.
2126
24
If he had smiled why would he have smiled?
2127
25To reflect that each one who enters imagines himself to be the first to enter
2128
26 whereas he is always the last ⧼terms⧽terms term of a preceding series even if the
27 first term
2129 of a succeeding ∧⧼one.⧽one. one, each imagining himself to be first,
28 last, only and alone
2130whereas
he is neither first nor last nor only nor ⸢B[alone.]alone.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
B⸣ [alone.]alone.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
one, each imagining himself to be first,
28 last, only and alone
2130whereas
he is neither first nor last nor only nor ⸢B[alone.]alone.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
B⸣ [alone.]alone.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
∧⧼one.⧽one. one, each imagining himself to be first,
28 last, only and alone
2130whereas
he is neither first nor last nor only nor ⸢B[alone.]alone.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
B⸣ [alone.]alone.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
one, each imagining himself to be first,
28 last, only and alone
2130whereas
he is neither first nor last nor only nor ⸢B[alone.]alone.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
B⸣ [alone.]alone.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
29 alone in a series ⧼remounting⧽remounting originating
2131in and repeated to
30infinity.
2132
1
What preceding series?
2133
2Assuming Mulvey to be∧to be∧ the first term of his series, Penrose, Bartell
3 d'Arcy,
2134 professor Goodwin, Julius Mastiansky, John Henry Menton,
4 Father
2135 Bernard Corrigan, a farmer at the Royal Dublin Society's Horse
5 Show,
2136 Maggot O'Reilly, Matthew Dillon, Valentine Blake Dillon (Lord
6 Mayor of
2137 Dublin), Christopher Callinan, Lenehan, an Italian
7 organgrinder, an
2138 unknown gentleman in the Gaiety Theatre, Benjamin
8 Dollard, Simon
2139 Dedalus, Andrew (Pisser) Burke, Joseph Cuffe, Wisdom
9 Hely, Alderman
2140 John Hooper, Dr
⧼James⧽James Francis⸢1
⧼James⧽James Francis1⸣
Brady, Father
10 Sebastian of Mount Argus, a
2141 bootblack at the General Post Office,
⸢1[Edward]Edward
11 Hugh
11 Hugh
1⸣ [Edward]Edward
11 Hugh
11 Hugh
E.⸢(3)E.(3)⸣
(Blazes) ⸢B[Boylan.]Boylan. Boylan and so each
2142and so ∧⧼
12on.⧽
12on. on to no last
term. on to no last
term.
∧⧼
12on.⧽
12on. on to no last
term. on to no last
term.
Boylan and so each
2142and so ∧⧼
12on.⧽
12on. on to no last
term. on to no last
term.
∧⧼
12on.⧽
12on. on to no last
term. on to no last
term.
B⸣ [Boylan.]Boylan. Boylan and so each
2142and so ∧⧼
12on.⧽
12on. on to no last
term. on to no last
term.
∧⧼
12on.⧽
12on. on to no last
term. on to no last
term.
Boylan and so each
2142and so ∧⧼
12on.⧽
12on. on to no last
term. on to no last
term.
∧⧼
12on.⧽
12on. on to no last
term. on to no last
term.
2143
13
What were his reflections concerning the last member of this series and ⸢1[last]last
14
late
14
late 1⸣ [last]last
14
late
14
late
2144 occupant of the bed?
2145
15Reflections on his vigour (a bounder)∧(a bounder)∧, corporal proportion (a
16 billsticker)∧(a
16 billsticker)∧,
2146
⸢1[business]business
commercial
commercial
1⸣ [business]business
commercial
commercial
ability (a bester)∧(a bester)∧, impressionability
17
(a boaster)∧(a boaster)∧.
2147
18
Why ⸢1[this last quality?]this last quality? for the observer impressionability in addition to
19
vigour, corporal
2148proportion and commercial ability? for the observer impressionability in addition to
19
vigour, corporal
2148proportion and commercial ability? 1⸣ [this last quality?]this last quality? for the observer impressionability in addition to
19
vigour, corporal
2148proportion and commercial ability? for the observer impressionability in addition to
19
vigour, corporal
2148proportion and commercial ability?
2149
20Because he had observed with augmenting frequency∧with augmenting frequency∧ in the preceding
2150
21 members of the same series the same concupiscence, inflammably
2151
22transmitted,
first with alarm, then with understanding, then with desire,
2152
23 finally with fatigue, with ⸢B[alternate]alternate alternating alternating
B⸣ [alternate]alternate alternating alternating
symptoms of
epicene⸢3epicene3⸣
24 comprehension
2153 and apprehension.
2154
25
With what antagonistic∧antagonistic∧ sentiments were his subsequent reflections
26
affected?
2155
27Envy, jealousy, abnegation, equanimity.
2156
1
Envy?
