} ' u r l b e r , 'A~"IIIaJIItaining
AUM_ that the wbole phrase is equivalent to AUM pi.
Hart-Clive-1962-Structure-and-Motif-in-Finnegans-Wake
an erect member: 'The dcclH'k:ep
. tate,tho:Cognitional,? ? ? verily. indeed,cl'<<lJI thiswholeworld'. SI L&,"CE: Book IV is the inlerpolatcd ""riod of Silc:ncoo. TIu: essential, limd e s 6gur a oflhis Book, and especially Anna Livia in het JaJt monologue, may rairly ~ aaid to npTW tho: Real Selfof F;~"""", WW, "beyond lhe beginning and the end of beings", The ph. asea "atman II evaB" (5g6'~4) and "adamanl evar" (6~6. 03) contain the SaNkrit expression ai"'Q . . . . , muning "becoming even the Self" and implying the
unundltion of all WJ""Oflg ideas about Ihe Self which i. a PI"C_ """Iwate or the attainment of the ~Fourth". To oonfimt that w. . have indeed rucltcrl a Jtno:r,. . ? lc-dge of Ann. . n he. . . . , Joyce i. . o-oduca the great lOnnula of Vedamie T ruth, al lcaJt 11. 1 imponanl as AUM: w _ lUi, which means "that art thou" and . il"ifin an apprehcn. >ion of tbe identity of A'man and Brahman-of the individual ooul and the World~'iolll--which i. held to be the ultimate truth. The phrase is included in translaLion 1I 6<"11. 11: "From thee to thee, thoo aft it thoo,
",
? ? The Drtam-Slru(/lI1t
that thouest theu". and it il thillame pn:>Ci2i of. piritu. J appre- bew. ion which is so irr<:v. =ntly described at 39+3~ (put IV of al,,:rc:yck):
'in the pallOlJlfl'lle ur-gc the allimmancnct: of that which h. el! i. luclf Alone (hu r, 0 hu r, Caller Emn l) a terioriseo on mia ourheNOlIOw plane in di,united solod, likeward and gushioua bodies with (science, tay ! ) perilwhitcned p_ ionpanting pugllQ- plangent intuition. of ""united selfdom (murky w~y, awtfi:w adim! ) in the highetdimi. ! siooalseU\w Allielf,thecmecngNanty JTlt'eIMeng Idol"" . . . ' Earwieker wUes inlO the golden dawn
~ may be dcstroyal and ,,-heNO Ihe. e ia IOmo: hope that hia lhaky family relariom will impn:we. Hia mn"';ollsni2i ia triumphantly proclaimed to be
0( a roe'" cycle ",? hen: faDe knowl
that of Ev~ryman: "Ei. . ,. . ,ecku 10 1M . . . . ,h1d bludyn world. 0 rally, 0 rally, 0 raUy! " (593. 0<1)
By continued meditation on AOM, the ad<:pt'. body io said by a pl'O(;Cll of g. . . . dual refinement 10 become composed in tum
of(anh, water, fire, air, and etMr. ' It will he ""memhcrcd thai thio il the _""ding order io which J~ d<:velops the clementi in Ihe te. er eyeles ofFu-gQIU WOW,' ifBook IV ;' equaled wilh Ih. ether, which would be quile co",ia~t with ilS chan cltr.
AU M is ubiquilOWl in the epicycles, a f. . . . a a mplesof which may bequotcd 10 dcmorul. . . . tc Ihe various ";0)'1 in wlUchJoyce maket use or the motif. TI\e lOur ItalCS are lia! J:<l at ~ . 03, lhe ficst th~ ;1'1 inverse ord. ,. , sirn:e the 'boots' of the Mulling,. ,. Pub io being awakened and brought back to mundane realilY: 'laid war' prised safe in bed [deep lleep] as h. dreamed [dr. :anu] that he'd wcalthc. in mormon halls when woIttnp [waking lIale] by a fourth [the ~Foorlh"l loud $:lore out of hio land of byelo [Ihe lower plane]'
Late. (:UU7) the . t<:Olence 'They are at the lurn or the l'oun h DrtI,e hurdlcs' Itt. ". to imply ,hat entering the city of Dublin (,Ford. of? Hurdks-Town'] ioequivalenttoenltring the'Fourth',
thai. Icnowledgt' of Dublin amountJ to an apprehension of Brahman.
