Difference between revisions of "Bidimetoloves"

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m (Link to "A first-draft version of Finnegans wake")
m (Broken link)
 
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* '''Biddy Doran:''' the Earwickers' hen
 
* '''Biddy Doran:''' the Earwickers' hen
** [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/JoyceColl/JoyceColl-idx?type=turn&entity=JoyceColl001600160164 Third Census of Finnegans Wake]
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** [http://digicoll.library.wisc.edu/cgi-bin/JoyceColl/JoyceColl-idx?type=turn&id=JoyceColl.GlasheenFinnegans&entity=JoyceColl.GlasheenFinnegans.p0164&isize=L&q1=Biddy%20Doran Third Census of Finnegans Wake]
  
 
* '''Biddy O'Brien:''' a character in the ballad ''[[Finnegan's Wake]]''; it is the fight between Biddy O'Brien and Maggy O'Connor that sets off the riot at Tim Finnegan's wake, during which a splash of whisky revives his dead body
 
* '''Biddy O'Brien:''' a character in the ballad ''[[Finnegan's Wake]]''; it is the fight between Biddy O'Brien and Maggy O'Connor that sets off the riot at Tim Finnegan's wake, during which a splash of whisky revives his dead body

Latest revision as of 15:34, 10 April 2010

  • Bid me to live: Robert Herrick (1591-1674), To Anthea, Who May Command Him Anything, in Hesperides (1648), lines 1-2: "Bid me to live, and I will live/ Thy Protestant to be" → Herrick's cavalier love-lyric was set to music by John L. Hatton (1809-86)
    • Ulysses 614.33: "Bid me to live and I will live thy protestant to be"
  • pity me to love
  • Biddy O'Brien: a character in the ballad Finnegan's Wake; it is the fight between Biddy O'Brien and Maggy O'Connor that sets off the riot at Tim Finnegan's wake, during which a splash of whisky revives his dead body