"urnlh' and thoroughly
acimi\ating
it into the book.
Hart-Clive-1962-Structure-and-Motif-in-Finnegans-Wake
R ,) is thus clearly cstablWted.
This verbal cd>o further j.
.
.
.
tifiea Joyce'.
idcntifu:ation of the twin historians-wh-o might otherwise seem to be no more than ~i"" onlooken--with the eternal combatants.
Th.
continuity of the female element, the fiowcn, is expresstd through a neat counterpoint ofform and content: even in the central phNlC!
l of the lenience, whert: the transitory nature of the rough male
Cily is under diKusoion, the rhythm is fluent and gt:ntlc. Joyce was essentially an indoor man, a city dweller. All his books before FUuwXPS Wah arc urban. Nature in the Words. - worthian scnae Itttnl to ha"" meant little to him, and althou. gh in Fi_XIlN WIIk. river and mountain, flower and tru are for the fin! time used LS major recurrent sym'oob, they arc little more than IIyliled lc<lIU which rarely develop into scruuow, living ima p . In A f''''I,~it til<: rural selting of Clollgowea Wood
,8,
? Two Map Motift
College iI bMeiy mentiotled and fuUilb no importanl funaion at it might have done in, say, a LaWTen. :. . , while the more rt:antly published pagel from StLpItnl Hm,' duling with rural Mullingar, show howout of touo:hJoyce fdl wht;n he anempted to write no. tumlistitally about events in oetting. ol1tside his no. tive city. The biographiea ha. ve little to . ay about holiday. 'pmt away from city life, and the Lett<:n oontai. . ""1')' linie III(11tionofthenatu",,1world (UUP! ,ofCOUIlC,forthefrequenl allu! ions to the Lifl'cy, which funned an essential part ofJOY,:,,', urhan Dublin). Mr. Frank Budgen insists that Joyce detested Rowen, and indeed even the graceful periwinkle, hy. . cpuh and and daisy ofQuinel'? . . ,ntenCe aTe prized more for the abltrac. tiens they embody Ihan fur their . . ,nsUOus qua! 'ti. . . Soon after J O). . :o: begins to rework Ihe ICnlenee, he tra. nsfu. . . . . the IIowers into a giggling group of \C'oo-d schoolgirls, and then into a vancty of other rapidly mutating symbot. . . Thi. is DOl 10 say tho. t lhe book W(luld be beller otherwise. In tOO many pJaceo it is ~lrcady dangerously MIT to a . . ,nomonalily which any softening ofJoyee's hard, stylised approach 10 natu",\ objects could only tend to exaggerate.
The Quinet molif is intimately bound up ". . ilh lhe 'ehange-of-oes:' theme, the ' MUTUOMORPHOMlffAT ION' (~8t. RI), at I shall pl'C'endy demortst. . . . te. }"irst, however, a few oornmentl . OOm J oyce'. numerology . re needed. All the numbers up 10 1ICVftI, and a few beyond that, are usociated with major ch. . . . . elers, 01" gTOUps of characlo;n. The following
arc lhe IIlOiIt important identification"
o Anna, ':\10lher 7. ero'; a female I)'IIlOOI
, Ean. ;ckn, the ilhyphaUic falh n
2 holde and her 'Iooking-glan ' girl; the pair of tempting
giT" in the Park; ! he wulterw<lmc:n. (All of tI>= pain In: of ooune equivalent,)
3 the English soldien who apprehend Earwiclt. er in lhe Phoenix Park
4 lite Old Androgyrles
,M. ~l>pla". ,. (<d. ),~}_}'IJ'<MlJuII-v,__. . . . . . . t:'. &rboo>cIate,
lit. , 'm, 1'1'. S-\! .
,"
? Two Mqjor Moufs
5 the Four, with their AS>i
6 the twdvc CUSI<>mers oft~n seem 10 b. made up of six
men, each playing two pam (e. g. , 'a choir of the
O'Daley O'OoyJes dcmblesixing the chorw', ? I. IS) 1 the 'Rainbow-girls', allied to the 'Q'
1(1 the Father and MUlherin union (. . . 308, and SK 16~--1) IQ the C" . tome. . .