? The Dream-Strudure
On P"'K" 308 AUM it oombined with the lrilh word for 'OIlC' (. I. on) to giw: 'Aun', the fint term of the m)"Uc decade with whichJoyc. c ends 11. 1. AUM repracnu what is ulled tile 'Creative Triad'. one of thTr:t: such triads whkh, a. ;c:ording to Blav~t! ly. ' emanau. from the U! tim~te Being, S_y:amhhouva (equivalent to the Kabbalistie En_Soph), the other two being the 'Initial Triad' and the 'M. . nifesled Triad'. All thl"<< are
compounded in theSupreme Deily. and thes<: ni,neemanations, plul Sw~yambhou. . . . . . hi. . . . . ,lf, make up . . decade similar to that of the Sephiroth which Joyce ;" parodying on page JOIl. iii. use of AUM , iuelh trinity, . . . the fm! term ofhillriad implies that thitl! nt term ;" iuelf potenti. o. ll}' diviaible into threo: paru, and 10 the proccu cl cyclic lubdivio. ion it continued. A detailed disclUliOll of J oyce'. three triads and of their relation to Ihe
Sephiroth may be found in the Shim. K'! I. '
JUltiUS coDcludes his denunciation ofSbem with the yawning
religious formula: '/. . . . . . . ,. ;", . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iootw. ot. l I - . o Wl'l'. (193. 29). No doubt without real;'in! ! " what he it doing, Shaun is intoning the holy syllable. Not only i. AU! >! dearly pruent in 'lIws ' E,. ', but the words . /. . . . -. . ;. , . . . . ;. _ _ _ ' 'eOQ1. l\d Kem to uprault respeeti""ly Ihe Waking State, Slttp (with D r e a m s ) , a n d D e e p S l e e p .
} ' u r l b e r , 'A~"IIIaJIItaining
AUM_ that the wbole phrase is equivalent to AUM pi.
.
.
ill concomitant Silence two or tI",:e dmea over.
This typical oonderuation forms the silent pause
marking the end of the major cycle of chapter 1. 7.
The Gripel impertinently asks the Mook:te 10 try 10 explain the mysteries ol th~ univmc to him (1S4-~), including in the
qUeJtion alluliom both to the Female Unity, Ann. . Livia, and to the Male Trinity, AUM: 'allinall . . hout awn . . nd liseiAa~' The Moobe, ofcourse, knows IIOthing ol all uu. and will have
10 be told in 11. 2 by Dolph. , who knew the answen anyway. Earwicker claims, in hil apology, to hav~ been '10 devout q
to pronounce tile holy r. . ::ipe thrice: 'I h. . "" been r<<iping om
, Ia. u. . . wi, ~ . . . . . , Luoodoo~ ,Bn. vol. II, pp. S9-4O- ? SK ,6, 11".
"3
? The Drwm-,slruelw(
omomioou> ! ett~n', b. ,t, . . . . . . . ,al, his uncontrollable Inngue betraY' him. When he finally wakes, OM again appe3n , in the context of th~ e. . . tern philosophy which pervades the opening
ofBook IV,
'Verb umprincipiall1 through the trancitive 'pru:<3 . ? . make ,unlike sylp om this warful dune'l battam'. (594-02-1I)
OM is a . ymbol foe the ! un', which here $hin. . Out ova the yawning gap of the F. dda. a1 Earwicker u,es Sunlight Snap to wash hi, o:aggy huttocb----the 'awful Dane's bottom'.
That J oyce ,bould h"", 'uch important $tructul"al patterns a. the d,. . ,am-cyc1es on 110 little-known a model a, the syllable AUM will of oouru o<:ca. <ion no "'rprise. It is hardly more recondite than Vico', tll~Oru:. and, when undentood, serves to give valuable new dimemioru to the reiativityofFiMtgans W. . . . . . The interplay bety;een individnality and univenality in the AUM Itate, ,. . ,-emph:uiwl the importance of ,ubjeetivity and ambiguity in the book and ultimately alto". , the 'ymbolism of
Book IV to e:<pand toward cosmic proportions, 110 making that final chapter the apoth<:mi. \ of the spirit of mankind that J oyce inlend~d it to be.
