126: Radio quiz program:
126-39: First question identifies the epic hero Finn MacCool
139: Second question regards Shaun's mother
139-40: Third question seeks a motto for the Earwicker establishment
140-41 Fourth question deals with the four capital cities of Ireland
141: Fifth question regards the Earwicker handyman
141-42: Sixth question regards Kate, the charwoman
142: Seventh question identifies the twelve citizens
142-43: Eighth question identifies the Maggies
143: Ninth question concerns the kaleidoscopic dream
143-148: Tenth question is a "pepette" letter of love
148-68: Eleventh question asks Shaun if he would aid Shem in saving his soul, includes: Professor Jones on the dime-cash problem (148- 52) The Mookse and the Gripes (152-59) Burrus and Caseous (161-68)
168: Twelfth question identifies Shem as the accursed brother
Analysis of Page 126 of Finnegans Wake
Summary
Page 126 features a mixture of riddling, rhetorical questions, and playful linguistic flourishes, all centred on a mythical or symbolic figure who combines historical, biblical, and legendary attributes. The text seems to narrate a distorted biography of HCE (Here Comes Everybody), referencing his immense stature, moral complexities, and entanglements with Irish history, culture, and religion. The playful tone and absurd humour of the passage highlight Joyce's preoccupation with the intertwining of history, myth, and personal identity.
Detailed Line-by-Line Analysis
126.01-126.03: "So? Who do you no tonigh, lazy and gentleman? The echo is where in the back of the wodes; callhim forth!"
126.04-126.09: "(Shaun Mac Irewick, briefdragger...their own fine artful disorder.)"
126.10-126.13: "What secondtonone myther rector and maximost bridgesmaker...giganteous Wellingtonia Sequoia;"
126.13-126.14: "...went nudiboots with trouters into a liffeyette when she was barely in her tricklies;"
126.14-126.16: "...well known to claud a conciliation cap onto the esker of his hooth;"
126.16-126.17: "...sports a chainganger's albert solemenly over his hullender's epulence;"
126.17-126.18: "...thought he weighed a new ton when there felled his first lapapple;"
126.18-126.19: "...gave the heinousness of choice to everyknight betwixt yesterdicks and twomaries;"
126.20-126.21: "...sevenal successivecoloured serebanmaids on the same big white drawringroam horthrug;"
126.21-126.23: "...pumped the catholick wartrey and shocked the prodestung boyne;"
126.23-126.24: "...killed his own hungery self in anger as a young man;"
126.24: "...found fodder for five when allmarken rose goflooded;"
Key Themes and Techniques
Hiberno-English:
Mythological Allusions:
Irish History and Culture:
Sexual Innuendo:
Humour and Absurdity:
Page 126 exemplifies Joyce’s ability to weave myth, history, and humour into a dense and multilayered text. Through linguistic innovation and cultural references, Joyce transforms HCE into a universal figure, embodying the contradictions and complexities of human existence.
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