2157
2Of a bodily and mental male∧male∧ organism specially adapted for the
2158
3 superincumbent posture of energetic human copulation
and energetic
4piston
2159and cylinder movement⸢Band energetic
4piston
2159and cylinder movementB⸣
necessary for the complete satisfaction of a
5 constant
2160 but not acute concupiscence resident in a bodily and mental female
2161
6organism,
passive but not obtuse.
2162
7
Jealousy?
2163
8Because a nature full and volatile
in ⸢3[her]her its its
3⸣ [her]her its its
free state, was alternately
9 the ⧼source⧽source agent
2164 and reagent of attraction. Because attraction
between ⸢3[agents]agents
10
agent(s)
10
agent(s)
3⸣ [agents]agents
10
agent(s)
10
agent(s)
and
2165
⸢3[reagents]reagents
reagent(s)
reagent(s)
3⸣ [reagents]reagents
reagent(s)
reagent(s)
at all instants varied, with
11 inverse proportion of increase and
2166 decrease, with ∧⧼invariable⧽invariable incessant incessant
∧⧼invariable⧽invariable incessant incessant
12 circular extension and radial reentrance. Because
2167 the controlled
13 contemplation of the fluctuation of attraction produced, if
2168 desired, a
14 fluctuation of pleasure.
2169
15
Abnegation?
2170
16In virtue of a acquaintance initiated in September 1903 in the
17 establishment
2171 of George Mesias, merchant tailor and outfitter, 5 Eden
18 Quay, b hospitality
2172 extended and ⸢B[received,]received, received in kind,
19reciprocated and reappropriated in person,
received in kind,
19reciprocated and reappropriated in person,
B⸣ [received,]received, received in kind,
19reciprocated and reappropriated in person,
received in kind,
19reciprocated and reappropriated in person,
2173
c comparative youth subject
20 to ⸢B[influences]influences impulses impulses
B⸣ [influences]influences impulses impulses
of ambition and ⸢B[magnanimity.]magnanimity. magnanimity,
2174
21colleagual altruism and amorous ⸢2[egoism.]egoism.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
2⸣ [egoism.]egoism.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
magnanimity,
2174
21colleagual altruism and amorous ⸢2[egoism.]egoism.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
2⸣ [egoism.]egoism.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
B⸣ [magnanimity.]magnanimity. magnanimity,
2174
21colleagual altruism and amorous ⸢2[egoism.]egoism.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
2⸣ [egoism.]egoism.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
magnanimity,
2174
21colleagual altruism and amorous ⸢2[egoism.]egoism.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
2⸣ [egoism.]egoism.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
egoism,
d ⧼racial⧽racial
extraracial
22attraction,
2175intraracial inhibition,
supraracial ⸢3[prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
3⸣ [prerogative.]prerogative.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
prerogative,
e
23an imminent provincial
2176musical tour, common current expenses, net
24proceeds divided.
2177
25
Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than equanimity?⧽
2177
25
Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than equanimity? ⸢B ⧼
2177
25
Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than equanimity?⧽
2177
25
Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than equanimity? B⸣
26
Equanimity?
2178
27As as
natural as any and every natural act of a nature expressed or
2179
28 understood∧of a nature expressed or
2179
28 understood∧ executed in natured nature by natural creatures in accordance
2180
1with his, ⧼t⌷
⧽t⌷
her and their natured ∧⧼nature.⧽nature. natures, of dissimilar
2 similarity. natures, of dissimilar
2 similarity.
∧⧼nature.⧽nature. natures, of dissimilar
2 similarity. natures, of dissimilar
2 similarity.
⸢C
2178
27As as
natural as any and every natural act of a nature expressed or
2179
28 understood∧of a nature expressed or
2179
28 understood∧ executed in natured nature by natural creatures in accordance
2180
1with his, ⧼t⌷
⧽t⌷
her and their natured ∧⧼nature.⧽nature. natures, of dissimilar
2 similarity. natures, of dissimilar
2 similarity.
∧⧼nature.⧽nature. natures, of dissimilar
2 similarity. natures, of dissimilar
2 similarity.
C⸣
As not so
2181calamitous as a cataclysmic annihilation
of the
3 planet in consequence of a
2182 collision with a dark sun. As less reprehensible
4 than theft, highway robbery,
2183 cruelty to children and animals, obtaining
5 money under false pretences,
2184 forgery, embezzlement, misappropriation of
6 public money, betrayal of
2185 public trust, malingering, mayhem, corruption
7 of minors, criminal libel,
2186blackmail, contempt of court, arson, treason,
8 felony, mutiny on the high
2187 seas, trespass, burglary, jailbreaking, practice
9 of unnatural vice, desertion
2188 from armed forces in the field, perjury,
10 poaching, usury, intelligence with
2189 the king's enemies, impersonation,
11 criminal assault, manslaughter, wilful
2190 and premeditated murder. As not
12 more abnormal than all other parallel
2191 processes of adaptation to altered
13 conditions of existence, resulting in a
2192 reciprocal equilibrium between the
14 bodily organism and its ∧⧼external⧽external attendant attendant
∧⧼external⧽external attendant attendant
2193 circumstances, foods,
15 beverages, acquired habits, indulged inclinations,
2194 significant disease. As
16 more than inevitable, irreparable.
