tion m ay
function
ind.
McHugh-Roland-1976-The-Sigla-of-Finnegans-Wake
oftdon.
.
I<<>ul_
? The Decline or m
I. l contrUrs wilh 1. 1. The style i. civilized and stilled, it in, iotJ
O(l vull! :arity with Victorian squeo. mi. hn," and abound. in "'"tin constructions and euphemi. ms. For example: 'royalty was announced by ntnru;r ro have been pleued ro have halted ic. elf', 'the lileral 11m. . of which d = c y can . afely $Ca"cdy hint', 'a re, spo::rablc prominently connected r. now of lro-Europeo. n ">CCn'
dAnces with welldre. . ed ideo. . who kntw the correct thinll;", '10 be exquisitely punctilious abow Ih. m'. It i. fairly easy reading in comparison with tbe 'n t of FW.
The chapter begin. in the afternoon of . . golden age, 'jUS! when """" chalked haUtraps' (030. 05). Enoo, son of Seth, WlI. ' regarded by the kabhalists as ? greare, nu. gician than any before him :" pre' . um. ably he is chalking circles ro cQmpd the spirits. lne Pbo<:nix Park appeou in a mo,"" urhane "'peeI, with gardening and hurno. n
in . . pa. . . . g. from 111. 3 (481. 12- 15):
commingnownfrom the uphal' [(, the concrete, from \h. hum. an hi. torie brute, Finn. . n F"yn. "n, <>CCcanyciivcd, to . his same vulganizcd hilbir from yours, Mr Tupling Tnun of Morning de H. ightJ, with his laVllSl How- and hi. ram' blina- undcrgroand.
The relation orthe hun. er to the town,dwdler i. ,hat inward my. tery of U{y. . . . , paternity, which may he actual (Uly~ and Tdema. ;:hu. ), spiritual (God and resu. ), literary (Shakcspe&r<: and Haml. ! ) or psychological (Bloom and Stephen). The 111. 3 pas- sage "dds 'We speak of Gun, the farth. ,. . And in th. locative. Bapl Hapl' VI. Rl3. 71 h;u 'hap_ father'. The word, according 10 Sir John Lubbock, is from the Kocch language of Northeast Bengal. "
Mr Hart" hI;, . ! >own that the patronymic 'Eorwickcr' occurs at Sidl. . ham in the Hundred of Manhood, West Sussex. Perhaps il connotes ears ofwhea! : William Earwi<:ker'. snv? ? tone there ditplay. two. BUI in FW an ? orwickcr is fortmO$t one who traps
artifacts incvid(:ncc. Eventually
by diverse ramification. of humanity.
w.
at(:lin the city centre, thronged The differencc berw<en Finn. gan and EacwickCT i? ? piphanizcd
"A. E- '110m:, n. , H;iy Kob6. >. . . . (N. . . Yori<, Uom",rty 1I<d. [\)60), '95-6.
n. , 0. ;,;. '" Civili",,';". . J,. . . Prino'_ c-t. . _ . ,. M _ mono, 0>-= ,110), 3>6.
I~L<a>a--
M
(
~ "The ~ <I Si<ll<>ban>',;" A W. . u D? <<', <d. . ". OiY< Hart . . d F<i,. S<nn (Sydney Uol,"""", PI:-<st . gM), ,. - ,.
