Letter, carried of Shaun, son of Hek, written of Shem, brother of Shaun, uttered for Alp, mother of Shem, for Hek, father of Shaun. ...

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A Word In Your Ear
How & Why to Read James Joyce’s Finnegans Wake
by Eric Rosenbloom

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Click here for Table of Contents

E X C E R P T S :
Introductory Pages
See also the introductory essay
at the James Joyce Bibliography
  The Ravisht Bride
— Brighid and the year 1132 —
(11-page 66-KB pdf file)

Or view online
  Archdruid Berkeley
& St. Patrick

— a reading of pp. 611–612 —
(9-page 66-KB pdf file)

Or view online

Buy A Word In Your Ear
from the publisher
, Amazon U.S., or Amazon U.K.

Preview at Google Books

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A Sheaf of Araby  by Eric Rosenbloom
(renewal and the sacred whore)
(17-page 108-KB pdf file)
  [view online]   [view pictures mentioned in the text]



Return to Senders
(Mother Goose in Finnegans Wake)
by Eric Rosenbloom
(6-page 104-KB pdf file)

[View online]
Published by Flashpøint, Summer 2009

“Fair, Brown, and Trembling”
(an Irish Cinderella story)



“their old one page codex book of old year's eve 1132,
M.M.L.J. old style”

(a 74-KB pdf file of pages 386–399, set in the manner of parallel gospels)

[View paged version online]
Witches Brew
(a reading of Finnegans Wake, pages 21–23)
by Eric Rosenbloom
(14-page 80-KB pdf file)

[View online]

“Hark, the corne entreats! And the larpnotes prittle.”
(a 16-KB pdf file of the Prankquean–Jarl van Hoother story,
pages 21–23, set on a single page for easy reference)

[View online]



Serapis on the Liffey
by Eric Rosenbloom


Serapis, by Georg Ebers
(391-page 850-KB pdf file)

[ Preview page 1 ]

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Mummeries of Resurrection
The Cycle of Osiris in Finnegans Wake
by Mark L. Troy


Osiris, Isis, and Horus,
by Georg Ebers
Concordance
of Finnegans Wake


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annotations by page
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Bladyughfoulmoecklenburgwhurawhorascortastrumpapornanennykocksapastippatappatupperstrippuckputtanach

“Of the first was he to bare arms ...”; and,
“a daintical pair of accomplasses”
( Vieus Von DVbLIn )


“The prankquean was to hold her dummyship ...”

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“Well, you know or don’t you kennet or haven’t I told you
every telling has a taling and that’s the he and the she of it.”
 James Joyce reciting pages 213–216, 1929
(8.5-minute 11.8-MB MP3 file
[source])

a) Delfas. b) Dorhqk. c) Nublid. d) Dalway.
 Jim Norton reciting question 4, pages 140–141
(2.5-minute 2.3-MB MP3 file
[source])

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  “Finnegan’s Wake” (the song)  

“The Ballad of Persse O’Reilly”
pages 44-47 sung by Frank Harte
on A Prairie Home Companion, March 4, 2000, Dublin
(2.8-MB MP3 file)

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ALPdrücken  
a prejudiced list of resources
useful to the reader of Finnegans Wake

 
A Shorter Finnegans Wake

Sevenly
 
The primary editions of Finnegans Wake

Finnegans Wake for Children
 

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Doodles (sigla) TrueType font:  Macintosh or Windows

Doodles

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  Hebrew (& Tarot) Alphabet   Irish Tree Alphabet  

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I rejoice in the name of earwig, said Gumbril.  —Aldous Huxley, Antic Hay (1923)

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