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Molly’s nickname for Bloom.

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Sir John Rogerson’s quay is a street and quay in Dublin on the south bank of the Liffey between City Quay in the west and Britain Quay. Formerly part of Dublin Port, it has some of the few remaining campshire warehouses in Dublin.

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Bloom’s pen name.

PROPOSED SUGGESTION: A possible link to the chapter and theme of the ‘lotus eaters’, as well as a play on his own name, ‘Bloom’ – like a flower in bloom.

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Maud Gonne, WB Yeats' lover, wrote a pamphlet urging young Irish women not to consort with the soldiers of the enemy.

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Italian: “sweet doing nothing.”

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Gaelic: a common Irish toast meaning “health!”

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very cheap stew.

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German: Enough!

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Reference to William Blake’s The Book of Los. Los, the creator embodies creative imagination. In Blake’s Milton, a Poem he writes “For every Space larger than a red Glouble of Man’s blood/Is visionary and is created by the Hammer of Los.” Stephen puns (silently) on “visionary” and “visible”: Los created the visible world.

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The inescapable nature of what we can see.

The exact phrase has not been located, but it probably comes from Joyce’s translation of the French Aristotle. Each sense perceives particularly by means of the sensible qualities of the bodies perceived: hearing through sound, taste through savor, smell through odor, touch through weight, temperature, hardness/softness. Sight (in concert with the mind) perceives through color, which lies at the boundary of determined bodies. Stephen is contemplating (through Aristotle) the inescapability of the material world–in particular that aspect of it which is perceptible through the sense of sight.

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