1
1
(The
Mabbot street entrance of nighttown, before which stretches
2
2 an uncobbled tramsiding set with
skeleton tracks, red and green
3
3
will‐o'‐the‐wisps and danger signals. Rows of grimy houses with
4
4gaping doors. Rare lamps with
faint rainbow fans. Round
5
⸢3
5[a]aRabaiotti'sRabaiotti's
3⸣
5[a]aRabaiotti'sRabaiotti's
halted ice gondola stunted men and women squabble.
6
6They grab wafers between which are
wedged lumps of coral and
7
7copper snow. Sucking, they scatter
slowly, children. The swancomb
8
8of the gondola, highreared, forges
on through the murk, white and
9
9blue under a lighthouse. Whistles
call and answer. )
10
10
The Call
11
11Wait, my love, and I'll be with
you.
12
12
The Answer
13
13Round behind the stable.
14
14( ⸢5[An]AnA deafmuteA deafmute
5⸣ [An]AnA deafmuteA deafmute
idiot with goggle eyes, his shapeless mouth
15 dribbling,
15jerks past, shaken in Saint Vitus' dance. A chain of
16 children's hands
16 imprisons him*.)
17
17
The *C⧼c⧽hildren
18#
18Kithogue! Salute!
19
19
The Idiot
20
20(lifts a palsied left arm and
gurgles)
Ghahute!
21
1
The Children
22
2Where's the great light?
23
3
The Idiot
24
4(gobbling)
Ghaghahest.
25
5(They release him. He jerks on. A
pigmy woman swings on a rope
26
6 slung between two railings,
counting. A form sprawled against a
27
7 dustbin and muffled by its arm
and hat
⸢D[snores.
]snores.
snores, groans,
8grinding
28growling teeth, and snores
again.
snores, groans,
8grinding
28growling teeth, and snores
again.
D⸣ [snores.
]snores.
snores, groans,
8grinding
28growling teeth, and snores
again.
snores, groans,
8grinding
28growling teeth, and snores
again.
On a step a gnome
9 totting
among
29
⸢5[rubbish]rubbisha rubbishtipa rubbishtip
5⸣ [rubbish]rubbisha rubbishtipa rubbishtip
crouches to shoulder a sack
10 of rags and bones. A crone
30
standing by with a smoky oillamp rams
11her
last bottle in the maw of
31 his sack. He heaves
his booty, tugs
12 askew his peaked
cap and
32 hobbles off mutely. The crone
makes
13 back for her lair, swaying
her
33 lamp. A bandy child, asquat on
the
14 doorstep with a paper
34
shuttlecock, crawls sidling after her
in spurts,
15 clutches her skirt,
35 scrambles up. A drunken navvy grips with
both
16 hands the railings
36 of an area, lurching heavily. At a corner
two
17 night watch in
37shouldercapes,
their hands upon their
18staffholsters, loom tall. A
38 plate
crashes: a
woman screams:
a child
19 wails. Oaths of a man
39 roar, mutter, cease. Figures wander,
lurk,
20 peer from warrens. In
a
40 room lit by a candle stuck in a
bottleneck a
21 slut combs out the
tatts
41 from the hair of a scrofulous child.
Cissy
22 Caffrey's voice,
still
42 young, sings shrill from a lane.*)
43
23
Cissy Caffrey
44
24
I gave it to Molly
45
25
Because she was jolly,
46
26
The leg of the duck,
47
27
The leg of the duck.
48
28(Private Carr and Private
Compton, swaggersticks tight in their
49
29 oxters, as they march
unsteadily∧unsteadily∧
rightaboutface and burst
1 together
50 from their mouths a volleyed fart. Laughter of men from
2 the lane. A
51
hoarse virago retorts.)
52
3
The Virago
53
4Signs on you, hairy arse. More
power the Kildare girl.
54
5
Cissy Caffrey
55
6More luck to me. Cavan, Cootehill
and Belturbet. (she sings)
56
7
I gave it to Nelly
57
8
To stick in her belly,
58
9
The leg of the duck,
59
10
The leg of the duck.
60
11(Private Carr and Private Compton
turn and counterretort, their
61
12tunics bloodbright in a lampglow,
black sockets of caps on their
62
13blond cropped polls. Stephen Dedalus
and
Lynch∧
and
Lynch∧ pass
14 through
the
63 crowd close to the redcoats*.
*)
64
15
Private Compton
65
16(jerks his finger)
Way for the parson.
66
17
Private Carr
67
18(turns and calls)
What ho, parson!
68
19
Cissy Caffrey
69
20(her voice soaring higher *⧼,⧽)
70
21
She has it, she got it,
71
22
Wherever she put it,
72
23
The leg of the duck.
73
1(Stephen, flourishing the ashplant in his left hand,
chants with joy
74
2 the
introit
for paschal time. Lynch, his jockeycap low on his brow,
75
3 attends him, a sneer of
discontent wrinkling his face*.)
76
4
Stephen
77
5Vidi
aquam egredientem de templo a latere dextro.
Alleluia.
78
6(The famished snaggletusks of an
elderly bawd protrude from a
79
7 doorway*.)
80
8
The Bawd
81
9(her voice whispering
huskily) Sst! Come here till I tell you. Maidenhead
82
10 inside. Sst!
83
11
Stephen
84
12(altius aliquantulum)
Et
omnes ad quos pervenit aqua ista.
85
13
The Bawd
86
14(spits in their trail her jet
of venom) Trinity medicals. Fallopian tube. All
87
15 prick and no pence.
88
16(Edy Boardman, sniffling,
crouched with Bertha Supple, draws her
89
17 shawl across her nostrils*.)
90
18
Edy Boardman
91
19(bickering) And
says the
one: I seen you up Faithful place with your
92
20
⸢4[squarepusher]squarepushersquarepusher, the greaser off the railway,squarepusher, the greaser off the railway,
4⸣ [squarepusher]squarepushersquarepusher, the greaser off the railway,squarepusher, the greaser off the railway,
in ⸢4[the]thehishis
4⸣ [the]thehishis
21
cometobed hat.
Did you,
93 says I. That's not for you to say,
says I. You
22 never seen me in the
mantrap
94 with a married highlander, says I.
The likes of
23 her! Stag that one
is!
95 Stubborn as a mule! And her walking with
two
24 fellows the one time,
96Kilbride,
the
enginedriver,
and lancecorporal
25 Oliphant.
97
1
Stephen
98
2(triumphaliter
)
Salvi
facti
sunt.
99
3(He flourishes his ashplant,
shivering the lamp image, shattering
100
4 light over the world. ⃖ 3
⃗
A ⸢3[retriever]retrieverliver and white spanielliver and white spaniel
3⸣ [retriever]retrieverliver and white spanielliver and white spaniel
5 on the prowl slinks
101 after him⧼.⧽., growling. Lynch scares it with
a
6 kick*.)
102
7
Lynch
103
8So that?
104
9
Stephen
105
10(looks behind) So
that ⸢C[gesture]gesturegesture, not music not odour,gesture, not music not odour,
C⸣ [gesture]gesturegesture, not music not odour,gesture, not music not odour,
would be
11 a universal
106 language, the
gift of tongues rendering visible not the lay sense
12 but the first
107
entelechy, the structural rhythm.
108
13
Lynch
109
14Pornosophical philotheology.
Metaphysics in Mecklenburgh street!
110
15
Stephen
111
16We have shrewridden Shakespeare
and henpecked Socrates. Even the
112
17 allwisest Stagyrite was
bitted, bridled and mounted by a light of love.
113
18
Lynch
114
19
⸢3[Bah!]Bah!Ba!Ba!
3⸣ [Bah!]Bah!Ba!Ba!
115
20
Stephen
116
21Anyway, who wants two gestures to
illustrate a loaf and a jug? This
117
22 movement illustrates the loaf
and jug of bread or wine in Omar. Hold⧼.⧽.
23 my
118
stick.
119
1
Lynch
120
2Damn your yellow stick. Where are
we going?
121
3
Stephen
⸢D[To]To
122
4 Lecherous lynx, to
122
4 Lecherous lynx, to
D⸣ [To]To
122
4 Lecherous lynx, to
122
4 Lecherous lynx, to
⸢3[find]find
la belle dame sans merci,
la belle dame sans merci,
3⸣ [find]find
la belle dame sans merci,
la belle dame sans merci,
Georgina
5 Johnson, [3light of love,]light of love,
∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
ad
deam qui
123laetificat
iuventutem
meam.
ad
deam qui
123laetificat
iuventutem
meam.
∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
ad
deam qui
123laetificat
iuventutem
meam.
ad
deam qui
123laetificat
iuventutem
meam.
124
6(Stephen thrusts the ashplant on
him and slowly holds out his
125
7 hands, his head going back till
both hands are a span from his
126
8 breast, down turned, in
planes intersecting, the fingers about to
127
part,
9 the left being higher*.)
128
10
Lynch
129
11Which is the jug of bread? It
skills not. That or the customhouse. Illustrate
130
12 thou. Here take your crutch and
walk.
131
13(They pass. Tommy Caffrey
scrambles to a gaslamp and, clasping,
132
14 climbs in spasms. From the top
spur he slides down. Jacky Caffrey
133
15 clasps to climb. The navvy
lurches against the lamp. The twins
134
16 scuttle off in the dark. The
navvy, swaying, presses a forefinger
135
17 against a wing of his nose and
ejects from the farther nostril a long
136
18 liquid jet of snot. Shouldering
the lamp he staggers away through
137
19 the crowd with his flaring
cresset.
138
20 Snakes of river fog creep
slowly. From drains, clefts, cesspools,
139
21middens arise on all sides stagnant fumes. A glow
leaps in the south
140
22
beyond the seaward reaches of the river∧beyond the seaward reaches of the river∧. The navvy,
staggering
141
23forward, cleaves the crowd and lurches towards the
⧼uncobbled⧽uncobbled
24 tramsiding. On
142 the farther side under the railway bridge Bloom
25appears, flushed,
143
panting , >⧼crushing⧽crushing
cramming
cramming
<⧼crushing⧽crushing
cramming
cramming
bread and
26 chocolate into >⧼his sidepockets⧽his sidepocketsa sidepocketa sidepocket
<⧼his sidepockets⧽his sidepocketsa sidepocketa sidepocket
∧, >⧼crushing⧽crushing
cramming
cramming
<⧼crushing⧽crushing
cramming
cramming
bread and
26 chocolate into >⧼his sidepockets⧽his sidepocketsa sidepocketa sidepocket
<⧼his sidepockets⧽his sidepocketsa sidepocketa sidepocket
∧. From
144
Gillen's
27 hairdresser's window
a composite portrait shows him
145
gallant∧gallant∧
28 Nelson's image. A concave mirror
at the side presents to him
146
29 lovelorn longlost lugubru
Booloohoom. Grave Gladstone sees him
147
30 level⧼.⧽., Bloom for Bloom. He passes, struck by
the stare of
31 truculent
148Wellington, but
in the convex mirror grin unstruck the
1 bonham eyes
149 and fatchuck cheekchops of jollypoldy the rixdix
2 doldy.
150
3 At Antonio Rabaiotti's door Bloom
halts, sweated under the bright
151
4arclamp. He disappears. In a moment he reappears
and hurries
152
5 on∧and hurries
152
5 on∧.*)
153
6
Bloom
154
7Fish and taters. N. g.
Ah!
155
8(He disappears into Olhausen's, the
porkbutcher's, under the
156
9 downcoming rollshutter. A
few moments later he emerges from
157
10 under the shutter, puffing
Poldy, blowing Bloohoom. In each hand
158
11 he holds a parcel, one
containing a lukewarm pig's crubeen, the
159
12 other a cold sheep's trotter,
sprinkled with wholepepper. He gasps,
160
13 standing upright. Then bending
to one side he presses a parcel
161
14 against his ribs and groans*.)
162
15
Bloom
163
16Stitch in my side. Why did I
run?
164
17(He takes breath with care and
goes forward slowly towards the
165
18 lampset siding. The glow leaps again*.)
166
19
Bloom
167
20What is that? A flasher?
Searchlight.
168
21(He stands at Cormack's corner, watching*.)
169
22
Bloom
170
23Aurora borealis or a
steel foundry? Ah, the brigade, of course. South side
171
24 anyhow. Big blaze. Might be his
house. Beggar's bush. We're safe. (he
172
25 hums cheerfully)
London's burning, London's burning! On fire, on fire!
173
26
(he catches sight of the navvy
lurching through the crowd at the farther
174
27 side of Talbot
street) I'll miss him. Run. Quick. Better cross here.
175
28(He darts to cross the road.
Urchins shout*.)
176
1
The Urchins
177
2Mind out, mister!
178
3(Two
cyclists, with lighted paper lanterns aswing, swim by him,
179
4 grazing him, their bells rattling*.)
180
5
The Bells
181
6Haltyaltyaltyall.
182
7
Bloom
183
8(halts
erect∧erect∧, stung
by a spasm)
Ow!
184
9(He looks round, darts forward
suddenly. Through rising fog a
185
10 dragon ⸢5[sandstrewer]sandstrewersandstrewer, travelling at caution,sandstrewer, travelling at caution,
5⸣ [sandstrewer]sandstrewersandstrewer, travelling at caution,sandstrewer, travelling at caution,
slews
11 heavily down
upon
186 him, its huge red headlight winking,
its trolley
12 hissing on the
wire.
187 The motorman bangs his
footgong.)
188
13
The Gong
189
14Bang Bang Bla Bak Blud Bugg
Bloo.
190
15(The brake cracks violently.
Bloom, raising a policeman's
191
16 whitegloved hand, blunders
stifflegged out of the track. The
192
17motorman, thrown forward, pugnosed, on the guidewheel, yells
18 as
193 he slides ⸢5[past.]past.past over chains and keys.past over chains and keys.
5⸣ [past.]past.past over chains and keys.past over chains and keys.
)
194
19
The Motorman
195
20Hey, shitbreeches, are you doing
the hat trick?
196
21(Bloom trickleaps to the
curbstone and halts again. He brushes a
197
22 mudflake from his cheek with a
parcelled hand*.)
198
23
Bloom
199
24
No
thoroughfare.
⸢5
No
thoroughfare.
5⸣ Close shave that but cured the stitch. Must take up
200
25 Sandow's exercises again.
On the hands down. Insure against street
201
1 accident too. The Providential*.
(he feels his trouser pocket)
Poor
202
2 mamma's panacea. Heel easily
catch in track or bootlace in a cog. Day the
203
3wheel of the black Maria peeled off my shoe at Leonard's corner.
Third
204
4time is the charm.
∧Third
204
4time is the charm.
∧ Shoe trick. Insolent driver. I ought to report him.
205
5 Tension makes them nervous. Might
be the fellow balked me this morning
206
6 with that horsey woman. Same
style of beauty. Quick of him all the same.
207
7 The stiff walk. True word spoken
in jest. That awful cramp in Lad lane.
208
8 Something poisonous I ate. Emblem of luck. Why? Probably lost cattle.
209
9 Mark of the beast.∧Emblem of luck. Why? Probably lost cattle.
209
9 Mark of the beast.∧
(he closes his eyes an
instant) Bit light in the head
210
⧼I
10 feel⧽I
10 feel. Monthly or effect of the other.
Brainfogfag. That tired feeling.∧That tired feeling.∧ Too
11 much
211 for me now.
Ow!