The Decline of m 15
? ~arwiJ:'. Wh~n m mcctl the King he carri~ a de~ice employed forthisp~,aninvertedplanrpol. ""aItick. HyntemOon, an earwiucr il himself an earwig, and then, any inJect. Why lhould""rwi"qualify particularly for adD! illion into the 1Th:om. pia? Th~ir. . -t. trikinBfe. cuui. aplirofforcepi('07. 11). Mal? colm Burr" lA Y'thar urwiS' 'irupire drtad in ! lit mind' of the lu~ntiliouo,and il ilI. his i"'tturnenl ? ? th, end of too. linuous body and their habi, of bol,;"g imo dad: holn and crtvices that
hat lt d to the w;. ;t",prlOId <>orion llIlol they a", apt to elller th~ human CIf wirh fatal fe. ulu. From tlli' belief arose Our familillr
nam. c,which~nfintinAna. . . . Sa~onuIOIrcwicp,theo. erond half ofwhich ;, an old verb . . ,hich . . ,,,,ivct in Ill<: words wiale,
. . . . . "Ie, wriUle, m""nil\i quid: mov<mrnr. '
Fit' f' e<juendy mentions m? , ean and in the norebool. . . uch
lIeM. alizatiOf>l; as the: followina occur:
VI. B? S? ln: m his KOOd exr
mdeafI. Taub VI. II. '5? IH: m car A Imell 111
,,~'" t::louch -IliBhl
But the approprialion oi ocru. tI 10 'iKJa htn: ill only partly allowed in FW for, u we . halll<<, a critical differc-no< bctwccn t:: and " ill the Jood huri. . , and bad eycsisht of the (onner, and
the rever:w: a"ributes of the latter. Th. . . . , two Iysrems of correia?
tion m ay function ind. -pcndcntly : Ir il oftm as:w:rted thai m il <kaf, and this link. with hi, ' P. cch impediment. VI. 8. 36. )06 states 'm is earweak'. ~ In . . rwig hu entered Ilia audilory m""tul: O$9. l2 mcnoono 'whal lhey 100II oul of hil car'. But when " i,
Ielli. . , C rhal he is mad, he besins 'Come here, Herr Siudios. . . , 'ill l,eU yo\I a . . . . ij; in your n,' (' \11. . . - 13). II is rrcqumtly imputed 11111 m is MIld 100.
So much fortht ;nMr e. . . . Far man: ,ignificut is th( ov(rgr<1W1l pil\JUl nf King Mi""s. All the ! >C,. aru. who lransmil lhe slander ,boul m seem to be in the positiOll oi the barbe, who law undor Mid. . ' cu,lIIn. In addition 10 Ovid', vcnion we haw: Irish and Welsh kg. . . do of, kinS ""me<! Marl< or Eoclll;. ;t who had ~', eal"l. Fn)m these . au,"", may ckrive 1M attribution of rhe Plttt indignity 10 King Marl< in SCrouJ'1 Tri",," , which ,. . ,inforttl the connectionwithm We find PcnK O'Reilly{French,t-ot_ti/k,
VI. B. 1S? I'3:
? ? ? The Ikdine of m '7 'earwig') at 482. 03-5 together with Midas' g<>ld and his vile
dioease ;
- Breeze ",,[tly. Aures are ouren. Hau'~ hi' naun?
- Me da. has or orieb. Piercey, piercey, piercey, piercey! -W hiteeyelusdous and muddyhorsebroth! Pig Pursyriley!
m is nf (:(IuUe not known
?
obliged to recogni>. e almoSl embodi. . part of the . . ""nce of
Ihe mask, e. iI. 'Haroun Childeric traitsofm. . . . . . . contagiou,:someonewhohasencounteredI di. _
tin~t m will himself bee{l"'" more like m.
Al the ~ginning of 1. 3 the actors from 1. 2 are retrospectively
assessed ; many now ",hibit p<. linled m t. . . . its. In thi. Chapter di_ matic facto", an:: prominent and . ystematically detmont<: ; oon- sequently 'that sword of ce. . . . . . inty which would indentifide the body never fall" (051. OS-<i). The narrator. are aware that their cloud of witncuC$ has changed and can no longer ~ tru$t<d '0 rCp<. lrt . e<:u. . . . tdy On m. This aff"'l$ tht:ir . . yle, which is of",n clum. y and pror. . . . ~ted from overq. . . . lificli. tion. SOli~itous or the
reader's concurrenCC they offer br-acketed comments and inter- jection, and ask many rhetorical questions. An aon""phe", of aftermath pervad. . 1. 3, which approximates in some plac. . to an edilN ttan><;;ripli<)n. For example the sentence 055. 30-056. 19 oould ~ Clarified hy ~ginning at 'all' (055. ]]) and ignoring the subordinate dause 'whereby . . . b;l,wl'. Note the editors' ;"""'tion of the missing 'aby. . ' at 056. "".