Q8 the 'February-girls'----an ""panded fOrm oflhe '7'. (The algebraic. . . J 'urn of 7 _ 78. )
29 holde, the leap-year_girl
40 always associued with Anna; J'O"'ibly her age at the
naturalistic levd
'" Anna', thrcc children multiplied by a lrid: of notation;
. 0. 1110 the kabbalulic total of 'A- L -P' (A = I,L ~ 30, P = &>> '
These are the primary identification. hut l oye<: tiks the idea of cosmic reciprocity and hence whenever possibk he balanr. . . II. numerical group of One sex with an identical group of the opposite ,ex, so creating an anal<>gy with the WUc<:pl of 'anti_ particles' in modem physics. ' Thu. Ihe female duo i> r<:fleeted in the Shem. Shaun p"rtncr-ship, while lh~ thre-e soldien-who ,,,,,m to be Shem, Shaun, and a fonn of their fat~r, HCE----=e
~Ianced by a female trinity mru:\e up of h olde, ~r mitTOr_ imag<', and 't~ir' mother, Anna Livia. In the Quinet senten"" the female duo and tbe male trio art: made to app"aI in their inverted forffij, but each of these group' pla~ a part which ;" a C<lmbination of the a. ctivitics of the 'primary' '2' and the 'primary' '3'- the tempting of Ibe sinner and hi. oubsequcut apptthemion, Thusthe belligerent l'liny and Colnmdla, wbo,e rlItherfeminine-sounding narru;o "",m to have . ugg<:<ted to J oyce that they were inverts. ,' YJlicit hOntO$C"nally, wbile the thrt:e nymphomaniac flowe. . . peep through the 'hrubbery as do the spying soldi"",. J oyce makes this point in a marginal gl""' : the
, s. . S. I. . MacC<<:g<>r Ma,I>e. . , n. . Kd " l. . U-oJ. J, LQ<'Idon, 1887, p. 3. ? It will be "". ><. td that '4' and "0' are the oo. ly numbcn wlUch JO)<<
~ ? E. . i? , 'mcdaruo eu\o<,elk' (3~[. 3[).
rna". ,. ;ntrinoically and"'! I'Yn"",; ~ io . bo p. [+oj, &nd the aig<bn. ical. u. m of +_ 10.
'
.
number' (if' aixw<,
'"
? TWtI Mop MoJijs
twO hi1l0rian! are 'D<nu ]QIcru'- lwo gallanu-while the three 8owel'l are 'T~I! 7 . . ts. i:W', that is, they are both juvenile ('lOlly') sMUten who uk for the attention of the mal. . whom they alwaY' rehuff, and also th. . . . . , enemy (English) JOidiers. This succinct idemifieation of the girla and the soldiers is further emplwiaed in Ihe right_hand noIe, 'BELLETRISTICS', which lICe"" 10 he j (l)'(O'1 coinage fur Amuons "'ith a literary biaa.
Isobel writestv. 'O foolllOt. . l0 Quinet, in tm, IICcolld of which she mgga. u that the flat'" ofhis ''''ry spiritualstyk: be traQI. mute<! illin the rather mor<: toIid mailer 10 be found on Anna
Livia'i cloacalllCrap of tissue' :
'T ransioul that g:uwind min turfish, T eague, that's a good bog and you, Thady, polisa it oft, there's a nalrswipc:, on ,'OtI. blotlOm pulpet',
j oyce taka hobers advice and parodies thc IICII\l:nC( in five pla<<s in F_tmu IV. , Ih. . . 'u-anslouling' il into his 1rW!