212
12(A sinister figure leans on
plaited legs against O'Beirne's wall, a
213
13 visage unknown, injected with
dark mercury. From under a
214
14wideleaved sombrero the figure regards him with evil eye*.)
215
15
Bloom
216
16Bueñas
noches, señorita
Blanca
⸢3
Blanca
3⸣ . Que
calle es esta?
217
17
The Figure
218
18(impassive, raises a signal
arm)
Password.⸢5Password.5⸣
Sraid
Mabbot.
219
19
Bloom
220
20Haha.
Merci.
Esperanto.
Slan
leath.
(he mutters) Gaelic league
spy,
21 sent
221 by that fireeater.
222
22(He steps forward. A
sackshouldered ragman bars his path. He
223
23 steps left, ragsackman left*.)
224
24
Bloom
225
25I beg.
226
26(He leaps right, sackragman right*.)
227
1
Bloom
228
2I beg.
229
3(He
swerves, sidles,
stepaside,∧stepaside,∧
slips past and on*.)
230
4
Bloom
231
5Keep to the right, right, right.
If there is a ∧⧼fingerpost⧽fingerpost
signpost
signpost
∧⧼fingerpost⧽fingerpost
signpost
signpost
planted
6 by the Touring
232 Club at
Stepaside who procured that public boon? I who
7 lost my way and
233 contributed
to the columns of the Irish Cyclist the letter
8headed
In darkest
234 Stepaside. Keep, keep, keep to the
right. Rags and bones
9 at midnight. A
235 fence more likely. First place murderer makes for. Wash
off
10 his sins of the
236 world*.
237
11(Jacky Caffrey, hunted by Tommy
Caffrey, runs full tilt against
238
12 Bloom*.)
239
13
Bloom
240
14O.
241
15(Shocked, on weak hams, he halts.
Tommy and Jacky vanish
242
16 there, there. Bloom pats with
parcelled hands watchfob,
243
17pocketbookpocket,
pursepoke,
sweets of sin, potatosoap. )
244
18
Bloom
245
19Beware of pickpockets. Old
thieves'
dodge. Collide. Then snatch your
246
20 purse.
247
21(The retriever approaches
⸢5[sniffing.
]sniffing.
sniffing, nose to the
22ground. A sprawled
248form sneezes.
sniffing, nose to the
22ground. A sprawled
248form sneezes.
5⸣ [sniffing.
]sniffing.
sniffing, nose to the
22ground. A sprawled
248form sneezes.
sniffing, nose to the
22ground. A sprawled
248form sneezes.
A stooped bearded figure
23
appears garbed in the long
249 caftan of an elder
in Zion⧼.⧽. and a
24smokingcap with magenta tassels.
250 Horned spectacles hang down at
25 the wings of the nose. Yellow
251
poison streaks are on the drawn
26 face*.)
252
1
Rudolph
253
2Second halfcrown waste money
today. I told you not go with drunken goy
254
3 ever.
∧⧼You⧽You
So
you
So
you
∧⧼You⧽You
So
you
So
you
catch no money.⸢3
∧⧼You⧽You
So
you
So
you
∧⧼You⧽You
So
you
So
you
catch no money.3⸣
255
4
Bloom
256
5(hides the crubeen and trotter behind his back
and, crestfallen, feels warm
257
6 and cold feetmeat)
Ja,
ich weiss, papachi.
258
7
Rudolph
259
8What you making down this place?
Have you no
soul?⸢3Have you no
soul?3⸣
(*w⧼W⧽ith feeble
9 vulture
260 talons he feels the silent face of
Bloom) Are you not my son
10Leopold, the
261grandson of
Leopold? Are you not my dear son Leopold who
11 left the house
262 of his father
and left the god of his fathers Abraham and
12 Jacob?
263
13
Bloom
264
14(with precaution) I
suppose so, father. Mosenthal. All that's left of him.
265
15
Rudolph
266
16(severely) One night
they bring you home drunk as dog after spend your
267
17 good money. What you call them
running chaps?
268
18
Bloom
269
19(in youth's smart blue Oxford
suit with white vestslips, narrowshouldered,
270
20 in brown Alpine hat, wearing
gent's sterling silver Waterbury keyless watch
271
21 and double curb Albert with
seal attached, one side of him ∧⧼mudcoated⧽mudcoated
22coated with
272 stiffening mud
22coated with
272 stiffening mud
∧⧼mudcoated⧽mudcoated
22coated with
272 stiffening mud
22coated with
272 stiffening mud
) Harriers, father. Only that once.
273
1
Rudolph
⸢D[Once.]Once.
274
2 Once!
274
2 Once!
D⸣ [Once.]Once.
274
2 Once!
274
2 Once!
Mud head to foot. Cut your hand open. Lockjaw. They
3 make you
275
⸢D[kaputt.]kaputt.
kaputt, Leopoldleben.
kaputt, Leopoldleben.
D⸣ [kaputt.]kaputt.
kaputt, Leopoldleben.
kaputt, Leopoldleben.
You watch them chaps.
276
4
Bloom
277
5(weakly) They
challenged me to a sprint. It was muddy. I slipped.
278
6
Rudolph
279
7(with contempt)
Goim
nachez! Nice
spectacles for your poor mother!
280
8
Bloom
281
9Mamma!
282
10
Ellen Bloom
283
11(in
pantomime dame's stringed mobcap,
⸢5[Widow]Widow
widow
widow
5⸣ [Widow]Widow
widow
widow
12Twankey's
⸢D
⸢5[Widow]Widow
widow
widow
5⸣ [Widow]Widow
widow
widow
12Twankey's
D⸣
crinoline and
284
bustle,
blouse with muttonleg sleeves buttoned
13 behind, grey mittens and
285
cameo brooch, her plaited hair in a crispine
14 net,∧her plaited hair in a crispine
14 net,∧ appears ∧⧼on a⧽on aover theover the
∧⧼on a⧽on aover theover the
staircase
286 banisters, a slanted
candlestick in
15 her hand, and
cries out in shrill alarm)
287 O blessed Redeemer, what have
16 they done to him! My smelling salts!
(*S⧼s⧽he
288 hauls up a reef of skirt
and
17 ransacks the pouch of
her striped blay petticoat.
289 A
phial, an Agnus Dei, a
18shrivelled potato and a celluloid doll fall out.*)
290 Sacred Heart of Mary,
19 where were you at ∧⧼all?⧽all?
all
at all?
all
at all?
∧⧼all?⧽all?
all
at all?
all
at all?
291
20(Bloom, mumbling, his eyes
downcast, begins to bestow his parcels
292
21 in his filled pockets but
desists, muttering*.)
293
22
A Voice
294
23(sharply)
∧
294
23(sharply)
∧ Poldy!
295
1
Bloom
296
2Who? (he ducks and⸢Cducks andC⸣ wards off a
blow clumsily) At your service.
297
3(He looks up. Beside her mirage of
datepalms a handsome woman
298
4 in Turkish costume stands before
him. Opulent curves fill out her
299
5 scarlet trousers and ⸢3[jacket.]jacket.
jacket, slashed with gold.
jacket, slashed with gold.
3⸣ [jacket.]jacket.
jacket, slashed with gold.
jacket, slashed with gold.
A wide
6yellow
300cummerbund girdles her.⸢DA wide
6yellow
300cummerbund girdles her.D⸣ A white
yashmak,
violet in the
7 night,
301 covers her face, leaving free only her large
dark eyes and
8 raven
302 hair*.)
303
9
Bloom
304
10Molly!
305
11
Marion
306
12Welly? Mrs ⧼Bl⧽Bl Marion from this out, my dear man,
when you speak to me.
307
13
(satirically) Has poor little
hubby cold feet waiting so long?
308
14
Bloom
309
15(shifts from foot to
foot) *⧼.⧽ No, no. Not the least little bit.
310
16(He breathes in deep agitation,
swallowing gulps of air, questions,
311
17 hopes, crubeens for her supper,
things to tell her, excuse, desire,
312
18 spellbound. A coin gleams on her
forehead. On her feet are
19jewelled
313toerings.⸢3On her feet are
19jewelled
313toerings.3⸣ Her ankles are linked by
a slender fetterchain.
20 Beside her
a
314 camel, hooded with a turreting turban,
waits. A silk
21 ladder of
315 innumerable rungs climbs to his bobbing
howdah. He
22 ambles near
316 with disgruntled hindquarters. Fiercely she slaps his
23 haunch, her
317goldcurb wristbangles
angriling,⸢3her
317goldcurb wristbangles
angriling,3⸣ scolding him in
24 Moorish*.)
318
25
Marion
319
26Nebrakada! Femininum!
320
27(The ⸢3[camel]camelcamel, ⧼ra⧽ra
lifting a foreleg, plucks from a tree a
28large mango fruit,
321offers it to his mistress, blinking,
in his cloven
1hoof, thencamel, ⧼ra⧽ra
lifting a foreleg, plucks from a tree a
28large mango fruit,
321offers it to his mistress, blinking,
in his cloven
1hoof, then
3⸣ [camel]camelcamel, ⧼ra⧽ra
lifting a foreleg, plucks from a tree a
28large mango fruit,
321offers it to his mistress, blinking,
in his cloven
1hoof, thencamel, ⧼ra⧽ra
lifting a foreleg, plucks from a tree a
28large mango fruit,
321offers it to his mistress, blinking,
in his cloven
1hoof, then
droops his
322 head ⸢D[and ]and and, grunting, with uplifted
2neck,and, grunting, with uplifted
2neck,
D⸣ [and ]and and, grunting, with uplifted
2neck,and, grunting, with uplifted
2neck,
fumbles to kneel. Bloom
323 stoops his
back for leapfrog*.)
324
3
Bloom
325
4I can give you ... I mean as
your business menagerer .. Mrs Marion ..... if
326
5 you ....
327
6
Marion
328
7So you notice some change? (
*h⧼H⧽er hands passing slowly over her⸢5her5⸣
8trinketed
329stomacher,
⸢3
*h⧼H⧽er hands passing slowly over her⸢5her5⸣
8trinketed
329stomacher,
3⸣
*a⧼A⧽
slow friendly mockery in her
eyes) O Poldy,
9 Poldy,
you are a
330 poor old stick in the mud! Go and
see life. See the
wide∧wide∧
10 world.
331
11
Bloom
332
12I was just going back for that
lotion whitewax, orangeflower water. Shop
333
13 closes early on Thursday. But
the first thing in the morning.
(he pats
14 divers
334
pockets) This moving kidney. Ah!⸢C
(he pats
14 divers
334
pockets) This moving kidney. Ah!C⸣
335
15(He points to the south, then to
the east. A cake of new clean lemon
336
16 soap arises, diffusing light and perfume*.)
337
17
The Soap
338
18
We're a capital couple are
Bloom and I.
339
19
He brightens the earth. I
polish the sky.
340
20(The freckled⸢CfreckledC⸣ face of Sweny, the druggist, appears in the disc
of
21 the
341soapsun*.
)
342
22
Sweny
343
23Three and a penny, please.
344
1
Bloom
345
2Yes. For my wife.
Mrs Marion.∧Mrs Marion.∧ Special recipe.
346
3
Marion
347
4(softly) Poldy!
348
5
Bloom
⸢D[Yes?]Yes?
349
6 Yes, ma'am?
349
6 Yes, ma'am?
D⸣ [Yes?]Yes?
349
6 Yes, ma'am?
349
6 Yes, ma'am?
350
7
Marion
351
8Ti trema un poco il
cuore?
352
9(In disdain she saunters away,
humming the duet from Don
353
10
Giovanni,
∧humming the duet from Don
353
10
Giovanni,
∧ plump as a pampered∧pampered∧
⸢3[poulter]poulterpouterpouter
3⸣ [poulter]poulterpouterpouter
pigeon. )
354
11
Bloom∧
11
Bloom∧
355
12Are you sure about that Voglio? I mean the pronunciati ....∧
355
12Are you sure about that Voglio? I mean the pronunciati ....∧
356
13(He follows, followed by the
sniffing terrier. The elderly
14
∧⧼procuress⧽procuressbawdbawd
∧⧼procuress⧽procuressbawdbawd
357 seizes his sleeve, the bristles of her
chinmole
15 glittering.)
358
16
The
∧⧼
⧄◻
⧽
⧄◻
Bawd Bawd
∧⧼
⧄◻
⧽
⧄◻
Bawd Bawd
359
17Ten shillings a maidenhead. Fresh
thing ⧼that⧽that was never
touched. Fifteen.
18There's
360no‐one in it only her old father that's dead
drunk.⸢D
18There's
360no‐one in it only her old father that's dead
drunk.D⸣
361
19(She points. In the gap of her
dark den furtive, rainbedraggled,
362
20 Bridie Kelly stands*.)
363
21
Bridie
364
22Hatch street. Any good in your
mind?
365
1(With a squeak she flaps her bat
shawl and runs. A burly rough
366
2 pursues with booted strides. He
stumbles on the steps, recovers,
367
3 plunges into gloom. Weak squeaks
of laughter are heard, weaker*.)
368
4
The
∧⧼
⧄◻
⧽
⧄◻
Bawd Bawd
∧⧼
⧄◻
⧽
⧄◻
Bawd Bawd
369
5(her wolfeyes shining)
He's getting his pleasure. You won't get a virgin in
370
6 the flash houses. Ten shillings.
Don't be all night before the polis in plain
371
7 clothes sees us. Sixtyseven is a
bitch.
372
8(Leering, Gerty MacDowell limps
forward. She draws from behind,
373
9 ogling, and shows coyly her
bloodied clout*.)
374
10
Gerty
375
11With all my worldly goods I thee
and thou*.
(she murmurs) You did that.
I
376
12 hate you.
377
13
Bloom
378
14I? When? You're dreaming.⸢3You're dreaming.3⸣ I never saw you.
379
15
The Bawd
380
16Leave the gentleman ⸢D[alone.]alone.alone, you cheat. Writing the gentleman false
17letters.alone, you cheat. Writing the gentleman false
17letters.
D⸣ [alone.]alone.alone, you cheat. Writing the gentleman false
17letters.alone, you cheat. Writing the gentleman false
17letters.
381 Streetwalking and soliciting. Better for
your mother take the strap
18 to you
at
382 the bedpost, hussy like you.
383
19
Gerty
384
20(to Bloom) When you
saw all the secrets of my bottom drawer*.
(she paws
385
21 his sleeve,
slobbering) Dirty married man! I love you for doing that to
me.
386
22(She glides away crookedly. Mrs Breen in
man's frieze overcoat
387
23 with loose bellows pockets,
stands in the causeway, her roguish eyes
388
24 wideopen, smiling in all her
herbivorous buckteeth*.)
389
1
Mrs Breen
390
2Mr ...
391
3
Bloom
392
4(coughs gravely)
Madam, when we last had this pleasure ⸢D[on]onby letter
5datedby letter
5dated
D⸣ [on]onby letter
5datedby letter
5dated
393 the sixteenth instant ....
394
6
Mrs Breen
395
7Mr Bloom! You down here in the
haunts of sin! I caught you nicely!⸢DI caught you nicely!D⸣
396
8
Scamp!⸢3Scamp!3⸣
397
9
Bloom
398
10(hurriedly) Not so
loud my name. Whatever do you think
of
me?⸢5Whatever do you think
of
me?5⸣ Don't
399
11 give me away. Walls have ears. How do you
do? It's ages since I. You're
400
12looking splendid. Absolutely
it.⸢DYou're
400
12looking splendid. Absolutely
it.D⸣ Seasonable weather we are having this
13 time
401 of year. Black
refracts heat. Short cut home here. Interesting quarter.
