Panther monster.
From FinnegansWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search- Pater noster, or "Our Father", from the Latin version of the Lord's Prayer. The prayer is continued in the subsequent phrase, Send leabarrow loads amorrow.
- Some researchers intepret apocryphal, Greek and Talmudic sources as suggesting that Panther is the name of Jesus' biological father, a Roman centurion. (Jesus/Yeshu, Pandera/Panther)
- Cf. the black panther in "Ulysses"; it starts as a dream Haines had, but during the book it's more and more identified with Bloom (also a paternal figure); e.g. at the end of "Scylla and Charybdis": A dark back [Bloom's] went before them. Step of a pard; and when Bloom calls Stephen at the and of "Circe", Stephen groans: "Who? Black panther vampire"