In I. t-2 m i, involved in tangible human activities, building, drinking, walking and visiting theatre? . But a. we pl"Ol:ttd hi. ltC_ c. . . . ibi! i'y I. . . . . ,no and he bcc<lmes more static and g<>dlikc. He -=no u leep, being perhaps engrossed by mrobl activity beyond our compr<:ben. ion. EncapSulated by a mounting profusion of
wall. and mysteries, and treated with similarly mounting awe and ",verence, he i. finally lost to sight in 1. + This follow$ a seri. . . of encounters in whicb variou. antagooi. ", chlI. llenge him, "Sta- b~. hi"i an . . . <;:alation of phy. ical violence.
i
? . 8 The Sigla or Fitmqam Wake
The unifyi"3 ,heme of I. } wao bad w. . a. her; thaI of 1. 4 is exile. It ,Ulru wi. h an Egyptian Ii"" in the Dublin ~oo and end, wi. h the captiv. JCW1 in Bahylon_ The IA narTaton are less didae<ic than thMc of Ll_The "ylc is intermediate between . he leading argument ofthe manuocripl editors and 'he neutral iflar-gdy nega- live conjectures ofthe ocientific paleogrnph. . . of ! . ~. In Ihe open_ i"3 paRes they oontinw: to claboTate direCtly On 'heir Quarry,
De. pi'e the Viconian alignment of lbefour book. Ihis i. the part " f FWmoS! ostensibly connected wi,h burial. m may b e . Pharaoh, for he i. nnbalmed (078. 06), or he may . imply be immobile like William III', Statue " n College Green (07P~). Probably more relevant is the allu";"n to the f. . . -tilizinR monolith on the grave (076. }4-~) in ooonection with the vegecotion deities di.
? The Decline or m
I. l contrUrs wilh 1. 1. The style i. civilized and stilled, it in, iotJ
O(l vull! :arity with Victorian squeo. mi. hn," and abound. in "'"tin constructions and euphemi. ms. For example: 'royalty was announced by ntnru;r ro have been pleued ro have halted ic. elf', 'the lileral 11m. . of which d = c y can . afely $Ca"cdy hint', 'a re, spo::rablc prominently connected r. now of lro-Europeo. n ">CCn'
dAnces with welldre. . ed ideo. . who kntw the correct thinll;", '10 be exquisitely punctilious abow Ih. m'. It i. fairly easy reading in comparison with tbe 'n t of FW.
The chapter begin. in the afternoon of . . golden age, 'jUS! when """" chalked haUtraps' (030. 05). Enoo, son of Seth, WlI. ' regarded by the kabhalists as ? greare, nu. gician than any before him :" pre' . um. ably he is chalking circles ro cQmpd the spirits. lne Pbo<:nix Park appeou in a mo,"" urhane "'peeI, with gardening and hurno. n
in . . pa. . . . g. from 111. 3 (481. 12- 15):
commingnownfrom the uphal' [(, the concrete, from \h. hum. an hi. torie brute, Finn. . n F"yn. "n, <>CCcanyciivcd, to . his same vulganizcd hilbir from yours, Mr Tupling Tnun of Morning de H. ightJ, with his laVllSl How- and hi. ram' blina- undcrgroand.