402
14 Rescue of fallen women.
Magdalen asylum.
⸢CMagdalen asylum.
C⸣ I am the secretary .....
403
15
Mrs Breen
404
16(holds up a
finger)
⸢3
404
16(holds up a
finger)
3⸣
Now, don't tell a ⸢D[story!]story!big fib!big fib!
D⸣ [story!]story!big fib!big fib!
∧Now, don't tell a ⸢D[story!]story!big fib!big fib!
D⸣ [story!]story!big fib!big fib!
∧
I know
17somebody won't like
405that.⸢3I know
17somebody won't like
405that.3⸣ O just wait till I see Molly!
(slily) Account
for
18 yourself this very
406sminute or woe
betide you!
407
19
Bloom
408
20(looks behind) She
often said she'd like to visit. Slumming.⸢CSlumming.C⸣ The
exotic,
21 you
409 see. Negro servants
in livery⸢Cin liveryC⸣ too if she had
money. ⸢3[Othello.
22Black]Othello.
22BlackOthello blackOthello black
3⸣ [Othello.
22Black]Othello.
22BlackOthello blackOthello black
brute.
410 Eugene Stratton. Even the
bones and
23 cornerman at the
Livermore christies.
411 Bohee brothers. Sweep
for that
24 matter.
412
25(Tom and Sam Bohee, coloured
coons in white duck suits, scarlet
413
26 socks, upstarched Sambo chokers
and large scarlet asters in their
414
1buttonholes, leap out. Each has his banjo slung. Their
paler smaller
415
2 negroid hands jingle the twingtwang
wires. Flashing white kaffir
416
3 eyes and tusks they rattle
through a breakdown in clumsy clogs,
417
4 twinging, singing, back to back,
toe heel, heel toe, with
418
5 smackfatclacking nigger lips.*)
419
6
Tom and Sam
420
7
There's someone in the house
with Dina,
421
8
There's someone in the house,
I know,
422
9
There's someone in the house
with Dina
423
10
Playing on the old banjo.
424
11(They whisk black masks from raw
babby faces: then, chuckling,
425
12chortling, trumming, twanging, they diddle diddle cakewalk∧cakewalk∧
13 dance
426 away*.)
427
14
Bloom
428
15(with a sour tenderish
smile) A little frivol, shall we⧼?⧽?, if you are so
16 inclined?
429 Would you
like me perhaps to embrace you just for a fraction of a
17 second?
430
18
Mrs Breen
431
19(screams gaily) O,
you ruck! You ought to see yourself!
432
20
Bloom
433
21For old sake' sake. I
only meant a square party, a⸢3square party, a3⸣
mixed marriage
22 mingling
434 of our different little conjugials. You know
I had a soft corner for
23 you.
435
(gloomily) 'Twas I sent you
that valentine of the dear gazelle.
436
24
Mrs Breen
437
25Glory Alice, you do look a holy
show! Killing simply. (she puts out
her
438
26 hand inquisitively)
What are you hiding behind your back? Tell us, there's
439
27 a dear.
440
1
Bloom
441
2(seizes her wrist with his
free hand) Josie Powell that was, prettiest deb in
442
3 Dublin. How time flies by! Do you
remember, harking back in a
443
4 retrospective arrangement, ⧼old⧽old Old Christmas night, Georgina
Simpson's
444
5 housewarming while they were
playing the Irving Bishop game, finding the
445
6 pin blindfold and thoughtreading?
Subject, what is in this snuffbox?
446
7
Mrs Breen
447
8You were the lion of the night
with your seriocomic recitation and you
448
9 looked the part. You were always a favourite with the
ladies.⸢3You were always a favourite with the
ladies.3⸣
449
10
Bloom
450
11(
*s⧼S⧽quire of dames,⸢3
*s⧼S⧽quire of dames,3⸣ in dinner jacket
with wateredsilk facings,
blue
12masonic
451badge in his
buttonhole,⸢Dblue
12masonic
451badge in his
buttonhole,D⸣ black bow and mother‐of‐pearl studs,
a
13 prismatic
452 champagne glass tilted in his
hand) Ladies and gentlemen, I give
14 you
453 Ireland, home and beauty.
454
15
Mrs Breen
455
16The dear dead days beyond recall.
Love's old sweet song.
456
17
Bloom
457
18(meaningfully dropping his
voice) I confess I'm teapot with
curiosity∧with
curiosity∧ to
458
19 find out whether some person's
something is a little teapot at present.
459
20
Mrs Breen
460
21(gushingly)
Tremendously teapot! London's teapot and I'm simply teapot
461
22 all over me!
(she rubs sides with him)
After the parlour mystery games and
462
23 the crackers from the tree we
sat on the staircase ottoman. Under the
463
24 mistletoe. Two is company.
464
1
Bloom
465
2(wearing a purple Napoleon hat
with an amber halfmoon, his fingers and
466
3thumb
passing
slowly down to her soft moist meaty palm which she
467
4 surrenders gently)
The witching hour of
night.
⸢3The witching hour of
night.
3⸣ I took the splinter out of
468
5 this hand, carefully, slowly.
( ⸢3[tenderly]tenderlytenderly, as he slips on her finger
6a ruby ringtenderly, as he slips on her finger
6a ruby ring
3⸣ [tenderly]tenderlytenderly, as he slips on her finger
6a ruby ringtenderly, as he slips on her finger
6a ruby ring
)
469Là ci darem la mano.
⸢D
( ⸢3[tenderly]tenderlytenderly, as he slips on her finger
6a ruby ringtenderly, as he slips on her finger
6a ruby ring
3⸣ [tenderly]tenderlytenderly, as he slips on her finger
6a ruby ringtenderly, as he slips on her finger
6a ruby ring
)
469Là ci darem la mano.
D⸣
470
7
Mrs Breen
471
8(in a onepiece evening frock
⧼frock⧽frock
∧⧼of ⧽of executed inexecuted in
∧⧼of ⧽of executed inexecuted in
moonlight blue, a
9
tinsel sylph's
472
∧⧼crown⧽crowndiademdiadem
∧⧼crown⧽crowndiademdiadem
on her brow with her dancecard fallen
10 beside her moonblue satin
473 slipper, curves her palm softly, breathing
11 quickly)
Voglio e non .....⸢D
Voglio e non .....D⸣
You're
474 hot!
You're scalding! The left hand
12
nearest the heart.
475
13
Bloom
476
14When you made your present choice
they said it was beauty and the beast.
15I
477can never forgive you for that.⸢C
15I
477can never forgive you for that.C⸣
(his clenched fist at his
brow) Think
16what
it
478means. All you meant to me then.⸢3
(his clenched fist at his
brow) Think
16what
it
478means. All you meant to me then.3⸣
( ⸢3[with choked sobs
]with choked sobs
17hoarsely
17hoarsely
3⸣ [with choked sobs
]with choked sobs
17hoarsely
17hoarsely
) Woman, it's breaking me!⸢C
( ⸢3[with choked sobs
]with choked sobs
17hoarsely
17hoarsely
3⸣ [with choked sobs
]with choked sobs
17hoarsely
17hoarsely
) Woman, it's breaking me!C⸣
479
18(Denis Breen, whitetallhatted, with Wisdom Hely's
480
19sandwichboards, shuffles past them in carpet slippers, his
dull beard
481
20 thrust out, muttering to right
and left. Little Alf Bergan, cloaked in
482
21 the pall of the ace of spades, dogs him
to left and right, doubled in
483
22 laughter*.)
484
23
Alf Bergan
485
24(points jeering at the
sandwichboards)
U. p:
up.
486
25
Mrs Breen
487
26(to Bloom) High jinks
below stairs*.
(she gives him the glad eye)
Why
488
27 didn't you kiss the spot to make
it well? You
wanted to.
489
1
Bloom
490
2(shocked) Molly's best
friend! Could you?
491
3
Mrs Breen
492
4(her pulpy tongue between
her ⸢D[lips]lipslips, offers a pigeon kisslips, offers a pigeon kiss
D⸣ [lips]lipslips, offers a pigeon kisslips, offers a pigeon kiss
) Hnhn.
5 The
493 answer is a lemon. Have you a little present
for me there?
494
6
Bloom
495
7(offhandedly) Kosher.
A snack for supper. The home without potted meat
496
8 is incomplete. I was at
Leah, Mrs Bandmann Palmer. Trenchant exponent
497
9 of Shakespeare. Unfortunately
threw away the programme. Rattling good
498
10 place round there for pigs' feet.
Feel.
499
11(Richie Goulding, three ladies'
hats pinned on his head, appears
500
12 weighted to one side by the
black legal bag of Collis and Ward on
501
13 which a skull and crossbones are
painted in white limewash. He
502
14 opens it and shows it full of
polonies, kippered ⸢3[herring,]herring,
15herrings,
15herrings,
3⸣ [herring,]herring,
15herrings,
15herrings,
Findon
503 haddies and tightpacked pills*.)
504
16
Richie
505
17Best value in Dub.
506
18(Bald Pat, bothered beetle,
stands on the curbstone, folding his
507
19 napkin, waiting to wait.*)
508
20
Pat
509
21(advances with a tilted
dish of spillspilling gravy)
⸢D
509
21(advances with a tilted
dish of spillspilling gravy)
D⸣ Steak and kidney.
22
Bottle
510 of lager. Hee hee hee. Wait till I
wait.
511
23
Richie
512
24Goodgod. Inev erate inall ....
513
1(With hanging head he marches
doggedly forward. *⧼(⧽The navvy,
514
2 lurching by, gores him with his
flaming pronghorn*.)
515
3
Richie
516
4(with a cry of pain, his hand to his
back) Ah! Bright's! Lights!
517
5
Bloom
518
6(points to the navvy)
A spy. Don't attract attention. I hate stupid crowds. I
519
7 am not on pleasure ∧⧼bent down here.⧽bent down here.bent.bent.
∧⧼bent down here.⧽bent down here.bent.bent.
I am in a grave
8
predicament.∧I am in a grave
8
predicament.∧
520
9
Mrs Breen
∧⧼
521
10You're humbugging⧽
521
10You're humbugging
Humbugging
Humbugging
∧⧼
521
10You're humbugging⧽
521
10You're humbugging
Humbugging
Humbugging
and deluthering as per ⸢D[usual.]usual.
11usual with your cock and
bull story.
11usual with your cock and
bull story.
D⸣ [usual.]usual.
11usual with your cock and
bull story.
11usual with your cock and
bull story.
522
12
Bloom
523
13I want to tell you a little
secret about how I came to be here. But you must
524
14 never tell. Not even Molly. I
have a most particular reason.
525
15
Mrs Breen
526
16(all agog) O, not for
worlds.
527
17
Bloom
528
18Let's walk on. Shall us?⸢3Shall us?3⸣
529
19
Mrs Breen
530
20Let's.
531
21(The ⸢(A)[
∧⧼procuress⧽procuress
∧⧼procuress⧽procuress
]
∧⧼procuress⧽procuress
∧⧼procuress⧽procuress
bawdbawd
(A)⸣ [
∧⧼procuress⧽procuress
∧⧼procuress⧽procuress
]
∧⧼procuress⧽procuress
∧⧼procuress⧽procuress
bawdbawd
makes an unheeded sign. Bloom
22 walks on with Mrs
532 Breen. The
terrier follows, whining piteously,
23 wagging his tail*.)
533
1
The ⸢(A)[
∧⧼Procuress⧽Procuress
∧⧼Procuress⧽Procuress
]
∧⧼Procuress⧽Procuress
∧⧼Procuress⧽Procuress
BawdBawd
(A)⸣ [
∧⧼Procuress⧽Procuress
∧⧼Procuress⧽Procuress
]
∧⧼Procuress⧽Procuress
∧⧼Procuress⧽Procuress
BawdBawd
534
2Jewman's melt!
535
3
Bloom
536
4(in an oatmeal sporting suit,
a sprig of woodbine in the lapel, tony∧tony∧ buff
537
5 shirt, shepherd's plaid
∧⧼tie⧽tieSaint Andrew's cross scarftieSaint Andrew's cross scarftie
∧⧼tie⧽tieSaint Andrew's cross scarftieSaint Andrew's cross scarftie
, white spats,
6 fawn
538 dustcoat on his arm, tawny red brogues,
fieldglasses in bandolier and
7
a grey
539 billycock hat) Do you
remember a long long ⸢5[time]timetime,time,
5⸣ [time]timetime,time,
years
8and years∧years
8and years∧
⸢5[ago]agoago,ago,
5⸣ [ago]agoago,ago,
just
540 after Milly,
∧⧼marionette⧽marionetteMarionette we
9 called
her,Marionette we
9 called
her,
∧⧼marionette⧽marionetteMarionette we
9 called
her,Marionette we
9 called
her,
was weaned when we all went
541 together
to Fairyhouse races, was
10 it?
542
11
Mrs Breen
543
12(in smart Saxe
tailormade, white velours hat and spider veil)
∧
543
12(in smart Saxe
tailormade, white velours hat and spider veil)
∧
544
13 Leopardstown.
545
14
Bloom
546
15I mean, Leopardstown. And Molly
won seven shillings on a ∧⧼horse⧽horsethree
16 year oldthree
16 year old
∧⧼horse⧽horsethree
16 year oldthree
16 year old
547 named Nevertell and coming home along by
Foxrock in that old
17
fiveseater∧fiveseater∧
548 shanderadan of a ⸢3[wagonette. You]wagonette. You
waggonette you
waggonette you
3⸣ [wagonette. You]wagonette. You
waggonette you
waggonette you
were in
18 your heyday then
and you had
549 on that new hat of white velours
with a
19 surround of molefur that
Mrs
550
⸢3[Galbraith]Galbraith Hayes Hayes
3⸣ [Galbraith]Galbraith Hayes Hayes
advised you to buy
20
because it was marked down to nineteen and
551
eleven, a bit of wire and an old
21
rag of velveteen, and I'll lay you⸢3you3⸣ what you
552 like ⧼
⌷
⧽
⌷
she did it on
22
purpose ....
553
23
Mrs Breen
554
24She did, of course, the cat! Don't tell me!⸢DDon't tell me!D⸣ Nice adviser!
555
25
Bloom
556
26Because it didn't suit you one
quarter as well as the other ducky little
557
27 tammy toque with the bird of
paradise wing in it that I admired on you and
558
1 you honestly looked just too
fetching in it though it was a pity to kill it, you
559
2 cruel naughty
creature, little mite of a thing with a heart the size of a
560
3 fullstop.
561
4
Mrs Breen
562
5(squeezes his arm,
simpers) Naughty cruel I was!
563
6
Bloom
564
7(low, secretly, ever more
rapidly) And Molly was eating a sandwich of
565
8 spiced beef out of Mrs Joe
Gallaher's lunch basket. Frankly, though she
566
9 had her advisers or admirers, I
never cared much for her style. She was ....
567
10
Mrs Breen
568
11Too ....
569
12
Bloom
570
13Yes. And Molly was laughing
because Rogers and Maggot O'Reilly were
571
14 mimicking a cock as we passed a
farmhouse and Marcus Tertius Moses, the
572
15 tea merchant, drove past us in a
gig with his daughter, Dancer Moses was
573
16 her name, and the poodle in her
lap bridled up and you asked me if I ever
574
17 heard or read or knew or came
across ....
575
18
Mrs Breen
576
19(eagerly)
Yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes, yes.
577
20(She fades from his side.
