We completed chapter 3 of book 3, with "Mattahah! Marahah! Luahah! Joahanahanahana!" (554.10)
(We have one more chapter in book 3 and just one chapter in book 4. So 74 more pages to go till we say 'good bye' to Finnegan.)
Summary of book 3 from Wikipedia:
Part III concerns itself almost exclusively with Shaun, in his role as postman, having to deliver ALP's letter, which was referred to in Part I but never seen.[73][74]
News of interest:
The Schauspielhaus in Zürich is staging the play, 'Die Toten' based on the works of Joyce (Ulysses and Finnegans Wake) wrapped within the story, The Dead, from the Dubliners. It is a fantastic play! I simply loved it.
Murray Gell-Mann, who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1969 passed away on 24, May. One of his discoveries were the elementary particles, the quarks. Gell-Mann gave the name quarks to these elementary particles after reading the sentence, 'Three quarks for muster Mark' in chapter 4 of book 2 (page 383) of Finnegans Wake.
(We have one more chapter in book 3 and just one chapter in book 4. So 74 more pages to go till we say 'good bye' to Finnegan.)
Summary of book 3 from Wikipedia:
Part III concerns itself almost exclusively with Shaun, in his role as postman, having to deliver ALP's letter, which was referred to in Part I but never seen.[73][74]
III.1 opens with the Four Masters' ass narrating how he thought, as he was "dropping asleep",[75] he had heard and seen an apparition of Shaun the Post.[76] As a result, Shaun re-awakens and, floating down the Liffey in a barrel, is posed fourteen questions concerning the significance and content of the letter he is carrying. Shaun, "apprehensive about being slighted, is on his guard, and the placating narrators never get a straight answer out of him."[77] Shaun's answers focus on his own boastful personality and his admonishment of the letter's author – his artist brother Shem. The answer to the eighth question contains the story of the Ondt and the Gracehoper, another framing of the Shaun-Shem relationship.[78] After the inquisition Shaun loses his balance and the barrel in which he has been floating careens over and he rolls backwards out of the narrator's earshot, before disappearing completely from view.[79]
In III.2 Shaun re-appears as "Jaunty Jaun" and delivers a lengthy and sexually suggestive sermon to his sister Issy, and her twenty-eight schoolmates from St. Brigid's School. Throughout this book Shaun is continually regressing, changing from an old man to an overgrown baby lying on his back, and eventually, in III.3, into a vessel through which the voice of HCE speaks again by means of a spiritual medium. This leads to HCE's defence of his life in the passage "Haveth Childers Everywhere". Part III ends in the bedroom of Mr. and Mrs. Porter as they attempt to copulate while their children, Jerry, Kevin and Isobel Porter, are sleeping upstairs and the dawn is rising outside (III.4). Jerry awakes from a nightmare of a scary father figure, and Mrs. Porter interrupts the coitus to go comfort him with the words "You were dreamend, dear. The pawdrag? The fawthrig? Shoe! Hear are no phanthares in the room at all, avikkeen. No bad bold faathern, dear one."[80] She returns to bed, and the rooster crows at the conclusion of their coitus at the Part's culmination.
News of interest:
The Schauspielhaus in Zürich is staging the play, 'Die Toten' based on the works of Joyce (Ulysses and Finnegans Wake) wrapped within the story, The Dead, from the Dubliners. It is a fantastic play! I simply loved it.
Murray Gell-Mann, who won the Nobel Prize for Physics in 1969 passed away on 24, May. One of his discoveries were the elementary particles, the quarks. Gell-Mann gave the name quarks to these elementary particles after reading the sentence, 'Three quarks for muster Mark' in chapter 4 of book 2 (page 383) of Finnegans Wake.
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