Ill: SERIAL DREA~1S (532. 33)
Joyce calb On many minor dream-sources in FiMtgafIJ Wak. in additionInAU~I. TwooftheIIIOI! tfert. ikofth=arestories from the T/rQl<J(jt! d <lNi 0", Nights. 'The Sleeper Awakeoed' i, one ofthe best knownofall the tales and existsin many veruon<, being particularly popular in the ca. t in dramatised form. It
reiat<3 the ~. xperience of one Abu al_H . . . ,an who, from mistrust of friend,hip, would ~ntertain only . trangt:n ill hi, bouse. Olle ~vt:ning, inevitably, he met and took home witb him for tbe evcning the Calif Hamun in di. guisc. When pressed by the Califto ~"",pr= a wish for something ill ,. . ,turll fue bi. ho:! pitality, aI_Hasan replied that M wished ooly to b<' able to change place. with Hamull for a day in ordee to rid the city of a CI<lpulous 'hdkb_ Maroun, amused at the ,uggeot;on, contrived to drog
,I1_E. Hume,TI><TItirim! ~ U~WS. Oxf". -d,'9",p. 4'5. ".
? The Dream-Structure
al_Hasan and have him taken to the palace b. dchamher. There he wa! J put to b. d in the Califs nightdoth. . and the whole palace company ord. ,. . ,d to treat aI_H<uan in the morning exactly'" if he ,. ;",. . , the Calif hi"""lf. Whm awakened, al_ Hasan fuund hirrudf in the e<;ntu of a complete court kvt:e, everybody add. . . ,. . ing him as the CalifHaroun. Atfi. . . t at H<uan thought himself ,ti! ! -w<:<:p and dreaming, but the constant in,i,tence of the assembled company convinced him at last h"
wlU indud HaT<:mn himself. After a day of giving judll""m"nt and making mya! decrtt. '! , during which the unwanted ,heikh w a s di$I~>SCd o f , a i _ H a s a n w , , " l e d t o t h e p l e a ! u " " , o f t h e h a r i m . There he sat in . ucca. ion in four diffe,. . ,nt haH" each full of good things and each attended by . . ven gir\, of varying ,kin- colour who were cI. . . . . ssed in all the hu. . or the rainbow. After al_Ha. an had b. en thoroughly gratified in the b. . t of the halll, one of the girl! drugged him again, on oroe. . . from the Calif, and he w ,," t. aken hack to his own hom". When h. aw<>h: there
he ,till helieved himself to be the Calif "od wa, nOI convinr. <:<l. orh" true identity until after a 'pell in a madhouse. Following hi, release aI_Hasan once again met Haroun ill hi! mercltant d;"guise who, <Orry that his j",t have caused ,u"h ,uffering, peTlmaded al_Halan to entert. ain him once mort: in bi! bou. . . There the Calif drugged the young man again and had him
pJaccdin the royal bed as before. AI-Hasan awoke next morning to find himselfeeremoniornly treated '" Calif. MO$t delightful
of all for him w<u the p,. . ,. . nce of the twcnty_dght colourful girls who sang and danced in chorus, linking handl around the bed while ai_Hasan 'threw the bed coverings one way and Ibe culhinm another, (ast his nightcap into the air, I. aped from Ibe bcd, tore olf aU IW cloth. . and threw himself among the girt. . , hi? ? abb w. U fOrward and IW bottom har~; jomping, lwi. ting, contoning and shaking hi! b. lly, >abb and boltom, all in a storm ofgrowing laughter'. The Calif, hidden behind a curtain, was so amused that he began to hiccup and r-alled oul in ddight:
'Ahu ai-Hasan, 0 Abu ai_Hasan, havc you ,w<>rn to kill me~' At this the dance ! topped, silenct fell. A1_Ha. an realised hi, errot" and the now . awfied Calif rewardc<i him with a palace,
<05
? The Dr(Oln-Structure
honoun, and One of tbe girt. . . . wife. After a time of rejoicing, however, it occurred to al-II. . .