Followed by the whining dog he walks on
578
21 towards hellsgates. In an
archway a standing woman,
⧼bendin⧽bendin
22bent forward,⸢D
⧼bendin⧽bendin
22bent forward,D⸣
579 her feet apart, pisses cowily. Outside a
shuttered
23 pub a bunch of
580 loiterers listen to a tale which their
brokensnouted
24 gaffer rasps out
581 with raucous humour. An armless pair of them
flop
25 wrestling,
582 growling, in maimed ⧼sudden⧽sudden sodden playfight*.
*)
583
1
The Gaffer
584
2(crouches, his voice
twisted in his snout) And when Cairns came down
585
3 from the scaffolding in Beaver
street
what was he after doing it into only
586
4 into the bucket of porter that
was there waiting on the shavings for
587
5 Derwan's plasterers.
588
6
The Loiterers
589
7(guffaw with cleft palates⸢3with cleft palates3⸣ ) O
jays!
590
8(Their paintspeckled hats wag.
Spattered with size and lime of their
591
9 lodges they frisk limblessly
about him*.
*)
592
10
Bloom
593
11Coincidence too. They think
it funny.
Anything but that.
∧Anything but that.
∧ Broad
12 daylight.
594 Trying to walk. Lucky no woman.
595
13
The Loiterers
596
14Jays, that's a good one. Glauber
salts. O jays, into the men's porter.
597
15(Bloom passes. Cheap whores,
singly, coupled, shawled, dishevelled,
598
16 call from lanes, doors, corners*.)
599
17
The Whores
600
18Are you going far, queer
fellow?
601
19How's your middle leg?
602
20Got a match on you?
⸢3[Eh? Come
]Eh? Come
603
21 Eh, come
603
21 Eh, come
3⸣ [Eh? Come
]Eh? Come
603
21 Eh, come
603
21 Eh, come
here till I
stiffen it for you.
604
22(He plodges through their sump
towards the lighted street beyond.
605
23 From a bulge of window curtains
a gramophone rears a battered
606
24 brazen trunk. In the shadow a
shebeenkeeper haggles with the
607
25 navvy and the two redcoats*.)
608
1
The Navvy
609
2(belching) Where's the
bloody house?
610
3
The Shebeenkeeper
611
4Purdon street. Shilling a bottle
of stout. Respectable woman.
612
5
The Navvy
613
6(gripping the two redcoats,
staggers forward with them) Come on, you
614
7 British army!
615
8
Private Carr
616
9(behind his back) He
aint half balmy.
617
10
Private Compton
618
11(laughs) What ho!
619
12
Private Carr
620
13(to the navvy)
∧
620
13(to the navvy)
∧ Portobello barracks canteen. You ask for Carr. Just Carr.
621
14
The Navvy
622
15(shouts)
623
16
|5
| We are the boys. Of Wexford.
624
17
Private Compton
625
18Say! What price the
sergeantmajor?
626
19
Private Carr
627
20Bennett? He's my pal. I love old
Bennett.
628
1
The Navvy
629
2(shouts)
630
3
|5
| The ⧼Galling⧽Galling galling chain.
631
|5
|
4
And free our native
land.
632
5(He staggers forward, dragging
them with him. Bloom ⸢C[stops.]stops.
6stops, at
633fault.
6stops, at
633fault.
C⸣ [stops.]stops.
6stops, at
633fault.
6stops, at
633fault.
The dog approaches , his tongue outlolling,
7panting⸢3, his tongue outlolling,
7panting3⸣
*.)
634
8
Bloom
635
9Wildgoose chase this. Disorderly
houses. Lord knows where they are gone.
636
10 Drunks cover distance double
quick. Nice mixup. Scene at Westland row.
637
11 Then jump in first class with
third ticket. Then too far. Train with engine
638
12behind.⸢3Train with engine
638
12behind.3⸣ Might have
taken me to Malahide or a siding for the night or
639
13 collision. Second drink does it.
Once is a dose. What am I following him
640
14 for? Still, he's the best of
that lot. If I hadn't heard about Mrs Beaufoy
641
15 Purefoy I wouldn't have gone and
wouldn't have met. Kismet. He'll lose
642
16 that cash. Relieving office
here. Good biz for cheapjacks, organs. What do
643
17 ye lack? Soon got, soon gone.
Might have lost my life too with that man
644
18gongwheeltracktrolleyglarejuggernaut only for presence of mind. Can't
645
19 always save you, though. If I
had passed Truelock's window that day two
646
20 minutes ⸢3[late]latelaterlater
3⸣ [late]latelaterlater
would have been shot. Absence of body. Still if
bullet
21 only
647 went through my coat get damages for shock, five hundred
pounds.
22 What
648 was he? Kildare street club toff. God help his
gamekeeper.
649
23(He gazes ahead, reading on the wall a
scrawled chalk legend Wet Dream
650
24 and a phallic
design.)
Odd! Molly
drawing on the frosted carriagepane at
651
25 Kingstown. What's that like?
(Gaudy dollwomen loll in the
lighted
652
26 doorways, in window
embrasures, smoking birdseye cigarettes. The odour
653
27 of the sicksweet
weed floats towards him in slow round ovalling wreaths*.)
654
28
The Wreaths
655
29Sweet are the sweets. Sweets of
sin.
656
1
Bloom
657
2My spine's a bit limp. Go or turn?
And this food? Eat it and get all
658
3 pigsticky. Absurd I am. Waste of
money. One and eightpence too much.
659
4
(The retriever drives a cold
snivelling muzzle against his hand, wagging his
660
5 tail*.) Strange how they ⧼like⧽like take to me. Even that brute today.
Better
6 speak to
661 him first. Like women they like
rencontres. Stinks like
a polecat.
7Chacun
662
son goût.
He might be mad. Dogdays.
Uncertain in his
8 movements.
Good
663 fellow!
Fido!∧Fido!∧ Good fellow!
Garryowen!⸢DGarryowen!D⸣
(The ⸢3[retriever]retriever
9 wolfdog
9 wolfdog
3⸣ [retriever]retriever
9 wolfdog
9 wolfdog
sprawls on his back,
664 wriggling
obscenely with
10 begging paws,
his long black tongue lolling out*.)
665 Influence of his
11 surroundings. Give and have done with it. Provided
666 nobody. (Calling
12 encouraging
words he shambles back with a furtive
667
poacher's tread, dogged
13 by
the ⸢3[retriever]retrieversettersetter
3⸣ [retriever]retrieversettersetter
into a dark stalestunk corner. He
668 unrolls one
14 parcel and
goes to dump the crubeen softly but holds back and
669 feels the
15 trotter*.) Sizeable for threepence. But then I have it in my
left hand.
670 Calls
16 for more effort. Why? Smaller from want of use. O, let
it slide. Two
671 and six.
672
17(With regret he lets the unrolled
crubeen and trotter slide. The
673
18
⸢3[retriever]retrievermastiffmastiff
3⸣ [retriever]retrievermastiffmastiff
mauls the bundle clumsily and gluts ⸢(A)[
△
]
△
19himself
19himself
(A)⸣ [
△
]
△
19himself
19himself
with growling
674 greed, crunching the
bones. Two raincaped
20 watch
approach, silent,
675 vigilant. They murmur together*.)
676
21
The Watch
677
22Bloom. Of Bloom. For Bloom.
Bloom.
678
23(Each lays hand on
Bloom's shoulder*.)
679
24
First Watch
680
25Caught in the act. Commit no
nuisance.
681
26
Bloom
682
27(stammers) I am doing
good to others.
683
1(A covey of gulls, storm
petrels, ⸢D[rise]riserisesrises
D⸣ [rise]riserisesrises
hungrily from Liffey
2
slime
684 with Banbury cakes in their
beaks.)
685
3
The Gulls
⸢C[Caw!]Caw!
686
4 Kaw kave kankury
kake.
686
4 Kaw kave kankury
kake.
C⸣ [Caw!]Caw!
686
4 Kaw kave kankury
kake.
686
4 Kaw kave kankury
kake.
687
5
Bloom
688
6The friend of man. Trained by
kindness.
689
7(He points. Bob Doran, toppling
from a high barstool, sways over
690
8 the munching ⧼terrier⧽terrier
⸢3[retriever*.
]retriever*.
spaniel.spaniel.
3⸣ [retriever*.
]retriever*.
spaniel.spaniel.
)
691
9
Bob Doran
692
10Towser. Give us the paw. Give the
paw.
693
11(The ⸢3[dog]dogbulldogbulldog
3⸣ [dog]dogbulldogbulldog
growls, his scruff standing, a gobbet of pig's
12 knuckle
694
between his ⸢3[molars.]molars.molars through which rabid
13scumspittle dribbles.molars through which rabid
13scumspittle dribbles.
3⸣ [molars.]molars.molars through which rabid
13scumspittle dribbles.molars through which rabid
13scumspittle dribbles.
Bob
695 Doran falls silently into an area*.)
696
14
Second Watch
697
15Prevention of cruelty to
animals.
698
16
Bloom
699
17(enthusiastically) A
noble work! I scolded that tramdriver on Harold's
700
18 cross bridge for illusing the
poor horse with his harness scab. Bad ⸢C[language]language
19 French
19 French
C⸣ [language]language
19 French
19 French
I
701 got for my pains. Of course it was
frosty and the
20 last tram. All
tales of
702 circus life are highly
demoralising.
703
21(Signor Maffei, passionpale, in liontamer's costume with diamond
704
22 studs in his shirtfront,
steps forward, holding a
circus
23paperhoop,
⸢3a
circus
23paperhoop,
3⸣
a
705 curling
carriagewhip and a revolver with which he
24 covers the
706 gorging ⸢3[dog.]dog.
⧼bearcub.⧽bearcub.
⸢5[cub.
]cub.
boarhound.
boarhound.
5⸣ [cub.
]cub.
boarhound.
boarhound.
⧼bearcub.⧽bearcub.
⸢5[cub.
]cub.
boarhound.
boarhound.
5⸣ [cub.
]cub.
boarhound.
boarhound.
3⸣ [dog.]dog.
⧼bearcub.⧽bearcub.
⸢5[cub.
]cub.
boarhound.
boarhound.
5⸣ [cub.
]cub.
boarhound.
boarhound.
⧼bearcub.⧽bearcub.
⸢5[cub.
]cub.
boarhound.
boarhound.
5⸣ [cub.
]cub.
boarhound.
boarhound.
)
707
1
Signor Maffei
708
2(with a sinister
smile) Ladies and gentlemen, my educated greyhound. It
709
3 was I broke in the bucking
broncho Ajax with my patent spiked ⸢3[saddle.]saddle.
4saddle for
710carnivores.
4saddle for
710carnivores.
3⸣ [saddle.]saddle.
4saddle for
710carnivores.
4saddle for
710carnivores.
Lash under the belly with a knotted thong. Block
5 tackle and a
711
strangling pulley will bring your lion to heel, no matter
how
6 fractious, even
712Leo
ferox
there, the Libyan maneater. A redhot
crowbar
7 and some liniment
713 rubbing on the burning part produced Fritz
of
8 Amsterdam, the thinking
714 hyena*.
(he glares) I possess the
Indian sign. The
9 glint of my eye
does it
715 with these breastsparklers*.
(with a bewitching
10 smile) I now introduce
716 Mademoiselle Ruby, the pride of the
ring.
717
11
First Watch
718
12Come. Name and address.
719
13
Bloom
720
14I have forgotten for the
moment. Ah, yes!⸢(D)
720
14I have forgotten for the
moment. Ah, yes!(D)⸣
(
*h⧼H⧽e⸢(D)
*h⧼H⧽e(D)⸣ takes off his high
15 grade hat,
721
saluting) Dr Bloom, Leopold, dental surgeon. You have heard
of
16von⸢4
16von4⸣
Blum
722 Pasha. Umpteen millions.
Donnerwetter!
⸢4
Donnerwetter!
4⸣ Owns half Austria.
17
Egypt.
723 Cousin.
724
18
First Watch
725
19Proof.
726
20(A card falls from inside the
leather headband of Bloom's hat*.)
727
21
Bloom
728
22(in red fez, cadi's dress
coat with broad green sash, wearing a false badge
729
23of the Legion of
Honour,⸢4wearing a false badge
729
23of the Legion of
Honour,4⸣ picks up the card hastily and offers it)
Allow
24 me.
730
My club is the Junior Army and Navy. Solicitors: Messrs John
25Henry
731Menton, 27 Bachelor's Walk.⸢(D)
My club is the Junior Army and Navy. Solicitors: Messrs John
25Henry
731Menton, 27 Bachelor's Walk.(D)⸣
732
1
First Watch
733
2(reads) Henry Flower.
No fixed abode. Unlawfully watching and
734
3 besetting.
735
4
Second Watch
736
5An alibi. You are cautioned.
737
6
Bloom
738
7(produces from his heartpocket
a crumpled yellow flower) This is the
739
8 flower in question. It was given me by a
man I don't know his name.⸢3It was given me by a
man I don't know his name.3⸣
740
9
(plausibly) You know that old
joke, rose of Castile. Bloom. The change of
741
10name. Virag. (he murmurs privately and
confidentially) We are engaged
742
11 you ⸢D[see.]see.see, sergeant.see, sergeant.
D⸣ [see.]see.see, sergeant.see, sergeant.
Lady in the case. Love entanglement.∧Love entanglement.∧
(he
12 shoulders the
743 second
watch gently) Dash it all. It's a way we gallants⸢3gallants3⸣
13 have in the navy.
744 Uniform that does it*.
(he turns gravely to the
first
14 watch)
Still, of course,
745 you do get your Waterloo
sometimes. Drop in
15some evening and have a
746glass of old Burgundy.⸢3Drop in
15some evening and have a
746glass of old Burgundy.3⸣
(to the second watch
16 gaily) I'll
introduce you,
747inspector. She's game. Do
it in the shake of a
17lamb's
tail.⸢D
(to the second watch
16 gaily) I'll
introduce you,
747inspector. She's game. Do
it in the shake of a
17lamb's
tail.D⸣
748
18(A dark mercurialised face
appears, leading a veiled figure*.)
749
19
The Dark Mercury
750
20
[4That man is Leopold
M‘Intosh, wanted for wilful murder of Samuel
21Childs.]That man is Leopold
M‘Intosh, wanted for wilful murder of Samuel
21Childs.
The Castle is looking
for him. He was drummed out of the
22army.⸢3The Castle is looking
for him. He was drummed out of the
22army.3⸣
751
23
Martha
752
24(thickveiled, a crimson
halter round her neck, a copy of
the
Irish Times in
753
25her hand, in tone of
reproach, pointing) Henry! Leopold! Lionel, thou
26lost
754one!
Clear my name.
755
1
First Watch
756
2(sternly) Come to the
station.
757
3
Bloom
758
4(scared, ⸢6[makes Masonic signs]makes Masonic signshats himself, steps back, then, plucking
5 at his heart and
lifting his
759right forearm
on the∧on the∧ square, he gives
the sign
6and dueguard
of fellowcrafthats himself, steps back, then, plucking
5 at his heart and
lifting his
759right forearm
on the∧on the∧ square, he gives
the sign
6and dueguard
of fellowcraft
6⸣ [makes Masonic signs]makes Masonic signshats himself, steps back, then, plucking
5 at his heart and
lifting his
759right forearm
on the∧on the∧ square, he gives
the sign
6and dueguard
of fellowcrafthats himself, steps back, then, plucking
5 at his heart and
lifting his
759right forearm
on the∧on the∧ square, he gives
the sign
6and dueguard
of fellowcraft
)
760 No, ∧⧼no:⧽no:no, worshipful
master,⸢6worshipful
master,6⸣ light of
7love.no, worshipful
master,⸢6worshipful
master,6⸣ light of
7love.
