474-77: The four old men find the exhausted Yawn on a midden heap
477-83: They interrogate Yawn
483-85: Yawn angrily reproaches his interrogators
485-91: Inquiry continues as Yawn explains his relationship to his brother
491-99: The voice of ALP through Yawn discusses HCE's indiscretion
499-506: A ghost voice through Yawn discusses the Fall
506-10: Regarding Toucher "Thom" 5 10-20: Regarding the Wake
520-23: The interrogation takes a turn for the worse and tempers flare
523-26: Treacle Tom gives his version of the encounter in the park
526-28: Issy talks to her mirror image
528-30: Matt Gregory takes over the inquiry and recalls the constable
530-31: Kate is called upon to testify
532-39: HCE himself is called to the stand and delivers his self-defense
539-46: HCE boasts of the great city he has founded and rules
546-54: HCE recounts the conquest of ALP
Detailed Analysis of Page 474 of Finnegans Wake
Summary
Page 474 continues the description of Yawn, a somnolent and semi-divine figure whose monologue has ended but whose presence remains central to the narrative. The scene blends mythic and pastoral imagery as Yawn lies on a hillock in a dreamlike state, embodying themes of storytelling, temporality, and renewal. His passivity contrasts with the approach of four figures—three kings and a crowner—who represent judgment, authority, and mythic cycles.
This page is rich in symbolic language and musical cadence, featuring motifs of sleep, lamentation, and historical echoes. Joyce’s playful use of Hiberno-English and references to Irish culture enrich the text with layered meanings and humour.
Line-by-Line Analysis
474.01
"Lowly, longly, a wail went forth. Pure Yawn lay low."
474.02-474.03
"On the mead of the hillock lay, heartsoul dormant mid shadowed landscape, brief wallet to his side, and arm loose, by his staff of citron briar, tradition stick-pass-on."
474.04
"His dream monologue was over, of cause, but his drama parapolylogic had yet to be, affact."
474.06-474.08
"Most distressfully (but, my dear, how successfully!) to wail he did, his locks of a lucan tinge, quickrich, ripely rippling, unfilleted."
474.10-474.11
"Ouze of his sidewiseopen mouth the breath of him, evenso languishing as the princeliest treble treacle or lichee chewchow purse could buy."
474.12-474.13
"Yawn in a semiswoon lay awailing and (hooh!) what helpings of honeyful swoothead (phew!), which ear-piercing dulcitude!"
474.16-474.18
"When, as the buzzer brings the light brigade, keeping the home fires burning, so on the churring call themselves came at him, from the westborders of the eastmidlands, three kings of three suits and a crowner, from all their cardinal parts, along the amber way where Brosna's furzy."
474.19-474.20
"To lift them they did, senators four, by the first quaint skreek of the gloaming and they hopped it up the mountainy molehill, traversing climes of old times gone by of the days not worth remembering;"
Themes and Motifs
Mythic and Biblical Parody
Time and Memory
Orality and Tradition
Playful Sexual Innuendo
Humour and Satire
Conclusion
Page 474 is emblematic of Joyce’s intricate layering of myth, history, and humour. Through Yawn’s dreamlike figure, Joyce explores themes of tradition, memory, and renewal, punctuated by playful language and satirical imagery. The text’s rich use of Hiberno-English and references to Irish culture ground it in a specific national identity while engaging universal themes of storytelling and human folly.
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