2195
17
Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than equanimity?⧽
2195
17
Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than equanimity? ⧼Why
18
less jealousy th⧽Why
18
less jealousy th Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than
19
equanimity?
2196
20From outrage (matrimony) to outrage (adultery) there arose nought but
2197
21 outrage (copulation) yet the matrimonial violator of the matrimonially
2198
22 violated had not been outraged by the adulterous violator of the
2199
23 adulterously violated.
2195
17
Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than equanimity?⧽
2195
17
Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than equanimity? ⧼Why
18
less jealousy th⧽Why
18
less jealousy th Why more abnegation than jealousy, less envy than
19
equanimity?
2196
20From outrage (matrimony) to outrage (adultery) there arose nought but
2197
21 outrage (copulation) yet the matrimonial violator of the matrimonially
2198
22 violated had not been outraged by the adulterous violator of the
2199
23 adulterously violated.
2200
24
What retribution, if any?
2201
25Assassination, ⸢B[never.]never.
never,
as two wrongs did not make one right.
never,
as two wrongs did not make one right.
B⸣ [never.]never.
never,
as two wrongs did not make one right.
never,
as two wrongs did not make one right.
26 Duel by
2202 combat, no. Divorce, not ⸢B[yet.]yet. now. Exposure by mechanical
27artifice (automatic
2203bed) or individual testimony (concealed ocular∧ocular∧
28witnesses),
not yet. now. Exposure by mechanical
27artifice (automatic
2203bed) or individual testimony (concealed ocular∧ocular∧
28witnesses),
not yet.
B⸣ [yet.]yet. now. Exposure by mechanical
27artifice (automatic
2203bed) or individual testimony (concealed ocular∧ocular∧
28witnesses),
not yet. now. Exposure by mechanical
27artifice (automatic
2203bed) or individual testimony (concealed ocular∧ocular∧
28witnesses),
not yet.
∧⧼Damages,⧽Damages,
⸢B[Damages]Damages Suit for
2204damages
Suit for
2204damages
B⸣ [Damages]Damages Suit for
2204damages
Suit for
2204damages
by legal ⸢C[influence,]influence,
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
C⸣ [influence,]influence,
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
⸢B[Damages]Damages Suit for
2204damages
Suit for
2204damages
B⸣ [Damages]Damages Suit for
2204damages
Suit for
2204damages
by legal ⸢C[influence,]influence,
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
C⸣ [influence,]influence,
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
∧⧼Damages,⧽Damages,
⸢B[Damages]Damages Suit for
2204damages
Suit for
2204damages
B⸣ [Damages]Damages Suit for
2204damages
Suit for
2204damages
by legal ⸢C[influence,]influence,
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
C⸣ [influence,]influence,
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
⸢B[Damages]Damages Suit for
2204damages
Suit for
2204damages
B⸣ [Damages]Damages Suit for
2204damages
Suit for
2204damages
by legal ⸢C[influence,]influence,
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
C⸣ [influence,]influence,
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
29 influence or simulation of assault with evidence of injuries
2205
30sustained (selfinflicted),
not impossibly. ∧⧼Hushmoney,⧽Hushmoney,
Hushmoney by
31 moral influence,
Hushmoney by
31 moral influence,
∧⧼Hushmoney,⧽Hushmoney,
Hushmoney by
31 moral influence,
Hushmoney by
31 moral influence,
2206 possibly.
If any, positively, connivance, introduction of ⸢B[emulation,]emulation,
32 emulation (material,
2207a prosperous rival ∧⧼advertising agency:⧽advertising agency:
1agency of publicity:
1agency of publicity:
∧⧼advertising agency:⧽advertising agency:
1agency of publicity:
1agency of publicity:
moral, a successful rival agent of
2208intimacy),
32 emulation (material,
2207a prosperous rival ∧⧼advertising agency:⧽advertising agency:
1agency of publicity:
1agency of publicity:
∧⧼advertising agency:⧽advertising agency:
1agency of publicity:
1agency of publicity:
moral, a successful rival agent of
2208intimacy),
B⸣ [emulation,]emulation,
32 emulation (material,
2207a prosperous rival ∧⧼advertising agency:⧽advertising agency:
1agency of publicity:
1agency of publicity:
∧⧼advertising agency:⧽advertising agency:
1agency of publicity:
1agency of publicity:
moral, a successful rival agent of
2208intimacy),
32 emulation (material,
2207a prosperous rival ∧⧼advertising agency:⧽advertising agency:
1agency of publicity:
1agency of publicity:
∧⧼advertising agency:⧽advertising agency:
1agency of publicity:
1agency of publicity:
moral, a successful rival agent of
2208intimacy),
2 depreciation, alienation, humiliation, separation protecting
the⸢1the1⸣
2209 one
3 separated from the other, ⧼co⧽co protecting the
separator from both.
