08 lie
explains
IIow he arrived :ond planted hi.
McHugh-Roland-1976-The-Sigla-of-Finnegans-Wake
Shamu.
"" hil atkin.
cum?
, Julul lying .
uulen for an outea" ma.
tiff littered in blo"d curti.
h T' Thi, aho recalb a .
pecclt made in '53" by Sir
William Skeffingron, then Lord Deputy"fDublin, whocalled hi, enemies 'outcoll mastives, linered in C\! rri,h blnod'. "
1would di. pute the connection, with Mn Traven Smith'. work postulated by Mr A,herton,K bUI it is perhaps significant lhat a . ing! ep~f<<)mitisparodiedaltheopposednodeofFW,i. e. the 1. 4 trial. QSS. OS-7 Tc-peal$ the ume qUOtation as Wilde: 'I ~ alw. J'! l one of those for whom the vi. ible world exi. ted. '''
M . . . Trave. . . Smith comment. upon her wort: ? If lhe medium could be diopensed with and a . uitable "telephone" invenled hctwe<:n this world and the other, no doubt results would be Ie. . WlCVtItand clearcr. 'u This is apt: muehofill. ) i. telephone con- vc""rion. At S46. ~S-8 Xare four telephone operators interrupling m'? ? pceeh to inquire t1u: numbeT . nught and as); whet1u:r the cor- rectchangehasbeenin&crted. A. III. 3operuI withape. . . . onnamed Yawn and 1l1. 4 displays the ing,esa of daylight upon the night
of FW, the note on VI. B. S. 29 is interesting:
Yawn telegraph telephone
Dawn wirele,,"
rhought transference
"H",,,,,"T,. . . . . . . Smith. ~ M'""""f"""o. "odr;u. (I00_ ,T. Wotn<< Lauri< '_J, 1-9?
"iNd. ? . . . .
~,.
comeo from Goubrt. "/I>ii. , ~
W. . buf1<Hl. l(<"<. J. Wh;. "r. . . _
! I<"<. II. Wolsh, " /li,1m)' of'" Ci",. /
~ I. "? --II.
~Boo,"', 41.
~ Hco",. T. . . ". . . , Sm;th. , P,y. :)r;" M""". . fr- 0 . - w;u. , 6-? 1'! re ph,,"
The City 19
? 30 Tbe Sigla of JIj,. ". g"", Ill''''''.
T he rader may rein. . . my urrym, him inlo u. . micltl of. new thlJ)ler wllooot opmina be haa ! loOt ye'I sludied. How. :Vtt, Joy. . . , hinudf,plil 1I1. }" ,hi. poinl whn\h( published nts speech of Brs,. 4 in 19JO as a oepante book lIawllt CIriJdn. EwryttJller. , ? maoc:u! i"" counterpoise ,0 A~~" Lid . . PlMrabelk, now 1. 8. 'Hlveth Childe. . . ' i, an eJa,qumt I-tlf-vindication by the fourukr, arcbitect, vi. . . ,roy and Lord Mayor of Dublin l<:l<so:>pe<i into One J1"1'SQn. " is pcrmened ",Itb mediev. l Dublin placcnemcs, for example Giglones Hm, Skinner'. Alley, Big Buue. I. . . ne, Ke)'Kr'. l. . anc and Hangina T ower. VI. B. :8. l-4concain. an arny
ofLord Maron ofDublin ",lIich Joyce mewed amongs' ill ~ There are also variou. Q. . . ,rPQ from u. . 'Dublin Anml. ' of
TNJr,,', l)ir<<tory. Allhough Dublin is pr<:-em;nall, one fmdl m'lllY . UU$ionJ to (liner cities and IlIn r edifi""" or disoieu. I find in . UCC<eUion Ams,erdam, Rome, Bobyton, New Yort:, Pdin. . . Londool, OlIo, Frankfurt, Stockholm, L. i~l, Belt. . l, Bel? ,~, Riode Janeiro, Edinburgh, Moscow, Paris, Brisrol, Carth_ . . e, Washington, Naples, Bu~ Aires, Budapest, Cort, Cal- CUlla, Wa. . . . "" Prague:, Alllen! , Jerusalem, Copenhagen, St Petersburg, Granada, Con"anlinople, Sofia, Letcllworth (tile
r. . . . t Garden City), tbe c;tics of tile world', &ven WoruIel'l lJ\d Sydney .
