The siss of the whisp of the sigh of the softzing at the stir of the ver grose O arundo of a long one in midias reeds: and shades began to glidder alo...

The siss of the whisp of the sigh of the softzing at the stir of the ver grose O arundo of a long one in midias reeds: and shades began to glidder along the banks, greepsing, greepsing, duusk unto duusk, and it was as glooming as gloaming could be in the waste of all peacable worlds. Metamnisia was allsoonome coloroform brune; citherior spiane an eaulande, innemorous and unnumerose. The Mookse had a sound eyes right but he could not all hear. The Gripes had light ears left yet he could but ill see. He ceased. And he ceased, tung and trit, and it was neversoever so dusk of both of them. But still Moo thought on the deeps of the undths he would profoundth come the morrokse and still Gri feeled of the scripes he would escipe if by grice he had luck enoupes.

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  1. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    When I didn't join this board I didn't even know that this book existed. But if IQfy has taught me one thing, its the name of a book that I'll never waste time with in my life

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      And it’s name is the bible

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      FILTERED

  2. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    yeah finnegans is fking great

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      yep i'm now going to read it, this is incredible. thanks op

  3. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Why is this beautiful

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      jimmy didn't spend 17 years writing the book for nothin

  4. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    is it true that the whole book is just a meme to shit on pseudo-intellectuals?

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      No, Joyce spent nearly two decades writing it and destroyed many of his professional and personal relationships because of that book. He continued to constantly add things and revise throughout all 17 years and even made corrections to it after it was published. He's been on record saying that his life was not the same ever since he started writing Finnegans Wake. Dude pored his soul into that book.

      >'I haven't lived a normal life since 1922, when I began 'Work in Progress'. It demands an enormous amount of concentration. I want to describe the night itself. Ulysses is related to this book as day is to night. Otherwise there is no connection between the two books. Ulysses did not require the same amount of concentration. Since 1922 my book has become more real to me than reality, and everything has led to it; all other things have been insurmountable difficulties, even the smallest realities such as, for instance, having to shave in the morning.'

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        It’s insane to me that he wrote fricking Ulysses, took a year break, and then got back to work immediately on a book this demanding. Joyce was something else, regardless of what you think of his writing.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        It’s insane to me that he wrote fricking Ulysses, took a year break, and then got back to work immediately on a book this demanding. Joyce was something else, regardless of what you think of his writing.

        I haven't read FW but heard that a central unifying theme is what Joyce is trying to say about language. Is that true?

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          It’d be more apt to say that the language and the saying itself is a unifying theme. It’s an abundance of language and tongues to write a history of the world through the totality of the world. Language becomes a way that the world is made and remade. That’s why there are so many languages compounded and why there are so many portmanteaus. The Wake is trying to arrive at a new language in the way that Dante popularized his specific regional Tuscan, except it is a language of vastly larger scope

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            Thank you. This confirms somewhat what I've understood from following other conversations. The topic is of great interest to me but this book is way down the list of works I've lined up around this subject. I think I will understand the book when I get to it but it's early to say

        • 1 year ago
          Anonymous

          I do not really think FW has a 'central unifying theme'. The book is really about everything, it covers a wide range of themes of sin, guilt, redemption, history, sex, family, love, religion, etc. FW is Joyce going a step further from Ulysses but instead of encapsulating all of human experience in a single day he is attempting to encapsulate the entire of human history through a collective dream subconscious.

          Joyce says it like this:
          >'One great part of every human existence is passed in a state which cannot be rendered sensible by the use of wideawake language, cutandry grammar and goahead plot.'

          • 1 year ago
            Anonymous

            >The book is really about everything
            Writing included.

    • 1 year ago
      Anonymous

      >is it true that the whole book is just a meme to shit on pseudo-intellectuals?
      Unsure how valid it is but Frank Delaney said something like
      'Ulysses will take academics 100 years to understand, FW will take 500 years'.

      • 1 year ago
        Anonymous

        It's funny because there are some that will argue that the book is tied to disarming the power of language. The ambiguity of meaning triggers those that try to control language and thought and lock it down. I wonder if that take has anything to do with the statement your quoting. The transcendence of language is fascinating to me, whether it's a modern version like memetics or ancient versions like hieroglyphics, initiation rites and various other strange lost things

  5. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    Tim Finnegan lived in Walkin Street
    A gentle Irishman, mighty odd
    He'd a beautiful brogue so rich and sweet
    And to rise in the world he carried a hod
    You see he'd a sort of the tipp' lin' way
    With the love of the liquor, poor Tim was born
    And to help him on with his work each day
    He'd a drop of the craythur every morn
    Whack fol the da, now, dance to your partner
    Welt the floor your trotters shake
    Wasn't it the truth I tell you
    Lots of fun at Finnegan's wake
    One mornin' Tim was rather full
    His head felt heavy, which made him shake
    He fell from the ladder and he broke his skull
    And they carried him home his corpse to wake
    They rolled him up in a nice clean sheet
    And laid him out upon the bed
    With a gallon of whiskey at his feet
    And a barrel of porter at his head
    His friends assembled at the wake
    And Mrs. Finnegan called for lunch
    First they brought in tay and cake
    Then pipes, tobacco and whiskey punch
    Biddy O'Brien began to cry
    "Such a nice clean corpse did you ever see?
    Tim Mavourneen why did you die?"
    "Arrah hold your gob" said Paddy McGee
    Then Maggie O'Connor took up the job
    "O Biddy, " says she "you're wrong I'm sure"
    Biddy gave her a belt in the gob
    And left her sprawling on the floor
    Then the war did soon engage
    It was woman to woman and man to man
    Shillelagh law was all the rage
    And a row and a ruction soon began
    Then Mickey Maloney raised his head
    When a bucket of whiskey flew at him
    It missed and falling on the bed
    The liquor scattered over Tim
    Tim revives, see how he rises
    Timothy rising from the bed
    Said "Whirl your whiskey around like blazes
    Thundering Jesus, do you think I'm dead?"

  6. 1 year ago
    Anonymous

    finnegans wake is such a terrible book.

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