"urnlh' and thoroughly acimi\ating it into the book. (I have used the word 'parody' here for want of a beller. Joyce is nol really parodying Quinet at any poinl, \. MJ. t refashioninS his ""nlence won:! by . . . . . ? on:! to mil new contexts-an altngether different arl for which no adoquate tern. Ketru to eJ<iIl. The five 'parodies' are more like frtt u-ansl~tio. . . inln various di~Dof 'Djoytsclt'. ) Stylistically, Quinet'. IICnl(Oa is direcl, lyrical,
and simpl~ in short, aU thaI Fi""'IQIIS Wllkt;. nOl, By Ihe time j oyce was compcci"S his last book be wu long past the Rag. : w~n be could comfonably write such ';mpl. Ituff as this, however mu<;h he may have admired il. The reluh is thaI all his 'horkings inevilabiy annihila\l: Quinet'. rath~r 100 self-
oonscio. . . grace and dtlicacy_ ru I shall show below, j oyce has in every cue oomiderably elaborato:d and tJ<tcnded the original tnatt;riaI, but it is interesting to IOC how Ihe nCCQIilY to compooe within a more or less prcdcta'mincd rorm has very la. rse1y curbed his habit of exparuion and interpolation. The lint Ihree
JWOdies (thott on pagel r'l- 13, 1'7, and 236) "'ere incorpor- ated relati1l(:ly early in tbei. . respectiv. : cbap\l:n and allhough in
, cr, Ib< R. . . . "" Gm<rLl', <I<&l1inr himself ",i! h & ><XI or lnab ,u. f (is,. ,)).
,88
? Two Major Motifs
! ucceooi,. . , man~ript venioru the . urrounding paua! :", ha""in each case k en greatly developed and r. xpand~d, the parodies have ",mained almost untouched, In their earliest mrnu they
",ad as follow. :
'Since the high old timeo of Uekar and Hairyman tlte com? flowe. . . have ken . taying at RaUymun, the du,\oI'O$<: ha. . choosed out Goa"town', croMroad. , twolips have pressed togatbcrthem by . <Weet Rmh, t<Jwnland oftwinligh. . the white. thorn and rffithom have f,irygaycd the mayvallc)" of KnO(',\o'
maroon and though for ringo round them during a hundred thoU! and yeargang', the Formoream ha"" brinled the Tooath of the Daneo and til<: Oxman ha. '! k e n pe'tered by the Firebugs
& theJoyn. . have thrown up wallmutting & Little on the Green ;, chil<hfather nf the city, th"", pa"sealing buttonhole, have quadrilled aerna the cntturics and herr. now whiff to "! , fTe! h
& made-of. aU. . miles . . On the day of Kmallwhoo. '
(Briti. <h Mmeum Add. MS {7{112 A, ff. [01-<1. This was the fIrSt of the parodi. . to be wTillcn, and date! from 1926. See
uU"" p. 246. )
'Since noozy Nanette tripped palmywa)" with Highho Harry
there'. a 'purtfire tun a'kind o'kindling ",henoft a. the $<luff. lOulf blows her peatie, up aud a claypot wet f<Jr tru:e, my Sit)'$, and talkatalka till Tibh! haw, r. v<:: and whathough billiooon. . . has ken billioum. . . during millimnl of milknionl and our mixffi racings have ken giving two hoo," or thret: jee. . . f"r the grape, vine, and brcw and Pieters in Nieuw Atn$,eldam and
Paoli', where the po"l. . go and rum smdt his end for him and he dined off sooth american thU oldworld epistola of lbeir ~athering. and their marryings and tlu:ir hurying. and thtir natural sekctioI15 h. . . wmhled tumbkd down to lU f~nch and
made-at. all? hou. . . lik an auld . ;up on tay. '
(Add. }. IS H473, f. WI! . TIlis venion date! from tlu: second
half of 1927, when J oye<: wru r~,'iuog tho Cri/t,icn Illt~xt of LS for/TalUi,ic" S, August '927. SetJ. J. Sln<:um and H. Cahoon, A Biblicgraplty 4 Jama J"ft' 1882-I941, u,odon, '953, pp. 99, 101, I<<ti,m' C. 6. t, and C. 70. )
'Since the da)1o ofRoamal""", and Rehmoose til<: pava",-" have ,"
? Two Major Matift
