Difference between revisions of "Iggs for the brekkers"
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− | eggs for breakfast | + | * '''eggs for breakfast''' → following the images of a woman tending a fire, now we see what she's cooking → also, following the words [[Humpty]] [[shell]], [[Humpty Dumpty]] reappears, as the dreamer contemplates the eggs he (she?) will have for breakfast → breakfast signifies resurrection from the fasting one undergoes during a night's sleep |
− | + | * '''brekkers:''' the croaking company that has come to wake HCE (Joseph Campbell, ''A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake'' 42) → '''Brekkek ...''' from the Frogs' Chorus at [[Page_4|FW 004.02]] | |
− | + | ==Commentary== | |
+ | It is interesting how the deepest, most complex, most erudite cultural and historical references mix liberally (in the dream stream) with one-dimensional allusions such as Humpty Dumpty (who, prior to Lewis Carroll, was merely a four-line poem evidently referring to a cannon in the English Civil War) and Mutt and Jeff (a few pages further on). Humpty Dumpty comes back in the dream again and again, as someone who fell and was destroyed; the dreamer is obsessively stuck on this four-line nonsense poem, like a bit of a song you can't get out of your head. | ||
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+ | [[Category: Humpty Dumpty]] |
Latest revision as of 07:46, 14 May 2011
- eggs for breakfast → following the images of a woman tending a fire, now we see what she's cooking → also, following the words Humpty shell, Humpty Dumpty reappears, as the dreamer contemplates the eggs he (she?) will have for breakfast → breakfast signifies resurrection from the fasting one undergoes during a night's sleep
- brekkers: the croaking company that has come to wake HCE (Joseph Campbell, A Skeleton Key to Finnegans Wake 42) → Brekkek ... from the Frogs' Chorus at FW 004.02
Commentary
It is interesting how the deepest, most complex, most erudite cultural and historical references mix liberally (in the dream stream) with one-dimensional allusions such as Humpty Dumpty (who, prior to Lewis Carroll, was merely a four-line poem evidently referring to a cannon in the English Civil War) and Mutt and Jeff (a few pages further on). Humpty Dumpty comes back in the dream again and again, as someone who fell and was destroyed; the dreamer is obsessively stuck on this four-line nonsense poem, like a bit of a song you can't get out of your head.