In til. opening 11&1'" of 'Havelll Childers' m'. <'OflCO:m is 10 ;"" ifyiii,conduct,wllicllhedocswilhoul""",isu:ncy,II. >IXftding elli"" annullu. , _lie. ones. He rescnu the &landers inflicted upon lIim linco: iii. depI"U~ iust II rlu: pS)'d1ic Wilde tUma UlY. ns. lie defmds his morality by affirming llis dcwrion to IIi. wife. H. tllen describes lIis pUt life in Dublin and til. improve_ m~nll consequent upon lIil etror" tbere. In S39. '~540.
08 lie explains IIow he arrived :ond planted hi. residence, lin. . . , wlli~h famine, di. . ,ase and ""il li. . . . . n have vanished. Durina tile inlerval
belWttn 1. 4 and tho prClCnt all 1\. 01 bttn tr:msfilJUred, as II. illus- trsl. . in 540-4J. He mentions \he disappearance 0( . harpoho<Ken,
founded hospitals and l ubdued rebeh. In iii. mayonl capacity be pt;rfotttwxl tile ceremony 0( 'rlclinl tile franclli. . . '. William Enalioh WI. bailiffin 14118 durina tIIis ptrambulation of tilt city boundaries. At one poinl the procnlion ""'r"Clled 'lOUlhwltd I I fl. n William Englisb IIi. oouse, wlli~1I they PISSed tllrough, mounting over the roofofanolh. er 0001"", and p. . . inj alto tllrou'"
tIIugt. ndiq>crs fromtheJU<<tI (540-19-32). W. bear
linl finance(s,. 4'. 07-'4)andhis'lfuul'"apinttfor. ilIl. windle" and V"1kine raidttlo (S4Q. 14- :W). He built "". . enrorb (s,p. 04-7), m,mo,ltotds,cotreehouJelandthe'ten. H. P""publiconrions,
"'"it
<S.
,we! -
? several gardens, until 'My came to the Coomb. ''' Thi' features . '543. ,6-,8 and kad. directly into a . ummary of ,be unbygienic conditions prevailing in a . ingle dweUing.
Mr Atherton bu Ixgun ,be ,,"ollotirut "f 543. n- 545. u wi,b pbrase, taken from B. S. Rownt"",'. P",,? nly. In view of tit<: amnunt written aboul tit<: obsession witb ,,! uolor in UIy. . . . it i. strange to find the only extensive use of tbi, sort of IItlIteriol in FW deriving from a . tudy nor of Dublin but of York. But Rown_ tree's rca",m for Klc. :ting Yorl< wu iu lotal unexccptionobility.
Ifconditionl in York were as bad as Rownttee seemed to be prov- ing, the overaie British town-dwell. . at the tum (Jf the century looked in a pre,ty bid way. This i. tbe universal citizen of m. univenal city. m concludes (S45. 1. ~-23) by quoting Henry II's charter grantins Dublin to tit<: ciIi""n, of Bri'tol (Tolbris Mre). He relItllins unaffocted by the ruinous housing: 'Thus Ix hd<' be
eventually say. (s. . 6. 1}).
The remainder of the chapter is overshadowed by the marrLage
of the ci,y and the river, beglnning at 546. 29. Had the Liffey ( A) turned her hack and left her bed, one might ",It wbat rival intlu- encc drew her. But it was vasdy (Jlherwise. m oonfined the river beTWccn banks and walls, lea ding her from Leix! ip {o the Looplinc Bridge (s. . 7"5- ,6). At RinR'end he perfonned another part of Ihe fraru;biK ceremony: 'he Lord ~yor burls a apear int" Ihe Ka tu delimit the ciIY" extension ('my dart '" Ihmw', 547. 20).
Land was rttlairned in thi. region (547. 23-4) and the len bridges between OJapcliwd and the river'. mouth were built (547. 29-30).
Ships' siren. were heard. m proceed. to detail his beautification of the city for hi. bride: M mentio"" the manufacture of women', dothing, fasbions, novelties, tbe importation of e. otic food, the pr<>CC1'inn. of tit<: Dublin trades guilds, exhibitions, millie halls ~ndpm",,,,imes. Next(55'? 2'-552. 07)heOOmes'". . . entialcivic architecture, lhe oomtruction of tbe Grand and Royal Canal. ,
public convenience" universities, tbe Bank of Ireland (formerly die Parliament HouK), railway termini and catbedral? . He gives
a roU ofhonour ofarchil<<=lund sculp. o,. . : Richard C. . . . . . d s, Mary Redmond, James Gandon, Sir Thorn. . Deane, Oliver Shepperd, Edward Smyth, Parke Neville, Thorn. . Heaton, B. B. Sloney, John Henry Foley, Sir Thoma, Fam:ll, Jobn Van NoS! , Homo T homeycrofl and John Hogan (552. 10- 12).