been ,tridend through the strntJ or Cbapelldileul, the vau. bi. . have mttd and y<'ludled through the purly OO'Ze or Ballyoough, many a milmy cloudy has tripped taumily along that hertourt . tn. yed r<<1-. y :ond lhe rigadoons 1La"" held ragtimed revels Ql\ the platuuplain or Grangegonnan; and thMagh sinee then sterlin~ and guineQ have t>. ,cn ~pl~ hy brooks and lion. and $(Ime pI'OflTW' hQ been made On . tilth. and the races have <:Qmc:andlOoeandThy~ thnchefofoeuonen,h",made hit UIlIal aolCW\e . . of endadjustabl. . and whatnoe will"'" ionorw. . . , thote danccaddlt and cancanzani. . have rome ! tum_ mcring down for our begaymm, through the bedufdom of po'. p atJ, the obcecity ofpa" teapuc's, u lithe and limb fr<< limber "" when momie played at . . . . . . '
(Add_MS 41411, f. ~'. Tbi! . wu the third ofthe parodi. . to he written, and dates from '930. Su Lnl". , p. ~95. It it inter- . . . . ing to nOte thn in ~II Inn' ",,! 'lin. . . the word 'stilthJ' hQ
",","n conupted to 'llilta'. )
The fourth parody (3~) it a 'pecial case, linee the pasuge in f1u",tion ""'nt through two otagu of compoeiticm before it ~ to J oyce to tum it into a fresh ttnlmcnt of Quinet ' 'rorf. . -e and fonnicular allon:all and in putkuIar till budly shootJ the rising gcrmin3l badly. '
(Add. MS 47-t11o, f. 68. )
'When old the wormd wu a gadden opter and apter we"" T . . . . . m m i l y n . - i 1 l 1 l a n d i f 6 d O r l i f c I i i l l s f " ' C . . . . 6 e u 1 a r : a l I o r u r . 11 s n o t 100 panicular $(I till budly abootJ lite rising ~rminallel bodley chew the rat ofhis auger and budJey bite the dustice ofthe piece. ' (Add. MS 47"&, f. 67; it ;. pouiblc thilt 'auger' mould rud 'anger'. )
J oyce worked ! hi. up into a parody of Quinet lOr the /ulluiliH text; once again the earli~" venion of the parody it . "nOllt
identical to the final primed. text :
'When old the wormd was a gadden and Anthea fint unlOikd
hcr limt.
Cily is under diKusoion, the rhythm is fluent and gt:ntlc. Joyce was essentially an indoor man, a city dweller. All his books before FUuwXPS Wah arc urban. Nature in the Words. - worthian scnae Itttnl to ha"" meant little to him, and althou. gh in Fi_XIlN WIIk. river and mountain, flower and tru are for the fin! time used LS major recurrent sym'oob, they arc little more than IIyliled lc<lIU which rarely develop into scruuow, living ima p . In A f''''I,~it til<: rural selting of Clollgowea Wood
,8,
? Two Map Motift
College iI bMeiy mentiotled and fuUilb no importanl funaion at it might have done in, say, a LaWTen. :. . , while the more rt:antly published pagel from StLpItnl Hm,' duling with rural Mullingar, show howout of touo:hJoyce fdl wht;n he anempted to write no. tumlistitally about events in oetting. ol1tside his no. tive city. The biographiea ha. ve little to . ay about holiday. 'pmt away from city life, and the Lett<:n oontai. . ""1')' linie III(11tionofthenatu",,1world (UUP! ,ofCOUIlC,forthefrequenl allu! ions to the Lifl'cy, which funned an essential part ofJOY,:,,', urhan Dublin). Mr. Frank Budgen insists that Joyce detested Rowen, and indeed even the graceful periwinkle, hy. . cpuh and and daisy ofQuinel'? . . ,ntenCe aTe prized more for the abltrac. tiens they embody Ihan fur their . . ,nsUOus qua! 'ti. . . Soon after J O). . :o: begins to rework Ihe ICnlenee, he tra. nsfu. . . . . the IIowers into a giggling group of \C'oo-d schoolgirls, and then into a vancty of other rapidly mutating symbot. . . Thi. is DOl 10 say tho. t lhe book W(luld be beller otherwise. In tOO many pJaceo it is ~lrcady dangerously MIT to a . . ,nomonalily which any softening ofJoyee's hard, stylised approach 10 natu",\ objects could only tend to exaggerate.