∧⧼no:⧽no:no, worshipful
master,⸢6worshipful
master,6⸣ light of
7love.no, worshipful
master,⸢6worshipful
master,6⸣ light of
7love.
Mistaken identity. The Lyons
mail.
761 Lesurques and Dubosc. You
8 remember the Childs fratricide case.
We
762 medical men. By striking him
dead
9 with a hatchet. I am
wrongfully
763 accused. Better one guilty
escape than
10 ninetynine wrongfully
condemned.
764
11
Martha
765
12(sobbing behind her
veil) Breach of promise. My real name is Peggy
766
13Griffin.⸢DMy real name is Peggy
766
13Griffin.D⸣ He wrote to me
that he was miserable. I'll tell my brother, the
767
14
⸢D[footballer,]footballer,Bective rugger fullback,Bective rugger fullback,
D⸣ [footballer,]footballer,Bective rugger fullback,Bective rugger fullback,
on you, heartless flirt.
768
15
Bloom
769
16(behind his hand)
She's drunk. The woman is ⸢D[not sober.]not sober.inebriated.inebriated.
D⸣ [not sober.]not sober.inebriated.inebriated.
17(he ⸢6[hums carelessly]hums carelesslymurmurs
770vaguely the pass
of Ephraimmurmurs
770vaguely the pass
of Ephraim
6⸣ [hums carelessly]hums carelesslymurmurs
770vaguely the pass
of Ephraimmurmurs
770vaguely the pass
of Ephraim
)
18Shitbroleeth.⸢6
18Shitbroleeth.6⸣
771
19
Second Watch
772
20(tears in his eyes⧼)⧽), to Bloom)
You ought to be thoroughly well ashamed
21 of
773 yourself.
774
22
Bloom
775
23Gentlemen of the jury, let me explain. A pure mare's
nest. I am ⧼am⧽am a man
776
24 misunderstood. I am being made a
scapegoat of. I am a respectable married
777
25 man, without a stain on my
character. I live in Eccles street. My wife, I
26am⸢CI
26amC⸣
778 the daughter of a most distinguished
commander, a gallant
27upstanding
779gentleman,⸢Ca gallant
27upstanding
779gentleman,C⸣
what do you call him,⸢Dwhat do you call him,D⸣
Majorgeneral
Brian
1 Tweedy, one of
780 Britain's fighting men who helped to win our battles. Got
2his majority for
781the heroic defence of Rorke's Drift.⸢5Got
2his majority for
781the heroic defence of Rorke's Drift.5⸣
782
3
First Watch
783
4Regiment.
784
5
Bloom
785
6(turns to the gallery)
The royal Dublins, boys, the salt of the earth,⸢6the salt of the earth,6⸣
7 known
786
the world over. ⸢D[With]WithI think I see some old comrades in arms up
8there among
787you.
The R. D. F.,
with
I think I see some old comrades in arms up
8there among
787you.
The R. D. F.,
with
D⸣ [With]WithI think I see some old comrades in arms up
8there among
787you.
The R. D. F.,
with
I think I see some old comrades in arms up
8there among
787you.
The R. D. F.,
with
our own Metropolitan police,
9 guardians of our
788 homes, the pluckiest lads and the finest body of men,
as
10 physique, in the
789
⸢D[service.]service. service of our sovereign. service of our sovereign.
D⸣ [service.]service. service of our sovereign. service of our sovereign.
790
11
A Voice
791
12Turncoat! Up the Boers! Who booed
Joe Chamberlain?
792
13
Bloom
793
14(his hand on the shoulder of
the first watch) My old dad too was a J. P.
794
15 I'm as staunch a Britisher as
you are, sir. I fought
with the colours⸢Dwith the coloursD⸣
for
16 king
795 and country
[Dand was disabled]and was disabled
⸢C
[Dand was disabled]and was disabled
C⸣ in the absentminded war under
17general Gough in the park⸢5under
17general Gough in the park5⸣
and
796was disabled⸢Dand
796was disabledD⸣ at Spion Kop and
18Bloemfontein, was mentioned in dispatches.
797 I did all a white man could*.
19
(with quiet feeling) Jim
Bludso. Hold her
798 nozzle again the bank.
799
20
First Watch
800
21Profession or trade.
801
22
Bloom
802
23Well, I follow a literary occupation, author‐journalist. In fact we are just
803
24 bringing out a collection of
prize stories of which I am the inventor,
804
25 something that is an entirely
new departure. I am connected with the British
805
26 and Irish press. If you ring
up ....
806
1(Myles Crawford strides out
jerkily, a quill between his teeth. His
807
2 scarlet beak blazes within the
aureole of his straw hat. He dangles a
808
3 hank of Spanish onions in one
hand and holds with the other hand
809
4 a telephone receiver nozzle∧nozzle∧ to his ear*.)
810
5
Myles Crawford
811
6(his cock's wattles
wagging)
⸢C
811
6(his cock's wattles
wagging)
C⸣ Hello, seventyseven eightfour. Hello.
812
7Freeman's
Urinal
and
Weekly
Arsewipe
here∧here∧. Paralyse Europe. You
8 which?
813 Bluebags? Who writes?
Is it Bloom?
814
9(Mr Philip Beaufoy, palefaced,
stands in the witnessbox, in accurate
815
10 morning dress, outbreast pocket
with peak of handkerchief
816
11 showing, creased lavender
trousers and patent boots. He carries a
817
12 large portfolio
labelled Matcham's Masterstrokes*.
)
818
13
Beaufoy
819
14(drawls) No, you
aren't. Not
by a long shot⸢Dby a long shotD⸣ if I know it. I don't see it,
820
15 that's all. No born gentleman,
no‐one
with the most rudimentary
821
16 promptings of a gentleman would
stoop to such ⸢D[perfectly]perfectlyparticularlyparticularly
D⸣ [perfectly]perfectlyparticularlyparticularly
17 loathsome
822 conduct. One of those, my lord. A plagiarist. A soapy
sneak
18 masquerading
823 as a littérateur. It's perfectly obvious
that with the most
19inherent baseness⸢Dwith the most
19inherent basenessD⸣
824 he has cribbed some of my bestselling
copy,
really
20 gorgeous stuff, a
perfect
825
⸢D[gem.]gem.
gem,
the love passages in which are
21beneath suspicion.
gem,
the love passages in which are
21beneath suspicion.
D⸣ [gem.]gem.
gem,
the love passages in which are
21beneath suspicion.
gem,
the love passages in which are
21beneath suspicion.
The Beaufoy books
826
of love and great
⸢6[possessions]possessions
22possessions,
22possessions,
6⸣ [possessions]possessions
22possessions,
22possessions,
⸢5 of love and great
⸢6[possessions]possessions
22possessions,
22possessions,
6⸣ [possessions]possessions
22possessions,
22possessions,
5⸣
with which your lordship is doubtless
827
⸢6[familiar]familiarfamiliar,familiar,
6⸣ [familiar]familiarfamiliar,familiar,
23 are a household word throughout
the kingdom.
828
24
Bloom
829
25(murmurs
>⧼
⧄◻
⧽
⧄◻
with hangdogwith hangdog
<⧼
⧄◻
⧽
⧄◻
with hangdogwith hangdog
meekness
glum
>glum
<
∧
>⧼
⧄◻
⧽
⧄◻
with hangdogwith hangdog
<⧼
⧄◻
⧽
⧄◻
with hangdogwith hangdog
meekness
glum
>glum
<
∧)
That bit about the
26 laughing
830 witch hand in
hand I take exception to, if I may ...
831
1
Beaufoy
832
2(his lip upcurled,
smiles superciliously on the court) You funny ass, you!
833
3You're too beastly awfully
∧⧼amusing⧽amusingweirdweird
∧⧼amusing⧽amusingweirdweird
for words!⸢D
3You're too beastly awfully
∧⧼amusing⧽amusingweirdweird
∧⧼amusing⧽amusingweirdweird
for words!D⸣ I don't think
4 you need over
834 excessively
disincommodate yourself in that regard. My
5 literary agent Mr
835 J. B.
Pinker is in attendance. I presume, my lord, we shall
6 receive the usual
836 witnesses' fees, shan't we? We are considerably out
of
7 pocket over this bally
837 pressman ⸢C[johnny.]johnny.
⸢D[johnny]johnnyjohnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,johnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,
D⸣ [johnny]johnnyjohnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,johnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,
who has not even∧even∧ been to a
838university.
⸢D[johnny]johnnyjohnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,johnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,
D⸣ [johnny]johnnyjohnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,johnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,
who has not even∧even∧ been to a
838university.
C⸣ [johnny.]johnny.
⸢D[johnny]johnnyjohnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,johnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,
D⸣ [johnny]johnnyjohnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,johnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,
who has not even∧even∧ been to a
838university.
⸢D[johnny]johnnyjohnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,johnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,
D⸣ [johnny]johnnyjohnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,johnny, this jackdaw
8of Rheims,
who has not even∧even∧ been to a
838university.
839
9
Bloom
840
10(indistinctly)
University of life.
⸢CUniversity of life.
C⸣ Bad art.
841
11
Beaufoy
842
12(shouts) It's a
damnably foul ⸢C[lie!]lie!
lie,
showing the moral rottenness of
13the man!
lie,
showing the moral rottenness of
13the man!
C⸣ [lie!]lie!
lie,
showing the moral rottenness of
13the man!
lie,
showing the moral rottenness of
13the man!
843
(he extends his portfolio) We
have here damning evidence,
⸢Cdamning evidence,
C⸣
14 the corpus
844 delicti, my lord, a specimen of my
maturer work disfigured by
15 the
hallmark
845 of the beast*.
846
16
A Voice from the
Gallery
847
17
Moses, Moses, king of the
jews,
848
18
Wiped his arse in the Daily News.
849
19
Bloom
850
20(bravely)
Overdrawn.
851
21
Beaufoy
852
22You low cad! You ought to be
ducked in the ⸢D[horsepond!]horsepond!horsepond, you
23rotter!horsepond, you
23rotter!
D⸣ [horsepond!]horsepond!horsepond, you
23rotter!horsepond, you
23rotter!
(to the
853
court)
Why, look at
the man's private life! Leading a ⸢D[double]double
24 quadruple
24 quadruple
D⸣ [double]double
24 quadruple
24 quadruple
existence!
854
Street angel and house devil.∧Street angel and house devil.∧
Not fit to
25be mentioned in
mixed society!
⸢CNot fit to
25be mentioned in
mixed society!
C⸣
The
855archconspirator
of the age!
856
1
Bloom
857
2(to the court) And he,
a bachelor, how ...
858
3
First Watch
859
4The King versus Bloom.⸢C
859
4The King versus Bloom.C⸣
Call the woman Driscoll.
860
5
The Crier
861
6Mary Driscoll, scullerymaid!
862
7(Mary Driscoll, a slipshod servant
girl,
approaches. She has a
863
8 bucket on the crook of her arm
and a scouringbrush in her hand*.)
864
9
Second Watch
865
10Another! Are you of the
unfortunate class?
866
11
Mary Driscoll
867
12(indignantly) I'm not
a bad one. I bear a respectable ⸢5[character.]character.
13character and was
868four months in my last place.
13character and was
868four months in my last place.
5⸣ [character.]character.
13character and was
868four months in my last place.
13character and was
868four months in my last place.
I was in a situation, six
14 pounds a year and my
869 chances with Fridays
out and
I had to leave owing to
15 his
carryings on.
870
16
First Watch
871
17What do you tax him with?
872
18
Mary Driscoll
873
19He made a certain suggestion but
I thought more of myself as poor as I am.
874
20
Bloom
875
21(in housejacket of ripplecloth,
flannel trousers, heelless slippers,
22unshaven,
∧
22unshaven,
∧
876 his hair rumpled⧼)⧽): softly)
I treated you white.⸢CI treated you white.C⸣ I gave
1 you mementos, smart
877 emerald garters far above your station.
Incautiously I
2 took your part
when
878 you were accused of pilfering.
There's a medium in all
3 things.
Play cricket.
879
4
Mary Driscoll
880
5(excitedly) As ∧⧼Gawd⧽GawdGodGod
∧⧼Gawd⧽GawdGodGod
is looking down on me this night if ever I
6 laid a hand to
881 them
oylsters!
882
7
First Watch
883
8The offence complained of? Did something
happen?⸢6Did something
happen?6⸣
884
9
Mary Driscoll
885
10He surprised me in the rere of
the premises, Your honour, when the missus
886
11 was out shopping one morning
with a request for a safety pin. He held me
887
12 and I was discoloured in four
places as a result. And he interfered twict⸢CtwictC⸣
888
13 with my clothing.
889
14
Bloom
890
15She counterassaulted.
891
16
Mary Driscoll
892
17(scornfully) I had
more respect for the scouringbrush, so I had. I
893
18 remonstrated with him, Your lord, and
he remarked: keep it quiet.
894
19(General laughter*.)
895
20
George Fottrell
896
21(clerk of the crown and
peace, resonantly) Order in court! The accused
897
22 will now make a bogus⸢6bogus6⸣ statement.
898
23(Bloom, pleading not guilty and
holding a fullblown waterlily,
899
24 begins a long unintelligible speech. They would hear what
counsel
900
1 had to say in his stirring ⸢C[address.]address.
address to the grand jury.
address to the grand jury.
C⸣ [address.]address.
address to the grand jury.
address to the grand jury.
2 He was down
901 and out but, though branded as a black sheep, if he
3 might say so, he
902 meant to reform, to retrieve the memory of the⸢6memory of the6⸣
4 past in a purely
903sisterly way
⸢6in a purely
903sisterly way
6⸣ and return to nature as a purely
5 domestic animal. A
904sevenmonths'
child, he
had been carefully
6 brought up and
nurtured
905 by an aged bedridden⸢DbedriddenD⸣ parent. There
7
might have been lapses of an
906erring father⸢6of an
906erring father6⸣ but he wanted
to
8turn over a new leaf and⸢D
8turn over a new leaf andD⸣
now, when
907at long last in sight of the
9whipping post, to⸢6now, when
907at long last in sight of the
9whipping post, to6⸣ lead a
homely ⸢D[life,]life,life in the
908evening of his
10days,life in the
908evening of his
10days,
D⸣ [life,]life,life in the
908evening of his
10days,life in the
908evening of his
10days,
permeated by the⸢5the5⸣ affectionate ⸢5[surroundings.]surroundings.
11surroundings of
909the heaving bosom of the
family.
11surroundings of
909the heaving bosom of the
family.
5⸣ [surroundings.]surroundings.
11surroundings of
909the heaving bosom of the
family.
11surroundings of
909the heaving bosom of the
family.