. tate,tho:Cognitional,? ? ? verily. indeed,cl'<<lJI thiswholeworld'. SI L&,"CE: Book IV is the inlerpolatcd ""riod of Silc:ncoo. TIu: essential, limd e s 6gur a oflhis Book, and especially Anna Livia in het JaJt monologue, may rairly ~ aaid to npTW tho: Real Selfof F;~"""", WW, "beyond lhe beginning and the end of beings", The ph. asea "atman II evaB" (5g6'~4) and "adamanl evar" (6~6. 03) contain the SaNkrit expression ai"'Q . . . . , muning "becoming even the Self" and implying the
unundltion of all WJ""Oflg ideas about Ihe Self which i. a PI"C_ """Iwate or the attainment of the ~Fourth". To oonfimt that w. . have indeed rucltcrl a Jtno:r,. . ? lc-dge of Ann. . n he. . . . , Joyce i. . o-oduca the great lOnnula of Vedamie T ruth, al lcaJt 11. 1 imponanl as AUM: w _ lUi, which means "that art thou" and . il"ifin an apprehcn. >ion of tbe identity of A'man and Brahman-of the individual ooul and the World~'iolll--which i. held to be the ultimate truth. The phrase is included in translaLion 1I 6<"11. 11: "From thee to thee, thoo aft it thoo,
",
? ? The Drtam-Slru(/lI1t
that thouest theu". and it il thillame pn:>Ci2i of. piritu. J appre- bew. ion which is so irr<:v. =ntly described at 39+3~ (put IV of al,,:rc:yck):
'in the pallOlJlfl'lle ur-gc the allimmancnct: of that which h. el! i. luclf Alone (hu r, 0 hu r, Caller Emn l) a terioriseo on mia ourheNOlIOw plane in di,united solod, likeward and gushioua bodies with (science, tay ! ) perilwhitcned p_ ionpanting pugllQ- plangent intuition. of ""united selfdom (murky w~y, awtfi:w adim! ) in the highetdimi. ! siooalseU\w Allielf,thecmecngNanty JTlt'eIMeng Idol"" . . . ' Earwieker wUes inlO the golden dawn
~ may be dcstroyal and ,,-heNO Ihe. e ia IOmo: hope that hia lhaky family relariom will impn:we. Hia mn"';ollsni2i ia triumphantly proclaimed to be
0( a roe'" cycle ",? hen: faDe knowl
that of Ev~ryman: "Ei. . ,. . ,ecku 10 1M . . . . ,h1d bludyn world. 0 rally, 0 rally, 0 raUy! " (593. 0<1)
By continued meditation on AOM, the ad<:pt'. body io said by a pl'O(;Cll of g. . . . dual refinement 10 become composed in tum
of(anh, water, fire, air, and etMr. ' It will he ""memhcrcd thai thio il the _""ding order io which J~ d<:velops the clementi in Ihe te. er eyeles ofFu-gQIU WOW,' ifBook IV ;' equaled wilh Ih. ether, which would be quile co",ia~t with ilS chan cltr.
AU M is ubiquilOWl in the epicycles, a f. . . . a a mplesof which may bequotcd 10 dcmorul. . . . tc Ihe various ";0)'1 in wlUchJoyce maket use or the motif. TI\e lOur ItalCS are lia! J:<l at ~ . 03, lhe ficst th~ ;1'1 inverse ord. ,. , sirn:e the 'boots' of the Mulling,. ,. Pub io being awakened and brought back to mundane realilY: 'laid war' prised safe in bed [deep lleep] as h. dreamed [dr. :anu] that he'd wcalthc. in mormon halls when woIttnp [waking lIale] by a fourth [the ~Foorlh"l loud $:lore out of hio land of byelo [Ihe lower plane]'
Late. (:UU7) the . t<:Olence 'They are at the lurn or the l'oun h DrtI,e hurdlcs' Itt. ". to imply ,hat entering the city of Dublin (,Ford. of? Hurdks-Town'] ioequivalenttoenltring the'Fourth',
thai. Icnowledgt' of Dublin amountJ to an apprehension of Brahman.