The Quinet molif is intimately bound up ". . ilh lhe 'ehange-of-oes:' theme, the ' MUTUOMORPHOMlffAT ION' (~8t. RI), at I shall pl'C'endy demortst. . . . te. }"irst, however, a few oornmentl . OOm J oyce'. numerology . re needed. All the numbers up 10 1ICVftI, and a few beyond that, are usociated with major ch. . . . . elers, 01" gTOUps of characlo;n. The following
arc lhe IIlOiIt important identification"
o Anna, ':\10lher 7. ero'; a female I)'IIlOOI
, Ean. ;ckn, the ilhyphaUic falh n
2 holde and her 'Iooking-glan ' girl; the pair of tempting
giT" in the Park; ! he wulterw<lmc:n. (All of tI>= pain In: of ooune equivalent,)
3 the English soldien who apprehend Earwiclt. er in lhe Phoenix Park
4 lite Old Androgyrles
,M. ~l>pla". ,. (<d. ),~}_}'IJ'<MlJuII-v,__. . . . . . . t:'. &rboo>cIate,
lit. , 'm, 1'1'. S-\! .
,"
? Two Mqjor Moufs
5 the Four, with their AS>i
6 the twdvc CUSI<>mers oft~n seem 10 b. made up of six
men, each playing two pam (e. g. , 'a choir of the
O'Daley O'OoyJes dcmblesixing the chorw', ? I. IS) 1 the 'Rainbow-girls', allied to the 'Q'
1(1 the Father and MUlherin union (. . . 308, and SK 16~--1) IQ the C" . tome. . .
Q8 the 'February-girls'----an ""panded fOrm oflhe '7'. (The algebraic. . . J 'urn of 7 _ 78. )
29 holde, the leap-year_girl
40 always associued with Anna; J'O"'ibly her age at the
naturalistic levd
'" Anna', thrcc children multiplied by a lrid: of notation;
. 0. 1110 the kabbalulic total of 'A- L -P' (A = I,L ~ 30, P = &>> '
These are the primary identification. hut l oye<: tiks the idea of cosmic reciprocity and hence whenever possibk he balanr. . . II. numerical group of One sex with an identical group of the opposite ,ex, so creating an anal<>gy with the WUc<:pl of 'anti_ particles' in modem physics. ' Thu. Ihe female duo i> r<:fleeted in the Shem. Shaun p"rtncr-ship, while lh~ thre-e soldien-who ,,,,,m to be Shem, Shaun, and a fonn of their fat~r, HCE----=e
~Ianced by a female trinity mru:\e up of h olde, ~r mitTOr_ imag<', and 't~ir' mother, Anna Livia. In the Quinet senten"" the female duo and tbe male trio art: made to app"aI in their inverted forffij, but each of these group' pla~ a part which ;" a C<lmbination of the a. ctivitics of the 'primary' '2' and the 'primary' '3'- the tempting of Ibe sinner and hi. oubsequcut apptthemion, Thusthe belligerent l'liny and Colnmdla, wbo,e rlItherfeminine-sounding narru;o "",m to have . ugg<:<ted to J oyce that they were inverts. ,' YJlicit hOntO$C"nally, wbile the thrt:e nymphomaniac flowe. . . peep through the 'hrubbery as do the spying soldi"",. J oyce makes this point in a marginal gl""' : the
, s. . S. I. . MacC<<:g<>r Ma,I>e. . , n. . Kd " l. . U-oJ. J, LQ<'Idon, 1887, p. 3. ? It will be "". ><. td that '4' and "0' are the oo. ly numbcn wlUch JO)<<
~ ? E. . i? , 'mcdaruo eu\o<,elk' (3~[. 3[).
rna". ,. ;ntrinoically and"'! I'Yn"",; ~ io . bo p. [+oj, &nd the aig<bn. ical. u. m of +_ 10.