⸢D[He]HeAn
12acclimatised Britisher,
he
An
12acclimatised Britisher,
he
D⸣ [He]HeAn
12acclimatised Britisher,
he
An
12acclimatised Britisher,
he
had
910 seen that ⸢D[evening]eveningsummer
13evesummer
13eve
D⸣ [evening]eveningsummer
13evesummer
13eve
from the footplate of
an engine cab of the
911Loop
line railway
14company⸢6from the footplate of
an engine cab of the
911Loop
line railway
14company6⸣
while the rain
refrained from falling
912glimpses, as it
15were,⸢5while the rain
refrained from falling
912glimpses, as it
15were,5⸣ through the
windows of loveful households in
913 Dublin
city
16 and urban district of⸢5of5⸣ scenes truly rural⸢Dtruly ruralD⸣ of happiness of
914
the
17 better land with
Dockrell's wallpaper at one and ninepence a
915
dozen,
18innocent Britishborn⸢6Britishborn6⸣ bairns lisping
prayers to the Sacred
916
19Infant,⸢D
18innocent Britishborn⸢6Britishborn6⸣ bairns lisping
prayers to the Sacred
916
19Infant,D⸣ youthful
scholars grappling with their pensums
or
∧⧼
20bashful virgins⧽
20bashful virginsmodel
917 young ladiesmodel
917 young ladies
∧⧼
20bashful virgins⧽
20bashful virginsmodel
917 young ladiesmodel
917 young ladies
playing on the ⸢6[piano]piano
21pianoforte
21pianoforte
6⸣ [piano]piano
21pianoforte
21pianoforte
or anon
all with fervour⸢D
∧⧼
20bashful virgins⧽
20bashful virginsmodel
917 young ladiesmodel
917 young ladies
∧⧼
20bashful virgins⧽
20bashful virginsmodel
917 young ladiesmodel
917 young ladies
playing on the ⸢6[piano]piano
21pianoforte
21pianoforte
6⸣ [piano]piano
21pianoforte
21pianoforte
or anon
all with fervourD⸣
918 reciting the family rosary
22 round the crackling Yulelog while in
the
919boreens and green lanes the
23 colleens with their swains strolled
what
920times the strains of the
24 organtoned melodeon ⸢6[metalbound ]metalbound
Britanniametalbound
Britanniametalbound
6⸣ [metalbound ]metalbound
Britanniametalbound
Britanniametalbound
921 with
25four acting stops and twelvefold
bellows,
⸢Dand twelvefold
bellows,
D⸣ a sacrifice, greatest
922
26 bargain ever ....
923
27
*⧼(⧽Renewed laughter. He mumbles incoherently.⸢DHe mumbles incoherently.D⸣ Reporters
28 complain
924 that they cannot hear*.)
925
29
Longhand and Shorthand
926
30(without looking up from
their notebooks)
⸢5
926
30(without looking up from
their notebooks)
5⸣ Loosen his boots.
927
1
Professor MacHugh
928
2(from the presstable, coughs
and calls)
Cough it up,
man. Get it out in bits.
929
3(The crossexamination proceeds re Bloom and the bucket. A large
930
4 bucket. Bloom himself. Bowel
trouble. In Beaver street. Gripe,
5yes.⸢6Gripe,
5yes.6⸣
931 Quite bad. A plasterer's bucket. By walking
stifflegged.
6Suffered
932untold misery.⸢C
6Suffered
932untold misery.C⸣ Deadly agony. About noon. Love
or
7 burgundy. Yes,
933 some spinach. Crucial moment. He did not
look in
8 the bucket.
934 Nobody. Rather a mess. Not completely. A
Titbits
9 back number.*⧼)⧽
935
10
*⧼(⧽Uproar and catcalls . Bloom
in a torn frockcoat stained with
936
11whitewash, dinged silk hat sideways on his head, a
strip of
937
12stickingplaster across his nose, talks inaudibly⸢5. Bloom
in a torn frockcoat stained with
936
11whitewash, dinged silk hat sideways on his head, a
strip of
937
12stickingplaster across his nose, talks inaudibly5⸣
*.)
938
13
J. J. O'Molloy
939
14(in barrister's grey wig and
stuffgown, speaking with a voice of pained
940
15 protest) This is no
place for indecent ⸢5[levity.]levity.levity at the expense of an
16erring
941mortal
disguised in liquor.levity at the expense of an
16erring
941mortal
disguised in liquor.
5⸣ [levity.]levity.levity at the expense of an
16erring
941mortal
disguised in liquor.levity at the expense of an
16erring
941mortal
disguised in liquor.
We are not in a beargarden nor at an
17Oxford rag⸢Dnor at an
17Oxford ragD⸣
942 nor is this a travesty of justice. My client
is an infant,⸢Dan infant,D⸣ a
18 poor foreign
943 immigrant who started scratch as a stowaway∧as a stowaway∧ and is
19now⸢Dwho started scratch as a stowaway∧as a stowaway∧ and is
19nowD⸣ trying to turn an
944 honest
penny. The trumped up⸢Ctrumped upC⸣ misdemeanour
20 was due to a
momentary
945 aberration of heredity, brought
on by
21 hallucination, such
familiarities as the
946alleged guilty
occurrence⸢Das the
946alleged guilty
occurrenceD⸣ being
22 quite
permitted in my client's native place,
947the land of the Pharaoh.
23
Prima
⸢5[
facie
]
facie
facie,
I put it to
you that∧I put it to
you that∧ there was no
948attempt at
24carnally
knowing.
facie,
I put it to
you that∧I put it to
you that∧ there was no
948attempt at
24carnally
knowing.
5⸣ [
facie
]
facie
facie,
I put it to
you that∧I put it to
you that∧ there was no
948attempt at
24carnally
knowing.
facie,
I put it to
you that∧I put it to
you that∧ there was no
948attempt at
24carnally
knowing.
⸢D
Prima
⸢5[
facie
]
facie
facie,
I put it to
you that∧I put it to
you that∧ there was no
948attempt at
24carnally
knowing.
facie,
I put it to
you that∧I put it to
you that∧ there was no
948attempt at
24carnally
knowing.
5⸣ [
facie
]
facie
facie,
I put it to
you that∧I put it to
you that∧ there was no
948attempt at
24carnally
knowing.
facie,
I put it to
you that∧I put it to
you that∧ there was no
948attempt at
24carnally
knowing.
D⸣ Intimacy did not occur and the offence
949
complained of
25by ⸢D[Driscoll]DriscollDriscoll, that her virtue was ⸢5[attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
5⸣ [attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
Driscoll, that her virtue was ⸢5[attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
5⸣ [attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
D⸣ [Driscoll]DriscollDriscoll, that her virtue was ⸢5[attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
5⸣ [attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
Driscoll, that her virtue was ⸢5[attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
5⸣ [attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
⸢C
25by ⸢D[Driscoll]DriscollDriscoll, that her virtue was ⸢5[attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
5⸣ [attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
Driscoll, that her virtue was ⸢5[attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
5⸣ [attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
D⸣ [Driscoll]DriscollDriscoll, that her virtue was ⸢5[attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
5⸣ [attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
Driscoll, that her virtue was ⸢5[attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
5⸣ [attempted,]attempted,solicited,solicited,
C⸣ was
26 not repeated. I
950would deal in especial with atavism.⸢5I
950would deal in especial with atavism.5⸣ There have
been cases
27 of shipwreck
951 and somnambulism in my client's family.
∧⧼His story is⧽His story isIf
28 the accused could
speak he
952 could a ⸢6[tail]tailtaletale
6⸣ [tail]tailtaletale
unfold –If
28 the accused could
speak he
952 could a ⸢6[tail]tailtaletale
6⸣ [tail]tailtaletale
unfold –
∧⧼His story is⧽His story isIf
28 the accused could
speak he
952 could a ⸢6[tail]tailtaletale
6⸣ [tail]tailtaletale
unfold –If
28 the accused could
speak he
952 could a ⸢6[tail]tailtaletale
6⸣ [tail]tailtaletale
unfold –
one of the
29strangest that have ever been narrated
953between the covers of a book.⸢5
∧⧼His story is⧽His story isIf
28 the accused could
speak he
952 could a ⸢6[tail]tailtaletale
6⸣ [tail]tailtaletale
unfold –If
28 the accused could
speak he
952 could a ⸢6[tail]tailtaletale
6⸣ [tail]tailtaletale
unfold –
∧⧼His story is⧽His story isIf
28 the accused could
speak he
952 could a ⸢6[tail]tailtaletale
6⸣ [tail]tailtaletale
unfold –If
28 the accused could
speak he
952 could a ⸢6[tail]tailtaletale
6⸣ [tail]tailtaletale
unfold –
one of the
29strangest that have ever been narrated
953between the covers of a book.5⸣
⸢(A)[
△
]
△
30He himself
30He himself
(A)⸣ [
△
]
△
30He himself
30He himself
, my lord,⸢5, my lord,5⸣
is a physical wreck from
954 cobbler's weak ⸢D[chest.]chest.
⸢5[chest and is about to become a mother.]chest and is about to become a mother.
31 chest.
31 chest.
5⸣ [chest and is about to become a mother.]chest and is about to become a mother.
31 chest.
31 chest.
⸢5[chest and is about to become a mother.]chest and is about to become a mother.
31 chest.
31 chest.
5⸣ [chest and is about to become a mother.]chest and is about to become a mother.
31 chest.
31 chest.
D⸣ [chest.]chest.
⸢5[chest and is about to become a mother.]chest and is about to become a mother.
31 chest.
31 chest.
5⸣ [chest and is about to become a mother.]chest and is about to become a mother.
31 chest.
31 chest.
⸢5[chest and is about to become a mother.]chest and is about to become a mother.
31 chest.
31 chest.
5⸣ [chest and is about to become a mother.]chest and is about to become a mother.
31 chest.
31 chest.
His submission is that he
32 is of Mongolian extraction
955 and
irresponsible for his actions. Not all there,
33 in fact.
956
1
Bloom
957
2(*B⧼b⧽arefoot, pigeonbreasted, in lascar's vest and trousers,
apologetic toes
958
3 turned in, opens his tiny
mole's eyes and looks about him dazedly, passing a
959
4 slow hand across his
forehead. Then he hitches his belt sailor fashion and
960
5 with a shrug of oriental
obeisance salutes the court, pointing one thumb
961
6 heavenward*.) Him makee velly muchee fine night. (*h⧼H⧽e begins to lilt
7
simply)
962
8
Li li poo lil chile
963
9
Blingee pigfoot evly night
964
10
Payee two
shilly ....
965
11(He is howled down*.)
966
12
J. J. O'Molloy
967
13(hotly to the
populace∧to the
populace∧) This is a lonehand fight. By Hades,⸢5By Hades,5⸣ I
will not
14 have
968 any client of mine gagged and badgered in this fashion
by a pack of
15
curs
969
and laughing
hyenas⸢5 and laughing
hyenas5⸣
∧by a pack of
15
curs
969
and laughing
hyenas⸢5 and laughing
hyenas5⸣
∧. The Mosaic code has superseded the law of
16 the
970jungle. I say it
and I say it ⸢6[emphatically]emphatically
emphatically, without
17 wishing for ∧⧼a⧽aoneone
∧⧼a⧽aoneone
moment to
971defeat the ends of
justice,
emphatically, without
17 wishing for ∧⧼a⧽aoneone
∧⧼a⧽aoneone
moment to
971defeat the ends of
justice,
6⸣ [emphatically]emphatically
emphatically, without
17 wishing for ∧⧼a⧽aoneone
∧⧼a⧽aoneone
moment to
971defeat the ends of
justice,
emphatically, without
17 wishing for ∧⧼a⧽aoneone
∧⧼a⧽aoneone
moment to
971defeat the ends of
justice,
⸢5[he]he
accused
accused
5⸣ [he]he
accused
accused
18 was not accessory before the act
and
972
[5 the
] the
⸢D[girl]girlprosecutrixprosecutrix
D⸣ [girl]girlprosecutrixprosecutrix
has not
19 been tampered
with.
⸢5[She]SheThe young personThe young person
5⸣ [She]SheThe young personThe young person
was treated by
973defendant
20as if she were his very∧very∧ own daughter. (Bloom takes J. J.
974 O'Molloy's
hand
21 and raises it to
his lips)
⸢D
⸢5[She]SheThe young personThe young person
5⸣ [She]SheThe young personThe young person
was treated by
973defendant
20as if she were his very∧very∧ own daughter. (Bloom takes J. J.
974 O'Molloy's
hand
21 and raises it to
his lips)
D⸣ I shall call rebutting evidence to
975
prove up to the
22 hilt that the
hidden hand is again at its old game. When in
976
doubt persecute
23 Bloom. My ⸢D[client]clientclient, an innately bashful man,client, an innately bashful man,
D⸣ [client]clientclient, an innately bashful man,client, an innately bashful man,
would be the
977 last
24 man in the world to do anything ungentlemanly ⧼or to⧽or to which injured
25modesty
978could object to or⸢5do anything ungentlemanly ⧼or to⧽or to which injured
25modesty
978could object to or5⸣ cast a stone at a girl who took
the wrong
26 turning when
979 some ⸢D[dastard]dastarddastard, responsible for her condition,dastard, responsible for her condition,
D⸣ [dastard]dastarddastard, responsible for her condition,dastard, responsible for her condition,
had
27 worked his own sweet
will
980 on her. He wants to go straight.
I regard him
28as the whitest man I know.⸢CI regard him
28as the whitest man I know.C⸣
981 He is down on his luck at present owing to
the
29 mortgaging of his
extensive
982property at Agendath ⸢D[Netaim,]Netaim,Netaim in
30farawayNetaim in
30faraway
D⸣ [Netaim,]Netaim,Netaim in
30farawayNetaim in
30faraway
Asia Minor, slides of which will
983now
be shown.
⸢C[He offers a
31penny in
the pound.]He offers a
31penny in
the pound.
(to Bloom) I
suggest that⸢DthatD⸣ you will
[Dnow]now do the
32handsome thing.
(to Bloom) I
suggest that⸢DthatD⸣ you will
[Dnow]now do the
32handsome thing.
C⸣ [He offers a
31penny in
the pound.]He offers a
31penny in
the pound.
(to Bloom) I
suggest that⸢DthatD⸣ you will
[Dnow]now do the
32handsome thing.
(to Bloom) I
suggest that⸢DthatD⸣ you will
[Dnow]now do the
32handsome thing.
∧
⸢C[He offers a
31penny in
the pound.]He offers a
31penny in
the pound.
(to Bloom) I
suggest that⸢DthatD⸣ you will
[Dnow]now do the
32handsome thing.
(to Bloom) I
suggest that⸢DthatD⸣ you will
[Dnow]now do the
32handsome thing.
C⸣ [He offers a
31penny in
the pound.]He offers a
31penny in
the pound.
(to Bloom) I
suggest that⸢DthatD⸣ you will
[Dnow]now do the
32handsome thing.
(to Bloom) I
suggest that⸢DthatD⸣ you will
[Dnow]now do the
32handsome thing.
∧
984
1
Bloom
985
2A penny in the pound.
986
3(The image of the lake of Kinnereth with
blurred cattle cropping in
987
4 silver haze is projected on the wall.
Moses Dlugacz, ⸢D[ferreteyed,]ferreteyed,
5ferreteyed
988albino,
5ferreteyed
988albino,
D⸣ [ferreteyed,]ferreteyed,
5ferreteyed
988albino,
5ferreteyed
988albino,
in blue dungarees, stands up in the gallery,
6 holding in each
989 hand an orange citron and a pork kidney*.)
990
7
Dlugacz
991
8(hoarsely)
Bleibtreustrasse, Berlin, W. 13.
992
9(J. J. O'Molloy steps on to a
low plinth and holds the lapel of his
993
10 coat with solemnity. His face
lengthens, grows pale and bearded,
994
11 with sunken eyes, the blotches
of phthisis and hectic cheekbones of
995
12 John F. Taylor. He applies his handkerchief to his mouth and
996
13 scrutinises the galloping tide
of rosepink blood*.