2210
4
By what reflections did ⸢2[he]he he, a conscious reactor against the void of
2211
5
incertitude, he, a conscious reactor against the void of
2211
5
incertitude, 2⸣ [he]he he, a conscious reactor against the void of
2211
5
incertitude, he, a conscious reactor against the void of
2211
5
incertitude, justify to himself his sentiments?
2212
6The preordained frangibility of the hymen:
the presupposed intangibility
7 of
2213 the thing in itself:
the incongruity and disproportion∧and disproportion∧ between the
2214
⧼
pr⧽
pr
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
tension of the thing proposed to be done and
9the
2215selfabbreviating
relaxation of the thing done:⸢Cthe incongruity and disproportion∧and disproportion∧ between the
2214
⧼
pr⧽
pr
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
tension of the thing proposed to be done and
9the
2215selfabbreviating
relaxation of the thing done:C⸣
the ⧼fallacious⧽fallacious
10 fallaciously inferred
2216 debility of the female:∧the presupposed intangibility
7 of
2213 the thing in itself:
the incongruity and disproportion∧and disproportion∧ between the
2214
⧼
pr⧽
pr
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
tension of the thing proposed to be done and
9the
2215selfabbreviating
relaxation of the thing done:⸢Cthe incongruity and disproportion∧and disproportion∧ between the
2214
⧼
pr⧽
pr
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
tension of the thing proposed to be done and
9the
2215selfabbreviating
relaxation of the thing done:C⸣
the ⧼fallacious⧽fallacious
10 fallaciously inferred
2216 debility of the female:∧
the muscularity of the male: the
11 variations of ethical
2217 codes:
the natural grammatical transition by
12 inversion involving no
2218 alteration of sense∧by
12 inversion involving no
2218 alteration of sense∧ of ∧⧼a⧽a an aorist an aorist
∧⧼a⧽a an aorist an aorist
preterite
13proposition (parsed as masculine∧masculine∧
2219subject, monosyllabic onomatopoeic
14transitive verb ⧼and⧽and with direct feminine∧feminine∧
2220object) from the active voice
15into ⧼a⧽a its correlative aorist∧aorist∧ preterite proposition
2221(parsed as feminine∧feminine∧
16subject, auxiliary verb and quasimonosyllabic
2222onomatopoeic
past participle
17with complementary masculine agent) in the
2223passive voice:
⸢1the natural grammatical transition by
12 inversion involving no
2218 alteration of sense∧by
12 inversion involving no
2218 alteration of sense∧ of ∧⧼a⧽a an aorist an aorist
∧⧼a⧽a an aorist an aorist
preterite
13proposition (parsed as masculine∧masculine∧
2219subject, monosyllabic onomatopoeic
14transitive verb ⧼and⧽and with direct feminine∧feminine∧
2220object) from the active voice
15into ⧼a⧽a its correlative aorist∧aorist∧ preterite proposition
2221(parsed as feminine∧feminine∧
16subject, auxiliary verb and quasimonosyllabic
2222onomatopoeic
past participle
17with complementary masculine agent) in the
2223passive voice:
1⸣
the
18continued product ⧼of generations⧽of generations of seminators by generation: the
2224
19continual ⧼produce⧽produce production of semen by distillation:⸢Cthe
18continued product ⧼of generations⧽of generations of seminators by generation: the
2224
19continual ⧼produce⧽produce production of semen by distillation:C⸣
the futility of
20 triumph or
2225
⸢C[protestation]protestation
protest
protest
C⸣ [protestation]protestation
protest
protest
or vindication:
the inanity of extolled
21virtue: the lethargy of ⸢3[solid]solid nescient nescient
3⸣ [solid]solid nescient nescient
2226matter:⸢2the inanity of extolled
21virtue: the lethargy of ⸢3[solid]solid nescient nescient
3⸣ [solid]solid nescient nescient
2226matter:2⸣
the apathy of the stars.
2210
4
By what reflections did ⸢2[he]he he, a conscious reactor against the void of
2211
5
incertitude, he, a conscious reactor against the void of
2211
5
incertitude, 2⸣ [he]he he, a conscious reactor against the void of
2211
5
incertitude, he, a conscious reactor against the void of
2211
5
incertitude, justify to himself his sentiments?