The f"",1paragraph orcS urbaniution brought 10 the point
" ) . W. . ""rton, Reo. J WIrit<. . . . . m<I Rev. R. Wd. h, A H,,,ory of'''' G,IY of DwM;. I, 95-8 t<<>>UII" the """''''''r?
TbeCity 21
? 22 The Sigla of Fim"gtms W". k~
whore t1u: injuries vi. ited by mon the ri""r', flanks are so extensive that IK> blade ofgra. . can <merge further from the stony scar ti. ,ue (553,06), S""en W<lndrous stalUes ar<: set up whilst an aureole of distant barl<ryfield$ ,upplies IJ1llrerial f"" the ""st Guinnesi ! lre_ wery, AI . he end m stands back like a rill8JIl'lSler warehing the (ir~'Ulati<m of the populace, drawn by . . varkty of (ircus hoeses,
Tbe priorities and juxtap"'itions in 'Havelh Otilders' IJ1lly appear grotesque, ignoble, sid: "" aff~. <<l. T o under-stand Joyce'. ca<icarur<: of hi, na. iv. city we should com""r<: the Dublin of
Uly. . . . as tre-. . ted by J. C. C. May,,"
Hi, commitment to Parnellism in the face of praclical alrerruttives must be =gni~ed as another an<mpt 10 view . . puresituation what historically i. partofan ongoing pro- cess, thereby relievinj hi. char. ocu:. . of the n. . . d to commil
them'l<'lves 'l<'rio""ly to the nighnn. a. r<: of history. The division betWttn '904 and the time when the book was
writt. . , and published W<lrx, to a like end. Intervening ""ents . tf~I such IJ1lllter-s as lone-for instance the "". ious ironies of'Aeol",,' ar<: augmented by iii location in an ar<:a of the city . ince halk,w<:d by na,i<)IU. lisl sen. imenl-bm such ironies are in themselves disahling: (hey do n<lt comp~ca. e bycutting across obvious surface meanings, but instead ~r . i,uationsallthe mor<: completely from their intended conscqucnttund enable them to be exploited as more or less pure medium. Dublin, in 1oyce's exiled vision, moves into an ar<:. between dream and fac\. Phy,ical
absence and t<mporal dis!
William Skeffingron, then Lord Deputy"fDublin, whocalled hi, enemies 'outcoll mastives, linered in C\! rri,h blnod'. "
1would di. pute the connection, with Mn Traven Smith'. work postulated by Mr A,herton,K bUI it is perhaps significant lhat a . ing! ep~f<<)mitisparodiedaltheopposednodeofFW,i. e. the 1. 4 trial. QSS. OS-7 Tc-peal$ the ume qUOtation as Wilde: 'I ~ alw. J'! l one of those for whom the vi. ible world exi. ted. '''
M . . . Trave. . . Smith comment. upon her wort: ? If lhe medium could be diopensed with and a . uitable "telephone" invenled hctwe<:n this world and the other, no doubt results would be Ie. . WlCVtItand clearcr. 'u This is apt: muehofill. ) i. telephone con- vc""rion. At S46. ~S-8 Xare four telephone operators interrupling m'? ? pceeh to inquire t1u: numbeT . nught and as); whet1u:r the cor- rectchangehasbeenin&crted. A. III. 3operuI withape. . . . onnamed Yawn and 1l1. 4 displays the ing,esa of daylight upon the night
of FW, the note on VI. B. S. 29 is interesting:
Yawn telegraph telephone
Dawn wirele,,"
rhought transference
"H",,,,,"T,. . . . . . . Smith. ~ M'""""f"""o. "odr;u. (I00_ ,T. Wotn<< Lauri< '_J, 1-9?
"iNd. ? . . . .
~,.
comeo from Goubrt. "/I>ii. , ~
W. . buf1<Hl. l(<"<. J. Wh;. "r. . . _
! I<"<. II. Wolsh, " /li,1m)' of'" Ci",. /
~ I. "? --II.
~Boo,"', 41.
~ Hco",. T. . . ". . . , Sm;th. , P,y. :)r;" M""". . fr- 0 . - w;u. , 6-? 1'! re ph,,"
The City 19
? 30 Tbe Sigla of JIj,. ". g"", Ill''''''.
