chap6 hades
Post on 17-Jul-2015
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“Are we all here now? Martin Cunningham asked.
Come along, Bloom” (6.8)
• Carriage seating of Cunningham, Dedalus, Power, and
Bloom
“The blinds of the avenue passed and number nine
with its craped knocker, door ajar.” (6.27)
• 9 Newbridge Ave. today
• Paddy Dignam’s house
“Irishtown, Martin Cunningham said. Ringsend.
Brunswick street.” (6.34)
• Map of the Funeral Procession.
“His fidus Achates!” (6.49)
• Latin: “the faithful Achates” (Aeneid 1:188)
• Aeneas’s friend and companion.
“Ringsend road. Dodder Bridge” (6.54-55)
• The River Dodder flows north and enters the Liffey just west of
Ringsend and Irishtown.
“Walking beside Molly in an Eton suit” (6.76)
• A short, waist-length jacket with
broad lapels and a shirt with a broad
white linen collar.
“…by the wall of the cease to do evil” (6.79)
• The motto over the door of the Richmond bridewell (jail).
• By the late nineteenth century the jail had been absorbed into the
Wellington (now Griffith) Barracks complex.
“The grand canal, he said” (6.120)
• The canal skirts the southern perimeter of central Dublin and links
Dublin with the west coast of Ireland.
“Dog’s home over there” (6.125)
• The Dog’s and Cat’s Home, on Grand Canal Quay.
• Established and maintained by the Dublin Society for the Prevention
of Cruelty to Animals.
“Thanks to the Little Flower” (6.161-63)
• “The Little Flower” is a popular name for St. Teresa of Lisieux.
“National School. Meade’s yard. The hazard”
(6.171)
• St. Andrews Boys’ and Girls’ National School
• Along Great Brunswick (now Pearse) Street.
“Antient concert rooms” (6.180)
• A hall where privately sponsored concerts were given.
• 42 Great Brunswick Street
“They went past the bleak pulpit of saint Mark’s, under the railway
bridge, past the Queen’s theatre: in silence” (6.183-84)
• Saint Mark’s Church and Queen’s Theatre (209 Pearse St.)
“Or the Lily of Killarney? Elster Grimes Opera Company. Big
powerful change. Wet bright bills for next week. Fun on the
Bristol.” (6.186)
• The Queen’s Royal Theatre advertised the Elster-Grimes Grand
Opera Company in that “Irish” opera (1862) – a melodramatic,
musical version of The Colleen Bawn.
“Sir Philip Crampton’s memorial fountain bust”
(6.191)
• Crampton was a Dublin surgeon and
who served for several years as
surgeon general of Her Majesty’s Forces.
• Stood in College Street at the west
end of Great Brunswick (now Pearse) St.
“From the door of the Red Bank the white disc of a straw
hat flashed reply: spruce figure: passed” (6.198-99)
• Burton Bindon’s Red Bank Restaurant, 19-20 D’Olier Street.
“Smith O’Brien. Someone has laid a bunch of
flowers there” (6.226)
• A statue at the intersection of
Westmoreland and D’Olier streets
where they converge at O’Connell
Bridge.
“O’Callaghan on his last legs” (6.236)
• His Last Legs (London, 1839) is the title of a brief and once-popular
two-act farce by the American William Bayle Bernard.
“Barmaid in Jury’s. Or the Moira, was it?” (6.248)
• Jury’s Commercial and Family Hotel, 7-8 College Green
• Moira Hotel, 15 Trinity Street
“They passed under the hugecloaked Liberator’s
form” (6.249)
• A twelve-foot statue of Daniel O’Connell on a twenty-eight-foot
pedestal.
• Stands in the northern approach
to O’Connell Bridge.
“Mr. Power, collapsing in laughter, shaded his face from the
window as the carriage passed Gray’s statue” (6.258)
• Sir John Gray (1816-75) was a Protestant Irish patriot, owner and
editor of the Freeman’s Journal.
• On a pedestal in the middle of
Sackville Street.
“Nelson’s Pillar” (6.293)
• Statue of Admiral Lord Nelson (1758-1805)
• In the middle of Sackville (now O’Connell) Street.
“Dull business by day, land agents, temperance hotel, Falconer’s
railway guide, civil service college, Gill’s, catholic club, the
industrious blind” (6.316-18)
• Sackville Street Upper (now O’Connell)
“White horses with white frontlet plumes came
round the Rotunda corner, galloping” (6.321-22)
• “The Rotunda” was a series of buildings that housed, variously, a
maternity hospital, a theatre, a concert hall, and “assembly rooms”.
• Where Sackville (now O’Connell) Street Upper gave into Cavendish
Row.
“And they call me the jewel of Asia, Of Asia, The
geisha” (6.355-57)
• “The Jewel of Asia,” from the light opera The Geisha.
• http://youtu.be/qRZBnI-1G-U
“Has anybody here seen Kelly? Kay ee double ell
wy” (6.373-74)
• An American adaptation from the English song “Kelly from the Isle of
Man” (1908) by C. W. Murphy and Will Letters.
• http://youtu.be/b-kB-Ytjcdg
“The Mater Misericordiae. Eccles street” (6.375-
76)
• In 1904, the largest hospital in Dublin.
• At the intersection of Berkeley Road and Eccles Street.
“In silence they drove along Phibsborough road”
(6.436)
• Part of a main north-south thoroughfare that gives into Prospect
Road beyond the Royal Canal.
“They drove on past Brian Boroimhe house”
(6.453)
• A pub at 1 Prospect Terrace, on
the corner of Prospect Road north of the
Crossguns Bridge.
“The high railings of Prospect rippled past their
gaze” (6.486)
• The cemetery in Glasnevin is called Prospect Cemetery.
“He glanced behind him to where a face with dark thinking
eyes followed towards the cardinal’s mausoleum” (6.533-34)
• Edward Cardinal MacCabe (1816-85), the archbishop of Dublin
(1879-85), created cardinal in 1882.
“Ned Lambert says he’ll try to get one of the girls
into Todd’s” (6.539)
• Todd, Burns & Co., Ltd. A department store in Dublin.
“Victoria and Albert. Frogmore memorial mourning”
(6.550)
• At the Frogmore Lodge at Windsor Castle, where Queen Victoria
had a special mausoleum constructed for herself, her husband,
Prince Albert, and her mother, the duchess of Windsor.
“Down in the vaults of saint Werburgh’s…” (6.609)
• The church on Werburgh Street is one of the oldest in Dublin.
• The original building was destroyed in 1301, then repaired and
enlarged in 1662.
“The O’Connell circle” (6.641)
• Near the center of the cemetery, a round platform of earth
surrounded by a deep ditch.
• In 1869, his remains were removed to a crypt in the O’Connell
monument, a 160-foot-tall replica of an Irish round tower.
“Deathmoths” (6.780)
• The death’s head moth has a skull-like marking on the upper part of
its thorax and is superstitiously regarded as a harbinger of death.
“Even Parnell. Ivy day dying out” (6.855)
• Parnell died 6 October 1891; on the anniversary of his death his
partisans wore a leaf of ivy in his memory.
“Charley, you’re my darling” (6.888)
• After the Scottish folk song “Charlie Is My Darlin’”
• http://youtu.be/gRChiJAw5tM
“Robert Emmet was buried here by torchlight,
wasn’t he?” (6.977-78)
• Robert Emmet (1778-1803), an Irish patriot who attempted to get
Napoleon’s assistance for an Irish uprising.
“Were is that Parsee tower of silence? Eaten by
birds. (6.987)
• After the Parsi custom of exposing the dead in towers.
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