2212
6The preordained frangibility of the hymen:
the presupposed intangibility
7 of
2213 the thing in itself:
the incongruity and disproportion∧and disproportion∧ between the
2214
⧼
pr⧽
pr
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
tension of the thing proposed to be done and
9the
2215selfabbreviating
relaxation of the thing done:⸢Cthe incongruity and disproportion∧and disproportion∧ between the
2214
⧼
pr⧽
pr
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
tension of the thing proposed to be done and
9the
2215selfabbreviating
relaxation of the thing done:C⸣
the ⧼fallacious⧽fallacious
10 fallaciously inferred
2216 debility of the female:∧the presupposed intangibility
7 of
2213 the thing in itself:
the incongruity and disproportion∧and disproportion∧ between the
2214
⧼
pr⧽
pr
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
tension of the thing proposed to be done and
9the
2215selfabbreviating
relaxation of the thing done:⸢Cthe incongruity and disproportion∧and disproportion∧ between the
2214
⧼
pr⧽
pr
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
∧⧼
8prolonged⧽
8prolonged selfprolonging selfprolonging
tension of the thing proposed to be done and
9the
2215selfabbreviating
relaxation of the thing done:C⸣
the ⧼fallacious⧽fallacious
10 fallaciously inferred
2216 debility of the female:∧
the muscularity of the male: the
11 variations of ethical
2217 codes:
the natural grammatical transition by
12 inversion involving no
2218 alteration of sense∧by
12 inversion involving no
2218 alteration of sense∧ of ∧⧼a⧽a an aorist an aorist
∧⧼a⧽a an aorist an aorist
preterite
13proposition (parsed as masculine∧masculine∧
2219subject, monosyllabic onomatopoeic
14transitive verb ⧼and⧽and with direct feminine∧feminine∧
2220object) from the active voice
15into ⧼a⧽a its correlative aorist∧aorist∧ preterite proposition
2221(parsed as feminine∧feminine∧
16subject, auxiliary verb and quasimonosyllabic
2222onomatopoeic
past participle
17with complementary masculine agent) in the
2223passive voice:
⸢1the natural grammatical transition by
12 inversion involving no
2218 alteration of sense∧by
12 inversion involving no
2218 alteration of sense∧ of ∧⧼a⧽a an aorist an aorist
∧⧼a⧽a an aorist an aorist
preterite
13proposition (parsed as masculine∧masculine∧
2219subject, monosyllabic onomatopoeic
14transitive verb ⧼and⧽and with direct feminine∧feminine∧
2220object) from the active voice
15into ⧼a⧽a its correlative aorist∧aorist∧ preterite proposition
2221(parsed as feminine∧feminine∧
16subject, auxiliary verb and quasimonosyllabic
2222onomatopoeic
past participle
17with complementary masculine agent) in the
2223passive voice:
1⸣
the
18continued product ⧼of generations⧽of generations of seminators by generation: the
2224
19continual ⧼produce⧽produce production of semen by distillation:⸢Cthe
18continued product ⧼of generations⧽of generations of seminators by generation: the
2224
19continual ⧼produce⧽produce production of semen by distillation:C⸣
the futility of
20 triumph or
2225
⸢C[protestation]protestation
protest
protest
C⸣ [protestation]protestation
protest
protest
or vindication:
the inanity of extolled
21virtue: the lethargy of ⸢3[solid]solid nescient nescient
3⸣ [solid]solid nescient nescient
2226matter:⸢2the inanity of extolled
21virtue: the lethargy of ⸢3[solid]solid nescient nescient
3⸣ [solid]solid nescient nescient
2226matter:2⸣
the apathy of the stars.
2227
22
In what final satisfaction did these antagonistic sentiments and ⸢2[reflections]reflections
23
reflections,
2228reduced to their simplest forms,
23
reflections,
2228reduced to their simplest forms, 2⸣ [reflections]reflections
23
reflections,
2228reduced to their simplest forms,
23
reflections,
2228reduced to their simplest forms, converge?
2229
24Satisfaction at the ubiquity in eastern and western terrestrial∧terrestrial∧
⸢1[hemispheres]hemispheres
25 hemispheres,
2230in all habitable lands and islands⧼,⧽, explored
26or unexplored
(the land of the
2231midnight sun, the islands of the blessed, the
27isles of Greece, the land of
2232promise),
25 hemispheres,
2230in all habitable lands and islands⧼,⧽, explored
26or unexplored
(the land of the
2231midnight sun, the islands of the blessed, the
27isles of Greece, the land of
2232promise),
1⸣ [hemispheres]hemispheres
25 hemispheres,
2230in all habitable lands and islands⧼,⧽, explored
26or unexplored
(the land of the
2231midnight sun, the islands of the blessed, the
27isles of Greece, the land of
2232promise),
25 hemispheres,
2230in all habitable lands and islands⧼,⧽, explored
26or unexplored
(the land of the
2231midnight sun, the islands of the blessed, the
27isles of Greece, the land of
2232promise),
of adipose
anterior and
posterior∧anterior and
posterior∧
28 female hemispheres, redolent of
2233
milk and honey and of⸢1
milk and honey and of1⸣
∧⧼excretory,
29 sanguine, seminal, animal⧽excretory,
29 sanguine, seminal, animal excretory sanguine and seminal excretory sanguine and seminal
∧⧼excretory,
29 sanguine, seminal, animal⧽excretory,
29 sanguine, seminal, animal excretory sanguine and seminal excretory sanguine and seminal
warmth,
30reminiscent
2234of secular families of curves of amplitude, insusceptible of
31moods of
2235impression or of contrarieties of expression,⸢2
30reminiscent
2234of secular families of curves of amplitude, insusceptible of
31moods of
2235impression or of contrarieties of expression,2⸣
expressive of
32 mute⧼,⧽, immutable⧼,⧽,
2236 mature animality.