T he rader may rein. . . my urrym, him inlo u. . micltl of. new thlJ)ler wllooot opmina be haa ! loOt ye'I sludied. How. :Vtt, Joy. . . , hinudf,plil 1I1. }" ,hi. poinl whn\h( published nts speech of Brs,. 4 in 19JO as a oepante book lIawllt CIriJdn. EwryttJller. , ? maoc:u! i"" counterpoise ,0 A~~" Lid . . PlMrabelk, now 1. 8. 'Hlveth Childe. . . ' i, an eJa,qumt I-tlf-vindication by the fourukr, arcbitect, vi. . . ,roy and Lord Mayor of Dublin l<:l<so:>pe<i into One J1"1'SQn. " is pcrmened ",Itb mediev. l Dublin placcnemcs, for example Giglones Hm, Skinner'. Alley, Big Buue. I. . . ne, Ke)'Kr'. l. . anc and Hangina T ower. VI. B. :8. l-4concain. an arny
ofLord Maron ofDublin ",lIich Joyce mewed amongs' ill ~ There are also variou. Q. . . ,rPQ from u. . 'Dublin Anml. ' of
TNJr,,', l)ir<<tory. Allhough Dublin is pr<:-em;nall, one fmdl m'lllY . UU$ionJ to (liner cities and IlIn r edifi""" or disoieu. I find in . UCC<eUion Ams,erdam, Rome, Bobyton, New Yort:, Pdin. . . Londool, OlIo, Frankfurt, Stockholm, L. i~l, Belt. . l, Bel? ,~, Riode Janeiro, Edinburgh, Moscow, Paris, Brisrol, Carth_ . . e, Washington, Naples, Bu~ Aires, Budapest, Cort, Cal- CUlla, Wa. . . . "" Prague:, Alllen! , Jerusalem, Copenhagen, St Petersburg, Granada, Con"anlinople, Sofia, Letcllworth (tile
r. . . . t Garden City), tbe c;tics of tile world', &ven WoruIel'l lJ\d Sydney .
In til. opening 11&1'" of 'Havelll Childers' m'. <'OflCO:m is 10 ;"" ifyiii,conduct,wllicllhedocswilhoul""",isu:ncy,II. >IXftding elli"" annullu. , _lie. ones. He rescnu the &landers inflicted upon lIim linco: iii. depI"U~ iust II rlu: pS)'d1ic Wilde tUma UlY. ns. lie defmds his morality by affirming llis dcwrion to IIi. wife. H. tllen describes lIis pUt life in Dublin and til. improve_ m~nll consequent upon lIil etror" tbere. In S39. '~540.
08 lie explains IIow he arrived :ond planted hi. residence, lin. . . , wlli~h famine, di. . ,ase and ""il li. . . . . n have vanished. Durina tile inlerval
belWttn 1. 4 and tho prClCnt all 1\. 01 bttn tr:msfilJUred, as II. illus- trsl. . in 540-4J. He mentions \he disappearance 0( . harpoho<Ken,
founded hospitals and l ubdued rebeh. In iii. mayonl capacity be pt;rfotttwxl tile ceremony 0( 'rlclinl tile franclli. . . '. William Enalioh WI. bailiffin 14118 durina tIIis ptrambulation of tilt city boundaries. At one poinl the procnlion ""'r"Clled 'lOUlhwltd I I fl. n William Englisb IIi. oouse, wlli~1I they PISSed tllrough, mounting over the roofofanolh. er 0001"", and p. . . inj alto tllrou'"
tIIugt. ndiq>crs fromtheJU<<tI (540-19-32). W. bear
linl finance(s,. 4'. 07-'4)andhis'lfuul'"apinttfor. ilIl. windle" and V"1kine raidttlo (S4Q. 14- :W). He built "". . enrorb (s,p. 04-7), m,mo,ltotds,cotreehouJelandthe'ten. H. P""publiconrions,
"'"it
<S.
,we! -
? several gardens, until 'My came to the Coomb. ''' Thi' features . '543. ,6-,8 and kad. directly into a . ummary of ,be unbygienic conditions prevailing in a . ingle dweUing.
Mr Atherton bu Ixgun ,be ,,"ollotirut "f 543. n- 545. u wi,b pbrase, taken from B. S. Rownt"",'. P",,? nly. In view of tit<: amnunt written aboul tit<: obsession witb ,,! uolor in UIy. . . . it i. strange to find the only extensive use of tbi, sort of IItlIteriol in FW deriving from a . tudy nor of Dublin but of York. But Rown_ tree's rca",m for Klc. :ting Yorl< wu iu lotal unexccptionobility.