? The Dream-Strudure
On P"'K" 308 AUM it oombined with the lrilh word for 'OIlC' (. I. on) to giw: 'Aun', the fint term of the m)"Uc decade with whichJoyc. c ends 11. 1. AUM repracnu what is ulled tile 'Creative Triad'. one of thTr:t: such triads whkh, a. ;c:ording to Blav~t! ly. ' emanau. from the U! tim~te Being, S_y:amhhouva (equivalent to the Kabbalistie En_Soph), the other two being the 'Initial Triad' and the 'M. . nifesled Triad'. All thl"<< are
compounded in theSupreme Deily. and thes<: ni,neemanations, plul Sw~yambhou. . . . . . hi. . . . . ,lf, make up . . decade similar to that of the Sephiroth which Joyce ;" parodying on page JOIl. iii. use of AUM , iuelh trinity, . . . the fm! term ofhillriad implies that thitl! nt term ;" iuelf potenti. o. ll}' diviaible into threo: paru, and 10 the proccu cl cyclic lubdivio. ion it continued. A detailed disclUliOll of J oyce'. three triads and of their relation to Ihe
Sephiroth may be found in the Shim. K'! I. '
JUltiUS coDcludes his denunciation ofSbem with the yawning
religious formula: '/. . . . . . . ,. ;", . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . iootw. ot. l I - . o Wl'l'. (193. 29). No doubt without real;'in! ! " what he it doing, Shaun is intoning the holy syllable. Not only i. AU! >! dearly pruent in 'lIws ' E,. ', but the words . /. . . . -. . ;. , . . . . ;. _ _ _ ' 'eOQ1. l\d Kem to uprault respeeti""ly Ihe Waking State, Slttp (with D r e a m s ) , a n d D e e p S l e e p .
} ' u r l b e r , 'A~"III
marking the end of the major cycle of chapter 1. 7.
The Gripel impertinently asks the Mook:te 10 try 10 explain the mysteries ol th~ univmc to him (1S4-~), including in the
qUeJtion alluliom both to the Female Unity, Ann. . Livia, and to the Male Trinity, AUM: 'allinall . . hout awn . . nd liseiAa~' The Moobe, ofcourse, knows IIOthing ol all uu. and will have
10 be told in 11. 2 by Dolph. , who knew the answen anyway. Earwicker claims, in hil apology, to hav~ been '10 devout q
to pronounce tile holy r. . ::ipe thrice: 'I h. . "" been r<<iping om
, Ia. u. . . wi, ~ . . . . . , Luoodoo~ ,Bn. vol. II, pp. S9-4O- ? SK ,6, 11".
"3
? The Drwm-,slruelw(
omomioou> ! ett~n', b. ,t, . . . . . . . ,al, his uncontrollable Inngue betraY' him. When he finally wakes, OM again appe3n , in the context of th~ e. . . tern philosophy which pervades the opening
ofBook IV,
'Verb umprincipiall1 through the trancitive 'pru:<3 . ? . make ,unlike sylp om this warful dune'l battam'. (594-02-1I)
OM is a . ymbol foe the ! un', which here $hin. . Out ova the yawning gap of the F. dda. a1 Earwicker u,es Sunlight Snap to wash hi, o:aggy huttocb----the 'awful Dane's bottom'.
That J oyce ,bould h"", 'uch important $tructul"al patterns a. the d,. . ,am-cyc1es on 110 little-known a model a, the syllable AUM will of oouru o<:ca. <ion no "'rprise. It is hardly more recondite than Vico', tll~Oru:. and, when undentood, serves to give valuable new dimemioru to the reiativityofFiMtgans W. . . . . . The interplay bety;een individnality and univenality in the AUM Itate, ,. . ,-emph:uiwl the importance of ,ubjeetivity and ambiguity in the book and ultimately alto". , the 'ymbolism of
Book IV to e:<pand toward cosmic proportions, 110 making that final chapter the apoth<:mi. \ of the spirit of mankind that J oyce inlend~d it to be.