The relation orthe hun. er to the town,dwdler i. ,hat inward my. tery of U{y. . . . , paternity, which may he actual (Uly~ and Tdema. ;:hu. ), spiritual (God and resu. ), literary (Shakcspe&r<: and Haml. ! ) or psychological (Bloom and Stephen). The 111. 3 pas- sage "dds 'We speak of Gun, the farth. ,. . And in th. locative. Bapl Hapl' VI. Rl3. 71 h;u 'hap_ father'. The word, according 10 Sir John Lubbock, is from the Kocch language of Northeast Bengal. "
Mr Hart" hI;, . ! >own that the patronymic 'Eorwickcr' occurs at Sidl. . ham in the Hundred of Manhood, West Sussex. Perhaps il connotes ears ofwhea! : William Earwi<:ker'. snv? ? tone there ditplay. two. BUI in FW an ? orwickcr is fortmO$t one who traps
artifacts incvid(:ncc. Eventually
by diverse ramification. of humanity.
w.
at(:lin the city centre, thronged The differencc berw<en Finn. gan and EacwickCT i? ? piphanizcd
"A. E- '110m:, n. , H;iy Kob6. >. . . . (N. . . Yori<, Uom",rty 1I<d. [\)60), '95-6.
n. , 0. ;,;. '" Civili",,';". . J,. . . Prino'_ c-t. . _ . ,. M _ mono, 0>-= ,110), 3>6.
I~L<a>a--
M
(
~ "The ~ <I Si<ll<>ban>',;" A W. . u D? <<', <d. . ". OiY< Hart . . d F<i,. S<nn (Sydney Uol,"""", PI:-<st . gM), ,. - ,.
The Decline of m 15
? ~arwiJ:'. Wh~n m mcctl the King he carri~ a de~ice employed forthisp~,aninvertedplanrpol. ""aItick. HyntemOon, an earwiucr il himself an earwig, and then, any inJect. Why lhould""rwi"qualify particularly for adD! illion into the 1Th:om. pia? Th~ir. . -t. trikinBfe. cuui. aplirofforcepi('07. 11). Mal? colm Burr" lA Y'thar urwiS' 'irupire drtad in ! lit mind' of the lu~ntiliouo,and il ilI. his i"'tturnenl ? ? th, end of too. linuous body and their habi, of bol,;"g imo dad: holn and crtvices that
hat lt d to the w;. ;t",prlOId <>orion llIlol they a", apt to elller th~ human CIf wirh fatal fe. ulu. From tlli' belief arose Our familillr
nam. c,which~nfintinAna. . . . Sa~onuIOIrcwicp,theo. erond half ofwhich ;, an old verb . . ,hich . . ,,,,ivct in Ill<: words wiale,
. . . . . "Ie, wriUle, m""nil\i quid: mov<mrnr. '
Fit' f' e<juendy mentions m? , ean and in the norebool. . . uch
lIeM. alizatiOf>l; as the: followina occur:
VI. B? S? ln: m his KOOd exr
mdeafI. Taub VI. II. '5? IH: m car A Imell 111
,,~'" t::louch -IliBhl
But the approprialion oi ocru. tI 10 'iKJa htn: ill only partly allowed in FW for, u we . halll<<, a critical differc-no< bctwccn t:: and " ill the Jood huri. . , and bad eycsisht of the (onner, and
the rever:w: a"ributes of the latter. Th. . . . , two Iysrems of correia?
tion m ay function ind. -pcndcntly : Ir il oftm as:w:rted thai m il <kaf, and this link. with hi, ' P. cch impediment. VI. 8. 36. )06 states 'm is earweak'. ~ In . . rwig hu entered Ilia audilory m""tul: O$9. l2 mcnoono 'whal lhey 100II oul of hil car'. But when " i,
Ielli. . , C rhal he is mad, he besins 'Come here, Herr Siudios. . . , 'ill l,eU yo\I a . . . . ij; in your n,' (' \11. . . - 13). II is rrcqumtly imputed 11111 m is MIld 100.