2237
1
The visible signs of ⸢B[satisfaction?]satisfaction? antesatisfaction? antesatisfaction? B⸣ [satisfaction?]satisfaction? antesatisfaction? antesatisfaction?
2238
2An approximate erection: a solicitous ∧⧼reversion⧽reversion
>⧼inversion⧽inversion
3adversion
3adversion
<⧼inversion⧽inversion
3adversion
3adversion
>⧼inversion⧽inversion
3adversion
3adversion
<⧼inversion⧽inversion
3adversion
3adversion
∧⧼reversion⧽reversion
>⧼inversion⧽inversion
3adversion
3adversion
<⧼inversion⧽inversion
3adversion
3adversion
>⧼inversion⧽inversion
3adversion
3adversion
<⧼inversion⧽inversion
3adversion
3adversion
: a gradual elevation: a
2239 tentative revelation:
a silent
4 contemplation.
2240
5
Then?
2241
6He kissed the plump mellow yellow smellow melons of her rump, on each
2242
7 plump melonous∧melonous∧ hemisphere, in their mellow yellow∧yellow∧ furrow, with
8 obscure
2243 prolonged provocative melonsmellonous osculation.
2244
9
The visible signs of ∧⧼resatisfaction⧽resatisfaction postsatisfaction postsatisfaction ∧⧼resatisfaction⧽resatisfaction postsatisfaction postsatisfaction ?
2245
10A silent contemplation: a tentative velation: a gradual abasement: a
2246
11 solicitous aversion: a proximate erection.
2247
12
What followed this silent action?
2248
13Somnolent invocation, less somnolent recognition, incipient excitation,
2249
14 catechetical interrogation.
2250
15
Did he⧽
2250
15
Did he With what modifications did the narrator reply to this
16
interrogation?
2251
17Negative: he omitted to mention the clandestine∧clandestine∧
correspondence
between
2252
18 Martha Clifford and Henry Flower, the public altercation at, in and in the
2253
19 vicinity of the licensed premises of Bernard Kiernan and Co,
Limited, 8, 9
2254
20 and 10 Little Britain street, the erotic provocation and response thereto
2255
21 caused by the exhibitionism of Gertrude (Gerty), surname unknown.
2256
22 Positive: he included mention of a performance by Mrs Bandmann
Palmer
2257
23 of Leah at the Gaiety Theatre, ⸢1[South Anne]South Anne
⸢3[46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
3⸣ [46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
49 South
24King
⸢3[46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
3⸣ [46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
49 South
24King
1⸣ [South Anne]South Anne
⸢3[46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
3⸣ [46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
49 South
24King
⸢3[46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
3⸣ [46 to]46 to 46, 47, 48, 46, 47, 48,
49 South
24King
street,
⸢[a charitable visit to the National Lying‐in ⧼Hotel⧽Hotel Hospital,
25 29, 30 and 31 Holles street,]a charitable visit to the National Lying‐in ⧼Hotel⧽Hotel Hospital,
25 29, 30 and 31 Holles street,
⸣ [a charitable visit to the National Lying‐in ⧼Hotel⧽Hotel Hospital,
25 29, 30 and 31 Holles street,]a charitable visit to the National Lying‐in ⧼Hotel⧽Hotel Hospital,
25 29, 30 and 31 Holles street,
∧
⸢[a charitable visit to the National Lying‐in ⧼Hotel⧽Hotel Hospital,
25 29, 30 and 31 Holles street,]a charitable visit to the National Lying‐in ⧼Hotel⧽Hotel Hospital,
25 29, 30 and 31 Holles street,
⸣ [a charitable visit to the National Lying‐in ⧼Hotel⧽Hotel Hospital,
25 29, 30 and 31 Holles street,]a charitable visit to the National Lying‐in ⧼Hotel⧽Hotel Hospital,
25 29, 30 and 31 Holles street,
∧ an
2258 invitation to supper at Wynn's (Murphy's)
