Difference between revisions of "Windy"

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* '''windy noise:''' This refers back to '''the skirling of harsh Mother East''', that is, the shrill sound of the harsh east wind that almost drowns out the ringing of the Angelus during HCE and the Cad's encounter in the Phoenix Park (FW 035.29-30).
 
* '''windy noise:''' This refers back to '''the skirling of harsh Mother East''', that is, the shrill sound of the harsh east wind that almost drowns out the ringing of the Angelus during HCE and the Cad's encounter in the Phoenix Park (FW 035.29-30).
  
* '''windy nous:''' "And the spirit of God was hovering over the surface of the waters."
+
* '''windy nous:''' "And the spirit (nous) of God was hovering over the surface of the waters."

Latest revision as of 08:31, 1 January 2024

  • Wyndham Lewis: British author and literary critic. His Time and Western Man (1927) is highly critical of Ulysses for being a time-centred work. Lewis regarded the three dimensions of space as real in a Platonic sense, whereas time, with its fleeting Heraclitean quality, was illusion. Joyce responded by making Lewis a primary model for Shaun in Finnegans Wake. This paragraph was heavily influenced by Time and Western Man.
  • windy noise: This refers back to the skirling of harsh Mother East, that is, the shrill sound of the harsh east wind that almost drowns out the ringing of the Angelus during HCE and the Cad's encounter in the Phoenix Park (FW 035.29-30).
  • windy nous: "And the spirit (nous) of God was hovering over the surface of the waters."