Like Cisco, my early favoritism falls on Mulligan. Mulligan, I understand, is a fictionalization of Joyce’s chum from Trinity, Oliver St. John Gogarty. They actually did live for a couple days together in the old Martello Tower at Sandycove in 1904. Joyce was one of two guests of Gogarty’s and apparently left in haste following some funny business with an imagined panther and a discharged revolver. The tower, now conveniently a museum and gift shop—it’s a guess about the giftshop, but who bloody hell would be stupid enough to challenge this excellent guess—stands today. Any of youse planning a trip to Dublin , however, can stay in your own private navel of the world Martello just across the bay. Swank looking, no?
Incidentally, Oliver St. John Gogarty now has a pub named after him in the Temple Bar neighborhood of Dublin . It is far, far too touristy and you won’t find many true Dubliners in the house. That said, I have enjoyed a libation or two and some music there on occasion, including earlier this month.
Anyhow, back to Ulysses.
So, other than Buck and his all-in-good-fun mockery of the Church, what struck me in the first episode was the ever returning presence of the sea. “a grey sweet mother? The snotgreen sea. The scrotumtightening sea. Epi oinopa pontoon.” Am I the only one who thought of George Costanza while reading scrotumtightening sea? “I was in the pool! I was in the pool!” There you have it ladies and gentlemen, James Joyce on…shrinkage. This book has everything!
By the way, that last bit, the Greek gobbledygook, means “upon the wine-dark sea.” It’s from…you guessed it, the Odyssey. And it’s used, secondary sources tell me, as a reoccurring epithet in the epic. That’s epithet, not epitaph. Although, I like it in that latter sense too, as in…he died a horrible, agonizing death upon the wine-dark sea.
And then there was Haines, the anti-Semitic Britisher. How delightfully English his I quite understand you Irish are a touch sore about we English lording over your lands and keeping you in penury little speech. “We feel in England that we have treated you rather unfairly.” Do you, I say? Do you, really? Well then, you’re really quite an alright chap, aren’t you? “It seems history is to blame.” Yes.
I thank Haines alsofor giving us our first of many forays into Hamlet. He quotes in part Horatio’s warning to feverstruck pal Hamlet not to follow the Ghost toward “the dreadful summit of the cliff/ That beetles o'er his base into the sea.” There’s that sea again.
The sea! The sea! Thalatta!
“A voice, sweetened and sustained, called to him from the sea. Turning the curve he waved his hand.”
Cheers,
Alex
In a final thought of the post, anyone care to guess the character who cries out the second line in Hamlet, the line following that most tension birthing of first lines ever: “Who’s there?”
Francisco is the mate’s name. That would be the guard who is being relieved by Bernardo who startles him on the watch. Thought you’d like that Cisco.