'
.
number' (if' aixw<,
'"
? TWtI Mop MoJijs
twO hi1l0rian! are 'D<nu ]QIcru'- lwo gallanu-while the three 8owel'l are 'T~I! 7 . . ts. i:W', that is, they are both juvenile ('lOlly') sMUten who uk for the attention of the mal. . whom they alwaY' rehuff, and also th. . . . . , enemy (English) JOidiers. This succinct idemifieation of the girla and the soldiers is further emplwiaed in Ihe right_hand noIe, 'BELLETRISTICS', which lICe"" 10 he j (l)'(O'1 coinage fur Amuons "'ith a literary biaa.
Isobel writestv. 'O foolllOt. . l0 Quinet, in tm, IICcolld of which she mgga. u that the flat'" ofhis ''''ry spiritualstyk: be traQI. mute<! illin the rather mor<: toIid mailer 10 be found on Anna
Livia'i cloacalllCrap of tissue' :
'T ransioul that g:uwind min turfish, T eague, that's a good bog and you, Thady, polisa it oft, there's a nalrswipc:, on ,'OtI. blotlOm pulpet',
j oyce taka hobers advice and parodies thc IICII\l:nC( in five pla<<s in F_tmu IV. , Ih. . . 'u-anslouling' il into his 1rW!
"urnlh' and thoroughly acimi\ating it into the book. (I have used the word 'parody' here for want of a beller. Joyce is nol really parodying Quinet at any poinl, \. MJ. t refashioninS his ""nlence won:! by . . . . . ? on:! to mil new contexts-an altngether different arl for which no adoquate tern. Ketru to eJ<iIl. The five 'parodies' are more like frtt u-ansl~tio. . . inln various di~Dof 'Djoytsclt'. ) Stylistically, Quinet'. IICnl(Oa is direcl, lyrical,
and simpl~ in short, aU thaI Fi""'IQIIS Wllkt;. nOl, By Ihe time j oyce was compcci"S his last book be wu long past the Rag. : w~n be could comfonably write such ';mpl. Ituff as this, however mu<;h he may have admired il. The reluh is thaI all his 'horkings inevilabiy annihila\l: Quinet'. rath~r 100 self-
oonscio. . . grace and dtlicacy_ ru I shall show below, j oyce has in every cue oomiderably elaborato:d and tJ<tcnded the original tnatt;riaI, but it is interesting to IOC how Ihe nCCQIilY to compooe within a more or less prcdcta'mincd rorm has very la. rse1y curbed his habit of exparuion and interpolation. The lint Ihree
JWOdies (thott on pagel r'l- 13, 1'7, and 236) "'ere incorpor- ated relati1l(:ly early in tbei. . respectiv. : cbap\l:n and allhough in
, cr, Ib< R. . . . "" Gm<rLl', <I<&l1inr himself ",i! h & ><XI or lnab ,u. f (is,. ,)).