Ill: SERIAL DREA~1S (532. 33)
Joyce calb On many minor dream-sources in FiMtgafIJ Wak. in additionInAU~I. TwooftheIIIOI! tfert. ikofth=arestories from the T/rQl<J(jt! d <lNi 0", Nights. 'The Sleeper Awakeoed' i, one ofthe best knownofall the tales and existsin many veruon<, being particularly popular in the ca. t in dramatised form. It
reiat<3 the ~. xperience of one Abu al_H . . . ,an who, from mistrust of friend,hip, would ~ntertain only . trangt:n ill hi, bouse. Olle ~vt:ning, inevitably, he met and took home witb him for tbe evcning the Calif Hamun in di. guisc. When pressed by the Califto ~"",pr= a wish for something ill ,. . ,turll fue bi. ho:! pitality, aI_Hasan replied that M wished ooly to b<' able to change place. with Hamull for a day in ordee to rid the city of a CI<lpulous 'hdkb_ Maroun, amused at the ,uggeot;on, contrived to drog
,I1_E. Hume,TI><TItirim! ~ U~WS. Oxf". -d,'9",p. 4'5. ".
? The Dream-Structure
al_Hasan and have him taken to the palace b. dchamher. There he wa! J put to b. d in the Califs nightdoth. . and the whole palace company ord. ,. . ,d to treat aI_H<uan in the morning exactly'" if he ,. ;",. . , the Calif hi"""lf. Whm awakened, al_ Hasan fuund hirrudf in the e<;ntu of a complete court kvt:e, everybody add. . . ,. . ing him as the CalifHaroun. Atfi. . . t at H<uan thought himself ,ti! ! -w<:<:p and dreaming, but the constant in,i,tence of the assembled company convinced him at last h"
wlU indud HaT<:mn himself. After a day of giving judll""m"nt and making mya! decrtt. '! , during which the unwanted ,heikh w a s di$I~>SCd o f , a i _ H a s a n w , , " l e d t o t h e p l e a ! u " " , o f t h e h a r i m . There he sat in . ucca. ion in four diffe,. . ,nt haH" each full of good things and each attended by . . ven gir\, of varying ,kin- colour who were cI. . . . . ssed in all the hu. . or the rainbow. After al_Ha. an had b. en thoroughly gratified in the b. . t of the halll, one of the girl! drugged him again, on oroe. . . from the Calif, and he w ,," t. aken hack to his own hom". When h. aw<>h: there
he ,till helieved himself to be the Calif "od wa, nOI convinr. <:<l. orh" true identity until after a 'pell in a madhouse. Following hi, release aI_Hasan once again met Haroun ill hi! mercltant d;"guise who, <Orry that his j",t have caused ,u"h ,uffering, peTlmaded al_Halan to entert. ain him once mort: in bi! bou. . . There the Calif drugged the young man again and had him
pJaccdin the royal bed as before. AI-Hasan awoke next morning to find himselfeeremoniornly treated '" Calif. MO$t delightful
of all for him w<u the p,. . ,. . nce of the twcnty_dght colourful girls who sang and danced in chorus, linking handl around the bed while ai_Hasan 'threw the bed coverings one way and Ibe culhinm another, (ast his nightcap into the air, I. aped from Ibe bcd, tore olf aU IW cloth. . and threw himself among the girt. . , hi? ? abb w. U fOrward and IW bottom har~; jomping, lwi. ting, contoning and shaking hi! b. lly, >abb and boltom, all in a storm ofgrowing laughter'. The Calif, hidden behind a curtain, was so amused that he began to hiccup and r-alled oul in ddight:
'Ahu ai-Hasan, 0 Abu ai_Hasan, havc you ,w<>rn to kill me~' At this the dance ! topped, silenct fell. A1_Ha. an realised hi, errot" and the now . awfied Calif rewardc<i him with a palace,
<05
? The Dr(Oln-Structure
honoun, and One of tbe girt. . . . wife. After a time of rejoicing, however, it occurred to al-II. . .
