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A man passes a day in early twentieth-century Dublin, in a journey patterned on Homer’s Odyssey.

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Table of Contents

Chapter 9

Portals of discovery opened to let in the quaker librarian, softcreakfooted, bald, eared and assiduous.

―A shrew, John Eglinton said shrewdly, is not a useful portal of discovery, one should imagine. What useful discovery did Socrates learn from Xanthippe?

―Dialectic, Stephen answered: and from his mother how to bring thoughts into the world. What he learnt from his other wife Myrto ( absit nomen! ) Socratididion’s Epipsychidion, no man, not a woman, will ever know. But neither the midwife’s lore nor the caudlelectures saved him from the archons of Sinn Fein and their naggin of hemlock.

―But Ann Hathaway? Mr Best’s quiet voice said forgetfully. Yes, we seem to be forgetting her as Shakespeare himself forgot her.

His look went from brooder’s beard to carper’s skull, to remind, to chide them not unkindly, then to the baldpink lollard costard, guiltless though maligned.

―He had a good groatsworth of wit, Stephen said, and no truant memory. He carried a memory in his wallet as he trudged to Romeville whistling The girl I left behind me . If the earthquake did not

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