,88
? Two Major Motifs
! ucceooi,. . , man~ript venioru the . urrounding paua! :", ha""in each case k en greatly developed and r. xpand~d, the parodies have ",mained almost untouched, In their earliest mrnu they
",ad as follow. :
'Since the high old timeo of Uekar and Hairyman tlte com? flowe. . . have ken . taying at RaUymun, the du,\oI'O$<: ha. . choosed out Goa"town', croMroad. , twolips have pressed togatbcrthem by . <Weet Rmh, t<Jwnland oftwinligh. . the white. thorn and rffithom have f,irygaycd the mayvallc)" of KnO(',\o'
maroon and though for ringo round them during a hundred thoU! and yeargang', the Formoream ha"" brinled the Tooath of the Daneo and til<: Oxman ha. '! k e n pe'tered by the Firebugs
& theJoyn. . have thrown up wallmutting & Little on the Green ;, chil<hfather nf the city, th"", pa"sealing buttonhole, have quadrilled aerna the cntturics and herr. now whiff to "! , fTe! h
& made-of. aU. . miles . . On the day of Kmallwhoo. '
(Briti. <h Mmeum Add. MS {7{112 A, ff. [01-<1. This was the fIrSt of the parodi. . to be wTillcn, and date! from 1926. See
uU"" p. 246. )
'Since noozy Nanette tripped palmywa)" with Highho Harry
there'. a 'purtfire tun a'kind o'kindling ",henoft a. the $<luff. lOulf blows her peatie, up aud a claypot wet f<Jr tru:e, my Sit)'$, and talkatalka till Tibh! haw, r. v<:: and whathough billiooon. . . has ken billioum. . . during millimnl of milknionl and our mixffi racings have ken giving two hoo," or thret: jee. . . f"r the grape, vine, and brcw and Pieters in Nieuw Atn$,eldam and
Paoli', where the po"l. . go and rum smdt his end for him and he dined off sooth american thU oldworld epistola of lbeir ~athering. and their marryings and tlu:ir hurying. and thtir natural sekctioI15 h. . . wmhled tumbkd down to lU f~nch and
made-at. all? hou. . . lik an auld . ;up on tay. '
(Add. }. IS H473, f. WI! . TIlis venion date! from tlu: second
half of 1927, when J oye<: wru r~,'iuog tho Cri/t,icn Illt~xt of LS for/TalUi,ic" S, August '927. SetJ. J. Sln<:um and H. Cahoon, A Biblicgraplty 4 Jama J"ft' 1882-I941, u,odon, '953, pp. 99, 101, I<<ti,m' C. 6. t, and C. 70. )
'Since the da)1o ofRoamal""", and Rehmoose til<: pava",-" have ,"
? Two Major Matift
been ,tridend through the strntJ or Cbapelldileul, the vau. bi. . have mttd and y<'ludled through the purly OO'Ze or Ballyoough, many a milmy cloudy has tripped taumily along that hertourt . tn. yed r<<1-. y :ond lhe rigadoons 1La"" held ragtimed revels Ql\ the platuuplain or Grangegonnan; and thMagh sinee then sterlin~ and guineQ have t>. ,cn ~pl~ hy brooks and lion. and $(Ime pI'OflTW' hQ been made On . tilth. and the races have <:Qmc:andlOoeandThy~ thnchefofoeuonen,h",made hit UIlIal aolCW\e . . of endadjustabl. . and whatnoe will"'" ionorw. . . , thote danccaddlt and cancanzani. . have rome ! tum_ mcring down for our begaymm, through the bedufdom of po'. p atJ, the obcecity ofpa" teapuc's, u lithe and limb fr<< limber "" when momie played at . . . . . . '
(Add_MS 41411, f. ~'. Tbi! . wu the third ofthe parodi. . to he written, and dates from '930. Su Lnl". , p. ~95. It it inter- . . . . ing to nOte thn in ~II Inn' ",,! 'lin. . . the word 'stilthJ' hQ
",","n conupted to 'llilta'. )
The fourth parody (3~) it a 'pecial case, linee the pasuge in f1u",tion ""'nt through two otagu of compoeiticm before it ~ to J oyce to tum it into a fresh ttnlmcnt of Quinet ' 'rorf. . -e and fonnicular allon:all and in putkuIar till budly shootJ the rising gcrmin3l badly. '
(Add. MS 47-t11o, f. 68. )
'When old the wormd wu a gadden opter and apter we"" T . . . . . m m i l y n . - i 1 l 1 l a n d i f 6 d O r l i f c I i i l l s f " ' C . . . . 6 e u 1 a r : a l I o r u r . 11 s n o t 100 panicular $(I till budly abootJ lite rising ~rminallel bodley chew the rat ofhis auger and budJey bite the dustice ofthe piece. ' (Add. MS 47"&, f. 67; it ;. pouiblc thilt 'auger' mould rud 'anger'. )
J oyce worked ! hi. up into a parody of Quinet lOr the /ulluiliH text; once again the earli~" venion of the parody it . "nOllt
identical to the final primed. text :
'When old the wormd was a gadden and Anthea fint unlOikd
hcr limt.