Ifconditionl in York were as bad as Rownttee seemed to be prov- ing, the overaie British town-dwell. . at the tum (Jf the century looked in a pre,ty bid way. This i. tbe universal citizen of m. univenal city. m concludes (S45. 1. ~-23) by quoting Henry II's charter grantins Dublin to tit<: ciIi""n, of Bri'tol (Tolbris Mre). He relItllins unaffocted by the ruinous housing: 'Thus Ix hd<' be
eventually say. (s. . 6. 1}).
The remainder of the chapter is overshadowed by the marrLage
of the ci,y and the river, beglnning at 546. 29. Had the Liffey ( A) turned her hack and left her bed, one might ",It wbat rival intlu- encc drew her. But it was vasdy (Jlherwise. m oonfined the river beTWccn banks and walls, lea ding her from Leix! ip {o the Looplinc Bridge (s. . 7"5- ,6). At RinR'end he perfonned another part of Ihe fraru;biK ceremony: 'he Lord ~yor burls a apear int" Ihe Ka tu delimit the ciIY" extension ('my dart '" Ihmw', 547. 20).
Land was rttlairned in thi. region (547. 23-4) and the len bridges between OJapcliwd and the river'. mouth were built (547. 29-30).
Ships' siren. were heard. m proceed. to detail his beautification of the city for hi. bride: M mentio"" the manufacture of women', dothing, fasbions, novelties, tbe importation of e. otic food, the pr<>CC1'inn. of tit<: Dublin trades guilds, exhibitions, millie halls ~ndpm",,,,imes. Next(55'? 2'-552. 07)heOOmes'". . . entialcivic architecture, lhe oomtruction of tbe Grand and Royal Canal. ,
public convenience" universities, tbe Bank of Ireland (formerly die Parliament HouK), railway termini and catbedral? . He gives
a roU ofhonour ofarchil<<=lund sculp. o,. . : Richard C. . . . . . d s, Mary Redmond, James Gandon, Sir Thorn. . Deane, Oliver Shepperd, Edward Smyth, Parke Neville, Thorn. . Heaton, B. B. Sloney, John Henry Foley, Sir Thoma, Fam:ll, Jobn Van NoS! , Homo T homeycrofl and John Hogan (552. 10- 12).
The f"",1paragraph orcS urbaniution brought 10 the point
" ) . W. . ""rton, Reo. J WIrit<. . . . . m<I Rev. R. Wd. h, A H,,,ory of'''' G,IY of DwM;. I, 95-8 t<<>>UII" the """''''''r?
TbeCity 21
? 22 The Sigla of Fim"gtms W". k~
whore t1u: injuries vi. ited by mon the ri""r', flanks are so extensive that IK> blade ofgra. . can <merge further from the stony scar ti. ,ue (553,06), S""en W<lndrous stalUes ar<: set up whilst an aureole of distant barl<ryfield$ ,upplies IJ1llrerial f"" the ""st Guinnesi ! lre_ wery, AI . he end m stands back like a rill8JIl'lSler warehing the (ir~'Ulati<m of the populace, drawn by . . varkty of (ircus hoeses,
Tbe priorities and juxtap"'itions in 'Havelh Otilders' IJ1lly appear grotesque, ignoble, sid: "" aff~. <<l. T o under-stand Joyce'. ca<icarur<: of hi, na. iv. city we should com""r<: the Dublin of
Uly. . . . as tre-. . ted by J. C. C. May,,"
Hi, commitment to Parnellism in the face of praclical alrerruttives must be =gni~ed as another an<mpt 10 view . . puresituation what historically i. partofan ongoing pro- cess, thereby relievinj hi. char. ocu:. . of the n. . . d to commil
them'l<'lves 'l<'rio""ly to the nighnn. a. r<: of history. The division betWttn '904 and the time when the book was
writt. . , and published W<lrx, to a like end. Intervening ""ents . tf~I such IJ1lllter-s as lone-for instance the "". ious ironies of'Aeol",,' ar<: augmented by iii location in an ar<:a of the city . ince halk,w<:d by na,i<)IU. lisl sen. imenl-bm such ironies are in themselves disahling: (hey do n<lt comp~ca. e bycutting across obvious surface meanings, but instead ~r . i,uationsallthe mor<: completely from their intended conscqucnttund enable them to be exploited as more or less pure medium. Dublin, in 1oyce's exiled vision, moves into an ar<:. between dream and fac\. Phy,ical
absence and t<mporal dis!