26Hotel,
35, 36 and 37 Lower
2259 Abbey street,
a volume of peccaminous
27pornographical
tendency entituled
2260Sweets of Sin,
anonymous∧anonymous∧
author a
28gentleman
of fashion,⸢3a volume of peccaminous
27pornographical
tendency entituled
2260Sweets of Sin,
anonymous∧anonymous∧
author a
28gentleman
of fashion,3⸣
a temporary∧temporary∧
2261 concussion caused by a falsely
29 calculated movement in the course of a
2262 postcenal gymnastic display, the
1 victim (since completely recovered) being
2263 Stephen Dedalus, ∧⧼age 2⧽age 2
∧⧼age 2⧽age 2
2 professor and author, eldest surviving son of Simon
2264 Dedalus, of no fixed ⸢3[occupation.]occupation.
3 occupation, an aeronautical feat executed by him
2265(narrator)
4in the presence of a witness, the professor and author aforesaid,
2266with
5promptitude of decision and gymnastic flexibility.
3 occupation, an aeronautical feat executed by him
2265(narrator)
4in the presence of a witness, the professor and author aforesaid,
2266with
5promptitude of decision and gymnastic flexibility.
3⸣ [occupation.]occupation.
3 occupation, an aeronautical feat executed by him
2265(narrator)
4in the presence of a witness, the professor and author aforesaid,
2266with
5promptitude of decision and gymnastic flexibility.
3 occupation, an aeronautical feat executed by him
2265(narrator)
4in the presence of a witness, the professor and author aforesaid,
2266with
5promptitude of decision and gymnastic flexibility.
2267
6
Was the narration otherwise unaltered by modifications?
2268
7Absolutely.
2269
8
Which event or person emerged as the salient point of his narration?
2270
9Stephen Dedalus, professor and author.
2271
10
What limitations of activity and inhibitions of conjugal rights⸢Band inhibitions of conjugal rightsB⸣ were
2272
11
perceived by listener and narrator concerning themselves during the
12
course
2273 of this intermittent and increasingly more⸢BmoreB⸣ laconic narration?
2274
13By the listener a limitation of fertility inasmuch as marriage had
been
2275
14celebrated ∧⧼one⧽one
1
1
∧⧼one⧽one
1
1
calendar month
∧⧼before⧽before after after
∧⧼before⧽before after after
the
⧼17th⧽17th 18th
15 anniversary of her birth (8
2276September 1870), viz.
8 ∧⧼August,⧽August, October, October,
∧⧼August,⧽August, October, October,
16
∧⧼and consummated on the sam⧽and consummated on the sam
⧼having been previously consummated on
17 the 10 July of the same year⧽having been previously consummated on
17 the 10 July of the same year and consummated on the same
⧼having been previously consummated on
17 the 10 July of the same year⧽having been previously consummated on
17 the 10 July of the same year and consummated on the same
∧⧼and consummated on the sam⧽and consummated on the sam
⧼having been previously consummated on
17 the 10 July of the same year⧽having been previously consummated on
17 the 10 July of the same year and consummated on the same
⧼having been previously consummated on
17 the 10 July of the same year⧽having been previously consummated on
17 the 10 July of the same year and consummated on the same
date⸢BdateB⸣
with
2277
18 female issue born 15 June 1889, having been anticipatorily consummated on
2278
19 the 10 ⧼of⧽of September of the same year and complete carnal intercourse,
20 with
2279 ejaculation of semen within the ∧⧼natural⧽natural
⸢2[female natural]female natural natural
21female natural
21female
2⸣ [female natural]female natural natural
21female natural
21female
⸢2[female natural]female natural natural
21female natural
21female
2⸣ [female natural]female natural natural
21female natural
21female
∧⧼natural⧽natural
⸢2[female natural]female natural natural
21female natural
21female
2⸣ [female natural]female natural natural
21female natural
21female
⸢2[female natural]female natural natural
21female natural
21female
2⸣ [female natural]female natural natural
21female natural
21female
organ, having
last⸢3last3⸣
⧼taken⧽taken taken
2280 place 5 weeks previous , viz.
22 27 November ⸢1[1894,]1894, 1893, 1893,
1⸣ [1894,]1894, 1893, 1893,
∧, viz.