So much fortht ;nMr e. . . . Far man: ,ignificut is th( ov(rgr<1W1l pil\JUl nf King Mi""s. All the ! >C,. aru. who lransmil lhe slander ,boul m seem to be in the positiOll oi the barbe, who law undor Mid. . ' cu,lIIn. In addition 10 Ovid', vcnion we haw: Irish and Welsh kg. . . do of, kinS ""me<! Marl< or Eoclll;. ;t who had ~', eal"l. Fn)m these . au,"", may ckrive 1M attribution of rhe Plttt indignity 10 King Marl< in SCrouJ'1 Tri",," , which ,. . ,inforttl the connectionwithm We find PcnK O'Reilly{French,t-ot_ti/k,
VI. B. 1S? I'3:
? ? ? The Ikdine of m '7 'earwig') at 482. 03-5 together with Midas' g<>ld and his vile
dioease ;
- Breeze ",,[tly. Aures are ouren. Hau'~ hi' naun?
- Me da. has or orieb. Piercey, piercey, piercey, piercey! -W hiteeyelusdous and muddyhorsebroth! Pig Pursyriley!
m is nf (:(IuUe not known
?
obliged to recogni>. e almoSl embodi. . part of the . . ""nce of
Ihe mask, e. iI. 'Haroun Childeric traitsofm. . . . . . . contagiou,:someonewhohasencounteredI di. _
tin~t m will himself bee{l"'" more like m.
Al the ~ginning of 1. 3 the actors from 1. 2 are retrospectively
assessed ; many now ",hibit p<. linled m t. . . . its. In thi. Chapter di_ matic facto", an:: prominent and . ystematically detmont<: ; oon- sequently 'that sword of ce. . . . . . inty which would indentifide the body never fall" (051. OS-<i). The narrator. are aware that their cloud of witncuC$ has changed and can no longer ~ tru$t<d '0 rCp<. lrt . e<:u. . . . tdy On m. This aff"'l$ tht:ir . . yle, which is of",n clum. y and pror. . . . ~ted from overq. . . . lificli. tion. SOli~itous or the
reader's concurrenCC they offer br-acketed comments and inter- jection, and ask many rhetorical questions. An aon""phe", of aftermath pervad. . 1. 3, which approximates in some plac. . to an edilN ttan><;;ripli<)n. For example the sentence 055. 30-056. 19 oould ~ Clarified hy ~ginning at 'all' (055. ]]) and ignoring the subordinate dause 'whereby . . . b;l,wl'. Note the editors' ;"""'tion of the missing 'aby. . ' at 056. "".
In I. t-2 m i, involved in tangible human activities, building, drinking, walking and visiting theatre? . But a. we pl"Ol:ttd hi. ltC_ c. . . . ibi! i'y I. . . . . ,no and he bcc<lmes more static and g<>dlikc. He -=no u leep, being perhaps engrossed by mrobl activity beyond our compr<:ben. ion. EncapSulated by a mounting profusion of
wall. and mysteries, and treated with similarly mounting awe and ",verence, he i. finally lost to sight in 1. + This follow$ a seri. . . of encounters in whicb variou. antagooi. ", chlI. llenge him, "Sta- b~. hi"i an . . . <;:alation of phy. ical violence.
i
? . 8 The Sigla or Fitmqam Wake
The unifyi"3 ,heme of I. } wao bad w. . a. her; thaI of 1. 4 is exile. It ,Ulru wi. h an Egyptian Ii"" in the Dublin ~oo and end, wi. h the captiv. JCW1 in Bahylon_ The IA narTaton are less didae<ic than thMc of Ll_The "ylc is intermediate between . he leading argument ofthe manuocripl editors and 'he neutral iflar-gdy nega- live conjectures ofthe ocientific paleogrnph. . . of ! . ~. In Ihe open_ i"3 paRes they oontinw: to claboTate direCtly On 'heir Quarry,
De. pi'e the Viconian alignment of lbefour book. Ihis i. the part " f FWmoS! ostensibly connected wi,h burial. m may b e . Pharaoh, for he i. nnbalmed (078. 06), or he may . imply be immobile like William III', Statue " n College Green (07P~). Probably more relevant is the allu";"n to the f. . . -tilizinR monolith on the grave (076. }4-~) in ooonection with the vegecotion deities di.