)
997
14
J. J. O'Molloy
998
15(almost voicelessly)
Excuse me. I
am suffering from a severe ⸢C[chill.]chill.chill,
16have
999recently come from a sickbed.chill,
16have
999recently come from a sickbed.
C⸣ [chill.]chill.chill,
16have
999recently come from a sickbed.chill,
16have
999recently come from a sickbed.
A few wellchosen words*.
(He
17 assumes the
1000 avine head,
foxy moustache and ⸢D[nasal]nasalproboscidalproboscidal
D⸣ [nasal]nasalproboscidalproboscidal
18
∧⧼utterance⧽utteranceeloquenceeloquence
∧⧼utterance⧽utteranceeloquenceeloquence
of Seymour
1001 Bushe*.) When the angel's book
19 comes to be opened if aught that
1002 the pensive bosom has inaugurated of
20soultransfigured and of
1003soultransfiguring deserves to live I say accord the
21 prisoner at the bar the
1004 sacred benefit of the doubt.
1005
22
(A paper
with something written on it is handed into court*.)
1006
23
Bloom
1007
24(in court dress)
⸢C
1007
24(in court dress)
C⸣ Can give best references. Messrs Callan, Coleman. Mr
1008
25 Wisdom Hely J. P. My old chief Joe Cuffe.⸢DMy old chief Joe Cuffe.D⸣ Mr V. B. Dillon, ex lord
26 mayor
1009 of Dublin. I have moved in the ⸢C[highest circles.]highest circles.charmed circle of
27the
highest .... Queens of
1010Dublin
society.
charmed circle of
27the
highest .... Queens of
1010Dublin
society.
C⸣ [highest circles.]highest circles.charmed circle of
27the
highest .... Queens of
1010Dublin
society.
charmed circle of
27the
highest .... Queens of
1010Dublin
society.
(carelessly) I was just
chatting
28 this afternoon at the
1011 viceregal lodge∧at the
1011 viceregal lodge∧ to my old ⸢D[friend]friend
⸢6[pal,]pal,pals,pals,
6⸣ [pal,]pal,pals,pals,
⸢6[pal,]pal,pals,pals,
6⸣ [pal,]pal,pals,pals,
D⸣ [friend]friend
⸢6[pal,]pal,pals,pals,
6⸣ [pal,]pal,pals,pals,
⸢6[pal,]pal,pals,pals,
6⸣ [pal,]pal,pals,pals,
⸢Cmy old ⸢D[friend]friend
⸢6[pal,]pal,pals,pals,
6⸣ [pal,]pal,pals,pals,
⸢6[pal,]pal,pals,pals,
6⸣ [pal,]pal,pals,pals,
D⸣ [friend]friend
⸢6[pal,]pal,pals,pals,
6⸣ [pal,]pal,pals,pals,
⸢6[pal,]pal,pals,pals,
6⸣ [pal,]pal,pals,pals,
C⸣
1 sir Robert and lady Ball,
astronomer ⸢C[royal ....]royal ....royal,
1012at the levee. Sir
2Bob, I said ......royal,
1012at the levee. Sir
2Bob, I said ......
C⸣ [royal ....]royal ....royal,
1012at the levee. Sir
2Bob, I said ......royal,
1012at the levee. Sir
2Bob, I said ......
1013
3
Mrs ∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
Yelverton BarryYelverton Barry
∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
Yelverton BarryYelverton Barry
1014
4(in lowcorsaged opal balldress
and elbowlength ivory gloves, wearing a
1015
5 sabletrimmed brickquilted
dolman, a comb of brilliants and panache of
1016
6osprey⸢Dand panache of
1016
6ospreyD⸣ in her
hair) Arrest him, constable. He wrote me an anonymous
1017
7 letter in prentice backhand when
my husband was ⸢5[on the Leinster]on the Leinsterin the
8North Riding of
1018Tipperary on the Munsterin the
8North Riding of
1018Tipperary on the Munster
5⸣ [on the Leinster]on the Leinsterin the
8North Riding of
1018Tipperary on the Munsterin the
8North Riding of
1018Tipperary on the Munster
circuit, signed James
9
Lovebirch. He said that he
1019 had seen from the
gods my peerless globes as I
10 sat
in a box of the Theatre
1020
Royal at a command∧command∧ performance of La
11 Cigale. I
deeply inflamed him, he
1021 said. He made
improper overtures to me
12 to
misconduct myself at half past
1022
four p.m. on the following Thursday,
13 Dunsink time. He offered to send me
1023 through the post a work of fiction
by
14 Monsieur Paul de Kock,
entitled The
1024 Girl with the
Three Pairs of Stays.
1025
15
Mrs Bellingham
1026
16(in cap and seal
coney⸢6coney6⸣
mantle, wrapped up to the nose,
steps out of her
1027
17 brougham and scans through
tortoiseshell quizzing‐glasses which she takes
1028
18 from inside her huge opossum
muff)
Also to me.∧Also to me.∧ Yes, I believe it is the
19 same
1029 objectionable
person. Because he closed my carriage door outside sir
1030
20 Thornley Stoker's one sleety day
during the cold snap of February∧February∧
1031
⸢5[ninetyfive]ninetyfive
21 ninetythree
21 ninetythree
5⸣ [ninetyfive]ninetyfive
21 ninetythree
21 ninetythree
when even the grid of the wastepipe and the
22 ballstop in my bath
1032 cistern were frozen. Subsequently he
enclosed a bloom
23 of edelweiss
culled
1033 on the heights, as he said, in my
honour. I had it
24 examined by a
botanical
1034 expert and elicited the
information that it was a
25 blossom
of the homegrown
1035 potato plant purloined from
a forcingcase of the
26 model
farm.
1036
27
Mrs ∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
Yelverton BarryYelverton Barry
∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
Yelverton BarryYelverton Barry
1037
28Shame on him!
1038
29(A crowd of sluts and ragamuffins
surges forward*.)
1039
1
The Sluts and
Ragamuffins
1040
2(screaming) Stop
thief! Hurrah there, Bluebeard! Three cheers for Ikey
1041
3 Mo!
1042
4
Second Watch
1043
5(produces handcuffs)
Here are the darbies.
1044
6
Mrs Bellingham
1045
7He addressed me in several handwritings with fulsome compliments as a
1046
8 Venus in furs and alleged
profound pity for my frostbound coachman
1047
9Palmer while in the same breath he expressed himself as envious of his
1048
10 earflaps and fleecy
sheepskins and of his fortunate proximity to my ⸢5[person.]person.
11person,
1049 when standing behind my chair wearing my livery
and
12the ⸢6[arms]armsarmorial
1050bearingsarmorial
1050bearings
6⸣ [arms]armsarmorial
1050bearingsarmorial
1050bearings
of the Bellingham escutcheon garnished
13sable, a buck's head
1051couped or.
11person,
1049 when standing behind my chair wearing my livery
and
12the ⸢6[arms]armsarmorial
1050bearingsarmorial
1050bearings
6⸣ [arms]armsarmorial
1050bearingsarmorial
1050bearings
of the Bellingham escutcheon garnished
13sable, a buck's head
1051couped or.
5⸣ [person.]person.
11person,
1049 when standing behind my chair wearing my livery
and
12the ⸢6[arms]armsarmorial
1050bearingsarmorial
1050bearings
6⸣ [arms]armsarmorial
1050bearingsarmorial
1050bearings
of the Bellingham escutcheon garnished
13sable, a buck's head
1051couped or.
11person,
1049 when standing behind my chair wearing my livery
and
12the ⸢6[arms]armsarmorial
1050bearingsarmorial
1050bearings
6⸣ [arms]armsarmorial
1050bearingsarmorial
1050bearings
of the Bellingham escutcheon garnished
13sable, a buck's head
1051couped or.
He lauded almost extravagantly my nether
14 extremities, my
1052
swelling calves in silk hose drawn up to the limit,
and
15 eulogised glowingly
1053 my other hidden treasures in priceless lace
which, he
16 said, he could
conjure
1054 up. He urged me (stating that he felt it his mission
17 in life to urge me)
∧(stating that he felt it his mission
17 in life to urge me)
∧
to
1055 defile the
marriage bed, to commit adultery at the
18 earliest possible
1056
opportunity.
1057
19
The Honourable Mrs ⸢5[Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
5⸣ [Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
1058
20(in amazon costume, hard hat,
jackboots cockspurred, vermilion
21 waistcoat,
1059 fawn musketeer ⧼ gloves⧽ gloves gauntlets with braided
drums, long
22 train held up
and
1060 hunting crop with which she
strikes her welt constantly)
23 Also me. Because
1061 he saw me on the polo ground of the Phoenix park at
the
24 match All Ireland
1062 versus the Rest of Ireland. My eyes, I
know, shone
25 divinely as I
watched
1063 Captain Slogger Dennehy of the
Inniskillings win the
26 final ⸢C[chukka.]chukka.
chukkar on his
1064darling cob Centaur.
chukkar on his
1064darling cob Centaur.
C⸣ [chukka.]chukka.
chukkar on his
1064darling cob Centaur.
chukkar on his
1064darling cob Centaur.
This plebeian
27
Don Juan∧Don Juan∧ observed me from behind a
1065 hackney car and sent me in double
28 envelopes an obscene photograph, such
1066as are sold after dark ⧼in⧽in on Paris
29boulevards,⸢Dsuch
1066as are sold after dark ⧼in⧽in on Paris
29boulevards,D⸣
insulting to any lady. I have it
1067 still. It
represents a partially
30 nude
señorita, frail and lovely (his wife, as he
1068 solemnly assured ⸢C[me)]me)me,
1taken by him from nature),
me,
1taken by him from nature),
C⸣ [me)]me)me,
1taken by him from nature),
me,
1taken by him from nature),
practising illicit
1069 intercourse with a muscular
2 torero, evidently a blackguard. He urged me to
1070 do likewise, to misbehave,
3 to sin with officers of the garrison. He
implored
1071 me to soil his
letter in an
4unspeakable
manner, to⸢Dsoil his
letter in an
4unspeakable
manner, toD⸣ chastise him as he richly
1072 deserves, to bestride and
5 ride
him, to give him a most vicious
1073
horsewhipping.
1074
6
Mrs Bellingham
1075
7Me too.
1076
8
Mrs ∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
Yelverton BarryYelverton Barry
∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
Yelverton BarryYelverton Barry
1077
9Me too.
1078
10(Several highly
respectable Dublin ladies hold up improper letters
1079
11received from Bloom*.)
1080
12
The Honourable Mrs ⸢5[Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
5⸣ [Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
1081
13(stamps her jingling spurs in
a⸢DaD⸣ sudden paroxysm of⸢Dparoxysm ofD⸣
fury) I will, by
14 the
1082 God
above me. I'll scourge the pigeonlivered ⸢D[cur.]cur.cur as long as I can
15stand over
1083him.cur as long as I can
15stand over
1083him.
D⸣ [cur.]cur.cur as long as I can
15stand over
1083him.cur as long as I can
15stand over
1083him.
I'll flay him alive.
1084
16
Bloom
1085
17(his eyes closing, quails
expectantly) Here? (he
squirms) Again!
(he
18 pants
1086
cringing∧cringing∧) I love the
danger.⸢5
(he
18 pants
1086
cringing∧cringing∧) I love the
danger.5⸣
1087
19
The Honourable Mrs ⸢5[Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
5⸣ [Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
1088
20Very much so! I'll make it hot
for you. I'll make you dance Jack Latten for
1089
21 that.
1090
22
Mrs Bellingham
1091
23Tan his breech well, the upstart!
Write the stars and
stripes on it!⸢6Write the stars and
stripes on it!6⸣
1092
1
Mrs ∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
Yelverton Barry
Yelverton Barry
∧⧼
⌀
⧽
⌀
Yelverton Barry
Yelverton Barry
1093
2Disgraceful! There's no
excuse for him! A married man!⸢CThere's no
excuse for him! A married man!C⸣
1094
3
Bloom
1095
4All these people. I meant only the
spanking idea. A warm tingling glow
1096
5 without effusion. Refined ⸢6[birching.]birching.birching to stimulate the
6circulation.birching to stimulate the
6circulation.
6⸣ [birching.]birching.birching to stimulate the
6circulation.birching to stimulate the
6circulation.
⸢CRefined ⸢6[birching.]birching.birching to stimulate the
6circulation.birching to stimulate the
6circulation.
6⸣ [birching.]birching.birching to stimulate the
6circulation.birching to stimulate the
6circulation.
C⸣
1097
7
The Honourable Mrs ⸢5[Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
5⸣ [Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
1098
8(laughs derisively) O,
did you, my fine fellow? Well, by the living God,⸢Cby the living God,C⸣
1099
9 you'll get the surprise of your
life now, believe me, the most unmerciful
1100
10 hiding a man ever bargained for.
You have lashed the dormant tigress in my
1101
11 nature into fury.
1101a
12
Mrs Yelverton Berry
1101b
13Shame!
1102
14
Mrs Bellingham
1103
15(shakes her muff and
quizzing‐glasses vindictively) Make him ⸢6[smart.]smart.
16smart,
1104Hanna dear.
16smart,
1104Hanna dear.
6⸣ [smart.]smart.
16smart,
1104Hanna dear.
16smart,
1104Hanna dear.
Give him ginger.
⸢CGive him ginger.
C⸣ Thrash the mongrel within an
17 inch of his
1105 life. The cat‐o'‐nine‐tails.
⸢CThe cat‐o'‐nine‐tails.
C⸣
Geld him. Vivisect him.
1106
18
Bloom
1107
19(shuddering, shrinking, joins
his hands⧼)⧽):
with hangdog mien)
O cold!
20O
1108shivery!⸢DO cold!
20O
1108shivery!D⸣ It was your ambrosial beauty. Forget,
forgive. Kismet. Let me
21 off
1109 this once*.
(he offers the other cheek) *⧼.⧽
1110
22
Mrs Yelverton Barry
1111
23
(severely)
⸢6
(severely)
6⸣ Don't do so on any account, Mrs ⧼Tallb⧽Tallb Talboys! He should
24be
1112soundly
trounced!
1113
1
The Honourable Mrs ⸢5[Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
5⸣ [Paget Butler]Paget ButlerMervyn TalboysMervyn Talboys
1114
2(unbuttoning her gauntlet
violently⸢6violently6⸣ )
⸢D
1114
2(unbuttoning her gauntlet
violently⸢6violently6⸣ )
D⸣ I'll do no such thing.
⸢C[Pigdog,
3to]Pigdog,
3to
Pigdog and
1115always was ever since he was
pupped! To
Pigdog and
1115always was ever since he was
pupped! To
C⸣ [Pigdog,
3to]Pigdog,
3to
Pigdog and
1115always was ever since he was
pupped! To
Pigdog and
1115always was ever since he was
pupped! To
dare address
4 me! I'll
flog him
1116 black and blue in the public
streets. I'll dig my spurs in him
5
up to the rowel.
1117 He is a wellknown cuckold*.
(she swishes her huntingcrop
6 savagely in the
1118 air) Take down his trousers without loss of
time. Come
7here,
sir!⸢DCome
7here,
sir!D⸣ Quick!
1119
Ready?⸢DReady?D⸣
1120
8
Bloom
1121
9(trembling, beginning to
obey) The weather ⸢5[is]ishas beenhas been
5⸣ [is]ishas beenhas been
so warm.