22 27 November ⸢1[1894,]1894, 1893, 1893,
1⸣ [1894,]1894, 1893, 1893,
∧ to the birth on 29
2281December ⸢1[1894]1894
231893
231893
1⸣ [1894]1894
231893
231893
∧on 29
2281December ⸢1[1894]1894
231893
231893
1⸣ [1894]1894
231893
231893
∧ of second (and only male) issue, deceased 9 January
⸢1[1895,]1895,
241894,
241894,
1⸣ [1895,]1895,
241894,
241894,
2282aged 11 days, there remained a period of ⸢1[9]9 10 10
1⸣ [9]9 10 10
years, 5 months
25 and 18 days
2283 during which carnal intercourse had been incomplete, without
26 ejaculation
2284 of semen within the natural female organ. By the narrator a
27 limitation of
2285 activity, mental and corporal, inasmuch as complete mental
28 intercourse
2286
between himself and the listener∧between himself and the listener∧ had not taken place since the
2287
29 consummation of puberty, indicated by catamenic hemorrhage, of the
2288
30 female issue of narrator and listener, 15 September 1903, there remained
1 a
2289 period of 9 months and 1 day during which,
in consequence
2 of a
2290
⧼preestablishment⧽preestablishment preestablished ∧⧼sexual⧽sexual natural ⧼female⧽female
natural ⧼female⧽female
∧⧼sexual⧽sexual natural ⧼female⧽female
natural ⧼female⧽female
3 comprehension in incomprehension between the
2291 consummated females
4 (listener and issue), complete corporal liberty of
2292 action had been
5
∧⧼inhibited⧽inhibited circumscribed circumscribed
∧⧼inhibited⧽inhibited circumscribed circumscribed
.
2293
6
How?
2294
7By various reiterated
feminine⸢1feminine1⸣
interrogation concerning the ∧⧼place⧽place
8masculine⸢1
8masculine1⸣
2295 destination
8masculine⸢1
8masculine1⸣
2295 destination
∧⧼place⧽place
8masculine⸢1
8masculine1⸣
2295 destination
8masculine⸢1
8masculine1⸣
2295 destination
whither, the place where, the time at which, the
9 duration for
2296 which, the object with which in the case of temporary
10 absences, projected
2297 or effected.
2298
11
What moved visibly above the listener's and the narrator's invisible
2299
12
thoughts?
⧼
2300
13An⧽
2300
13An The upcast reflection of a lamp and shade, an inconstant series of
2301
14 concentric circles of varying gradations of light and shadow.
2298
11
What moved visibly above the listener's and the narrator's invisible
2299
12
thoughts?
⧼
2300
13An⧽
2300
13An The upcast reflection of a lamp and shade, an inconstant series of
2301
14 concentric circles of varying gradations of light and shadow.
2302
15
In what directions did listener and narrator lie?
2303
16Listener,
S. E.
by E.:
Narrator,
N. W. by ⧼E⧽E
W.:
on the
⸢1[53°]53°
53rd
53rd
1⸣ [53°]53°
53rd
53rd
17parallel⸢B
17parallelB⸣
of
2304 latitude, N.,
and
⸢1[6°]6° 6th 6th
1⸣ [6°]6° 6th 6th
meridian⸢BmeridianB⸣
of longitude, W.:
at
18 an angle of 45° to the
2305 terrestrial equator.
2306
19
In what state of rest or motion?
2307
20At rest relatively to themselves and to each other. In motion being each and
2308
21 both carried westward, forward and rereward respectively, by the proper
2309
22 perpetual motion of the earth through everchanging tracks of
2310
23 neverchanging space.
2311
1
In what posture?
2312
2Listener: reclined semilaterally, left, left hand under head, right leg extended
2313
3 in a straight line and resting on left leg, flexed, in the attitude of Gea‐Tellus,
2314
4fulfilled,
recumbent, big with seed. Narrator: reclined laterally, left, with
2315
5 right and left legs flexed, the
⸢1[index]index indexfinger indexfinger
1⸣ [index]index indexfinger indexfinger
and thumb of the∧
⸢1[index]index indexfinger indexfinger
1⸣ [index]index indexfinger indexfinger
and thumb of the∧ right
6 hand
2316 resting on the bridge of the nose, in the attitude depicted in
a snapshot
2317
7 photograph made by Percy Apjohn,
the childman weary, the manchild in
2318
8 the womb.
2319
9
Womb? Weary?
2320
10He rests. He has travelled.
2321
11
With?
2322
12Sinbad
the Sailor and Tinbad the Tailor and Jinbad the Jailer and Whinbad
2323
13 the Whaler and Ninbad the Nailer and Finbad the Failer and Binbad the
2324
14 Bailer and Pinbad the Pailer and Minbad
the Mailer and Hinbad the Hailer
2325
15 and Rinbad the Railer and Dinbad the Kailer and Vinbad the ⸢2[Gailer]Gailer
16Quailer
16Quailer
2⸣ [Gailer]Gailer
16Quailer
16Quailer
and
2326 Linbad the Yailer and Xinbad the Phthailer.
2327
17
When?
2328
18Going to
dark∧dark∧ bed there was a square round Sinbad the Sailor ⧼auk's⧽auk's
⸢1[rok's]rok's
19 roc's
19 roc's
1⸣ [rok's]rok's
19 roc's
19 roc's
auk's
2329egg in
the night of∧night of∧
the⸢1the1⸣
bed of all the auks of the ⸢1[roks]roks
20 rocs
20 rocs
1⸣ [roks]roks
20 rocs
20 rocs
of
[2the]the
Darkinbad the
2330 Brightdayler.
2331
21
Where?
2332
22•
23