1122
10(Davy Stephens, ringletted,
passes with a bevy of barefoot
1123
11newsboys*.)
1124
12
Davy Stephens
1125
13
Messenger of the Sacred Heart
and⸢5
Messenger of the Sacred Heart
and5⸣
Evening Telegraph
with Saint
14Patrick's
1126Day supplement.
Containing the new addresses of all the
15cuckolds in
1127Dublin.
1128
16(The very reverend Canon O'Hanlon
in cloth of gold cope elevates
1129
17 and exposes a marble timepiece.
Before him Father Conroy and the
1130
18 reverend John Hughes S. J.
bend low.*)
1131
19
The Timepiece
1132
20(unportalling)
1133
21
Cuckoo.
1134
22
Cuckoo.
1135
23
Cuckoo.
1136
24(The brass quoits of a bed are
heard to jingle*.)
1137
1
The Quoits
1138
2Jigjag. Jigajiga. Jigjag.
1139
3(*A⧼a⧽ panel of fog rolls back rapidly, revealing rapidly in the
4jurybox
1140the faces of Martin Cunningham, foreman,
silkhatted,
5 Jack Power,
1141 Simon Dedalus, Tom Kernan, Ned Lambert,
John
6 Henry Menton,
1142 Myles Crawford, Lenehan, Paddy Leonard,
Nosey
7 Flynn, M‘Coy
1143 and the featureless face of a Nameless
One.)
1144
8
The Nameless One
1145
9Bareback riding. Weight for age.
Gob, he organised her.
1146
10
The Jurors
1147
11(all their heads turned to
his voice) Really?
1148
12
The Nameless One
1149
13(snarls) Arse over
tip. Hundred shillings to five.
1150
14
The Jurors
1151
15(all their heads
⸢C[bowed
]bowed
lowered lowered
C⸣ [bowed
]bowed
lowered lowered
in assent) Most of us thought as
16 much.
1152
17
First Watch
1153
18He is a marked man. Another
girl's plait cut. Wanted: Jack the Ripper. A
1154
19 thousand pounds reward.
1155
20
Second Watch
1156
21(awed, whispers) And
in black. A mormon. Anarchist.
1157
1
The Crier
1158
2(loudly) Whereas
Leopold Bloom of no fixed abode is a wellknown
1159
3 dynamitard, forger, bigamist,
bawd and cuckold and a public nuisance to
1160
4 the citizens of Dublin and
whereas at this commission of assizes the most
1161
5 honourable ....
1162
6(His Honour, sir Frederick
Falkiner, recorder of Dublin, in
7
judicial
1163 garb of grey stone rises from
the bench, stonebearded. He
8 bears
in
1164 his arms an umbrella sceptre. From
his forehead arise
9 starkly the
1165 Mosaic ramshorns*.)
1166
10
The Recorder
1167
11I will put an end to this white
slave ⸢D[traffic.]traffic.traffic and rid Dublin of this
12odious∧
12odious∧
1168pest.traffic and rid Dublin of this
12odious∧
12odious∧
1168pest.
D⸣ [traffic.]traffic.traffic and rid Dublin of this
12odious∧
12odious∧
1168pest.traffic and rid Dublin of this
12odious∧
12odious∧
1168pest.
Scandalous!
(he dons the black cap)
⸢D
(he dons the black cap)
D⸣ Let him be ⸢C[taken]taken
13
taken, Mr Subsheriff,
13
taken, Mr Subsheriff,
C⸣ [taken]taken
13
taken, Mr Subsheriff,
13
taken, Mr Subsheriff,
1169 from the dock where he now stands and
14detained in custody in
Mountjoy
1170 prison during His Majesty's
pleasure and
15there be hanged by
the neck until
1171 he is dead and therein fail
not at your ⸢6[peril.]peril.
16peril or may the Lord
have mercy on
1172your soul.
16peril or may the Lord
have mercy on
1172your soul.
6⸣ [peril.]peril.
16peril or may the Lord
have mercy on
1172your soul.
16peril or may the Lord
have mercy on
1172your soul.
Remove him.⸢DRemove him.D⸣
1173
17
(A black
skullcap descends upon his head.
*⧼(⧽The subsheriff
18Long
1174John Fanning ⸢D[appears holding]appears holdingappears, smokingappears, smoking
D⸣ [appears holding]appears holdingappears, smokingappears, smoking
a
19pungent Henry
Clay.⸢C
*⧼(⧽The subsheriff
18Long
1174John Fanning ⸢D[appears holding]appears holdingappears, smokingappears, smoking
D⸣ [appears holding]appears holdingappears, smokingappears, smoking
a
19pungent Henry
Clay.C⸣ )
1175
20
Long John Fanning
1176
21(scowls and calls with rich
rolling utterance) Who'll hang Judas
22Iscariot?
|C
|
1177
23 *(H. Rumbold, master barber, in a
bloodcoloured jerkin and
1178
24 tanner's apron, a rope coiled
over his shoulder, mounts the block.
25 A
1179 life preserver and a
nailstudded bludgeon are stuck in his belt. He
1180
26 rubs grimly his grappling hands,
knobbed with knuckledusters*.)
1181
27
Rumbold
1182
28(to the recorder with
sinister familiarity) Hanging Harry, your Majesty,
1183
29 the Mersey terror. Five guineas
a jugular. Neck or nothing.⸢CNeck or nothing.C⸣
1184
30(The bells of George's church
toll slowly, loud dark iron*.)
1185
1
The Bells
1186
2Heigho! Heigho!
1187
3
Bloom
1188
4(desperately) Wait.
Stop. Gulls. Good heart. I saw. Innocence. Girl in the
1189
5 monkeyhouse. Zoo. Lewd chimpanzee.
(breathlessly) Pelvic basin.
Her
1190
6artless ⸢6[blush. Unmanned]blush. Unmannedblush unmannedblush unmanned
6⸣ [blush. Unmanned]blush. Unmannedblush unmannedblush unmanned
me. (overcome with
7 emotion) I left the precincts.
1191
(he turns to a figure in the
crowd,
8
appealing) Hynes, ∧⧼you⧽youmay I speak to you?
1192 Youmay I speak to you?
1192 You
∧⧼you⧽youmay I speak to you?
1192 Youmay I speak to you?
1192 You
know me. That three
9shillings you can keep. If you want a
little∧a
little∧
1193more .....⸢D
(he turns to a figure in the
crowd,
8
appealing) Hynes, ∧⧼you⧽youmay I speak to you?
1192 Youmay I speak to you?
1192 You
∧⧼you⧽youmay I speak to you?
1192 Youmay I speak to you?
1192 You
know me. That three
9shillings you can keep. If you want a
little∧a
little∧
1193more .....D⸣
1194
10
Hynes
1195
11(coldly) You are a
perfect stranger.
1196
12
Second Watch
1197
13(points to the
corner) The bomb is here.
1198
14
First Watch
1199
15Infernal machine with a time
fuse.
1200
16
Bloom
1201
17No, no. Pig's feet. I was at a
funeral.
1202
18
First Watch
1203
19(draws his truncheon)
Liar!
1204
20(The ⸢5[dog]dogbeaglebeagle
5⸣ [dog]dogbeaglebeagle
lifts his
snout, showing the grey scorbutic face
21 of
1205 Paddy Dignam. He has
gnawed all. He exhales a putrid
22carcasefed
1206breath.⸢DHe exhales a putrid
22carcasefed
1206breath.D⸣
He grows to human size and shape. His ⸢5[retriever]retriever
23 dachshund
23 dachshund
5⸣ [retriever]retriever
23 dachshund
23 dachshund
coat
1207 becomes a brown mortuary
habit. His
24 green eye flashes
bloodshot.
1208 Half of one ear, all the nose
and both
25 thumbs are ghouleaten*.)
1209
1
Paddy Dignam
1210
2(in a hollow voice) It
is true. It
was my funeral. Doctor Finucane
1211
3 pronounced life extinct when I
succumbed to the disease from natural
1212
4 causes.
1213
5(He lifts his mutilated ashen face
moonwards and bays
1214
6 lugubriously*.)
1215
7
Bloom
1216
8(in triumph) You
hear?
1217
9
Paddy Dignam
1218
10Bloom, I am Paddy Dignam's
spirit.
List, list, O list!
1219
11
Bloom
1220
12The voice is the voice of
Esau.
1221
⧼
13
Fir⧽
13
Fir Second
Watch
1222
14(blesses himself) How
is that possible?
1223
15
First Watch
1224
16It is not in the penny
catechism.
1225
17
Paddy Dignam
1226
18By metempsychosis. Spooks.
1227
19
A Voice
1228
20O rocks.
1229
1
Paddy Dignam
1230
2(earnestly) Once I was
in the employ of Mr J. H. Menton, solicitor,
1231
3 commissioner for oaths and
affidavits, of 27 Bachelor's Walk. Now I am
1232
4 defunct, the wall of the heart
hypertrophied. Hard lines. The poor wife was
1233
5 awfully cut up. How is she
bearing it? Keep her off that bottle of sherry*.
1234
6
(⧼sh⧽sh he looks round him) A
lamp. I must satisfy an animal need. That
1235
7 buttermilk didn't agree with me. *⧼)⧽
1236
8(The portly figure of John
O'Connell, caretaker, stands forth,
1237
9 holding a bunch of keys tied with
crape. Beside him stands Father
1238
10 Coffey, chaplain, toadbellied, wrynecked, in a surplice and
1239
11 bandanna nightcap, holding
sleepily a staff of twisted poppies.)
1240
12
Father Coffey
1241
13(yawns, then chants⧼.⧽. with a hoarse croak)
Namine. Jacobs. Vobiscuits.
1242
14 Amen.
1243
15
John O'Connell
1244
16(foghorns stormily through
his megaphone) Dignam, Patrick T, deceased.
1245
17
Paddy Dignam
1246
18(
with>with< pricked up ears,∧
with>with< pricked up ears,∧
winces) Overtones.
(he wriggles forward
19 and>wriggles forward
19 and<
1247 places an ear to the
ground) My master's voice!∧
(he wriggles forward
19 and>wriggles forward
19 and<
1247 places an ear to the
ground) My master's voice!∧
1248
20
John O'Connell
1249
21Burial docket letter number
U. P. eightyfive thousand. Field seventeen.
1250
22 House of Keys.
Plot, one
hundred and one.
1251
23(Paddy Dignam listens with
visible effort, thinking, his tail
1252
24 stiffpointed, his ears cocked*.)
1253
1
Paddy Dignam
1254
2Pray for the repose of his
soul.
1255
3(He worms down through a coalhole,
his brown habit trailing its
1256
4 tether over rattling pebbles.
After him toddles an obese grandfather
1257
5 rat on fungus turtle paws under a
grey carapace⧼)⧽). Dignam's
voice,
1258
6 muffled, is heard baying under
ground: Dignam's dead and gone
1259
7 below. Tom Rochford,
⧼robinredbreast,⧽robinredbreast,
robinredbreasted, in cap
8 and
breeches,
1260 jumps from his twocolumned machine*.
*)
1261
9
Tom Rochford
1262
10(a hand to his breastbone,
bows) Reuben J. A florin I find him*.
(he fixes
1263
11 the manhole with a resolute
stare) My turn now on. Follow me up to
1264
12 Carlow.
1265
13(He executes a daredevil salmon
leap in the air and is engulfed in
1266
14 the coalhole. Two discs on the
columns wobble, eyes of nought. All
1267
15 recedes. Bloom ∧⧼ goes⧽ goesplodgesplodges
∧⧼ goes⧽ goesplodgesplodges
forward again
through the
16 sump . Kisses
1268 chirp
amid the rifts of fog>. Kisses
1268 chirp
amid the rifts of fog<
∧through the
16 sump . Kisses
1268 chirp
amid the rifts of fog>. Kisses
1268 chirp
amid the rifts of fog<
∧. A piano sounds. He
17 stands before a
1269 lighted house, listening. The kisses, winging
from
18 their bowers fly
1270 about him, twittering, warbling, cooing*.)
1271
19
The Kisses
1272
20(warbling) Leo!
(twittering) Icky licky
micky sticky for Leo! (cooing)
1273
21 Coo coocoo! Yummyyum,
Womwom! (warbling) Big comebig!
Pirouette!
1274
22Leopopold!
(twittering) Leeolee! (warbling) O Leo!
1275
23(They rustle, flutter upon his
garments, alight, bright giddy flecks,
1276
24 silvery sequins*.)
1277
25
Bloom
1278
26A man's touch. Sad music. Church
music. Perhaps here.
1279
27(Zoe Higgins, a young whore in a
sapphire slip, closed with three
1280
28 bronze buckles, a slim
⧼>velvet⧽velvet black velvet>velvet< fillet round her
29throat,
∧a slim
⧼>velvet⧽velvet black velvet>velvet< fillet round her
29throat,
∧ nods,
1281 trips down the steps and
accosts him.)
1282
1
Zoe
1283
2Are you looking for someone? He's
inside with his friend.
1284
3
Bloom
1285
4Is this Mrs Mack's?
1286
5
Zoe
1287
6No, eightyone. Mrs Cohen's. You
might go farther and fare worse. Mother
1288
7 Slipperslapper. (familiarly) She's on the job herself
tonight with ∧⧼her⧽her
8the
8the
∧⧼her⧽her
8the
8the
vet
∧⧼working⧽working
her
1289tipster>her
1289tipster<
that gives her all the winners
and pays for
9 her son in
Oxford.
1290Working
her
1289tipster>her
1289tipster<
that gives her all the winners
and pays for
9 her son in
Oxford.
1290Working
∧⧼working⧽working
her
1289tipster>her
1289tipster<
that gives her all the winners
and pays for
9 her son in
Oxford.
1290Working
her
1289tipster>her
1289tipster<
that gives her all the winners
and pays for
9 her son in
Oxford.
1290Working
overtime but her luck's turned
today∧but her luck's turned
today∧.
10
(suspiciously) You're not
1291 his father, are you?
1292
11
Bloom
1293
12Not I!
1294
13
Zoe
1295
14You both in black. ⸢6[Any]AnyHas little mousey anyHas little mousey any
6⸣ [Any]AnyHas little mousey anyHas little mousey any
tickles tonight?
1296
15(His skin, alert, feels her
fingertips approach. A hand glides over
1297
his
16 left thigh*.
)
1298
17
Zoe
1299
18How's the nuts?
1300
19
Bloom
∧⧼
1301
20Other⧽
1301
20OtherOffOff
∧⧼
1301
20Other⧽
1301
20OtherOffOff
side. Curiously they are on the right.
>⧼One heavier⧽One heavier
21Heavier
21Heavier
<⧼One heavier⧽One heavier
21Heavier
21Heavier
, I suppose.
∧
>⧼One heavier⧽One heavier
21Heavier
21Heavier
<⧼One heavier⧽One heavier
21Heavier
21Heavier
, I suppose.
∧ One in a
1302 million my tailor, Mesias,
says.
1303
22
Zoe
1304
23(in sudden alarm)
You've a hard chancre.
1305
1
Bloom
1306
2Not likely.
1307
3
Zoe
1308
4I feel it.
1309
5(Her hand slides into his left
trouser pocket and brings out a hard
1310
6 black shrivelled potato. She
regards it and Bloom with dumb moist
1311
7 lips*.)
1312
8
Bloom
1313
9A talisman. Heirloom.
1314
10
Zoe
⸢D[May I?]May I?
1315
11 For Zoe?
1315
11 For Zoe?
D⸣ [May I?]May I?
1315