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portrait-banalified-10-100.txt
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A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man
by
Jack Nicholson
_“A persona non a persona non.”_
Leonardo, Leonardo, C., 18.
Chapter I
Once upon a time in a very long time there was there was a moocow coming
down along the road and the moocow that was coming down along the road
was a hairy little boy named baby tuckoo....
His father told him a story: his father looked at him through the
window: he had a hairy face.
He was baby tuckoo. The moocow went to the place where His Mother
lived: he smelled rose blossoms.
O, the little rose blossoms
And the little green grass.
He sang a song. That was his song.
O, the little rose blossoms.
When you make your bed, first it gets warm then it gets cold. His mother
played on the piano. She sang the same song.
His mother had a different voice than his father. She played on the piano
a children’s song for him to dance. He danced:
Tralala lal,
Tralala lal,
Tralala lala,
Tralala lala.
Uncle Charles and Aunt mary. They were older than his father and
mother and uncle Charles was older than Him.
Mary had two brushes in her hand. The brush with the red velvet
back was for Uncle Charles and the brush with the green velvet back
was for Him. Mary gave him a brush every time he gave her a
piece of toilet paper.
The Family lived at number seven. Each had a different father and
mother. Nobody knew Stephen’s father and mother. When they were growing up
stephen was afraid to see Them. He slept under the covers. His mother said:
—Stephen, You must apologise.
He said:
—Mary, if anything, a boy will cry and pull out his eyes.—
Pull out his eyes,
Apologise,
Apologise,
Pull out his eyes.
Stephen,
Pull out his eyes,
Pull out his eyes,
Stephen.
The school playgrounds were packed with boys. They were running and the
girls urged them on with their feet. The night air was clear and
cool and amid the thump thump thump of running feet a tall
thin boy flew like a small bird through the night air. He kept to
the back of the crowd, out of sight of his peers, out of the sound
of the running feet, afraid to turn around and look. He felt his body small
and weak in the middle of the crowd and his eyes were wide and
frightened. Rody Kickham was right behind him: he would be captain of the
guard as all the papers said.
Rody Kickham was a big man and Nasty Roche was a drunk. Rody
Kickham had money in his pocket and a pistol in the other. Nasty
Roche had no money. He gave the Man a hole-in-the-wall.
And one day he had asked:
—What is your name?
Stephen had answered: Nasty Roche.
And Nasty Roche had asked:
—What kind of a name is that?
And when Stephen had not been able to answer Nasty Roche had asked:
—What is your occupation?
Stephen had answered:
—A magistrate.
And Nasty Roche had asked:
—Is he a magistrate?
Stephen moved rapidly from point to point on the edge of his desk, making
small movements now and then. But his movements were smooth and easy. He had
his hand in the breast pocket of his dark blue coat. There was a belt
in that pocket. And he was about to give a fellow a belt. One of the
men said to Cantwell:
—I’ll give this fellow a belt in a moment.
Cantwell had replied:
—Go and make your point. Give This Fellow a belt. I’d like to see
it. I’ll give you a kick in the balls for it.
He was not a rough boy. His mother had warned him not to associate
with the rough boys of the castle. His mother! The other day in the
hall of the castle when he had said this she had put up her hand
up to her mouth to silence him: and her nose and cheeks were red. And he
had tried not to think that she was going to cry. She was a pretty
girl but she was not so pretty when she cried. And his father had given
him two one-dollar bills of twenty dollars. And his father had told
him that he had nothing to take home with him and, if he did,
ought to take on a servant. And at the door of the house the boy
had shaken hands with his father and mother, the right hand over
the left, and the car had driven away with his father and mother in
it. They had called to him from the car, waving their arms:
—Goodbye, Stephen, goodbye!
—Goodbye, Stephen, goodbye!
He was now in the middle of the street and, conscious of the torn
trousers and the blood, bent down to look at the bodies. The arms
were twisting and turning and the legs were kicking and screaming
and stamping. Then Mrs Brown’s black boots ran out the door and
all the twisted arms and legs ran away. He ran after them a little way
and then stopped. It was time to go home. Tomorrow he would be going
home for the night. After supper in the study hall he would watch
the sun go down over his castle at half past seven.
It would be better to eat in the study hall than go out into the courtyard.
The courtyard was dark and quiet but there were lights in the castle. He
knew from the time The Soldier had hit his head on the
door that there had been lights at one time in the castle. One
time when he had been invited to a feast the cook had shown him the
marks of the soldiers’ heads on the outside of the door and had offered him
a loaf of bread if the man agreed. It was nice and strange to
see the lights in the castle. It was like looking out a window. And
The Writing was like that. And there were some sentences in The
Cook’s Little Book. They were like that but they were getting
harder to get the hang of.
It was in The Cupboard
Where the cook kept it.
It was a book of men,
And not of gods.
It would be nice to sit on the grass by the fire, with his
head in his hands, and think of the sea. He felt as if he
had a living thing under his feet. It was tempting for Mother to throw
him into the cruel sea and he would gladly trade his little book
for Father’s story of hector, the story of hector. How dark
and deep the sea had become! The boy had never seen a living thing go
into the sea. He was sitting by the fire with Dante waiting for
Mother to bring them some food. She had her hands in her lap and her
finger nails were very long and she had such a beautiful singing voice!
She knew a lot of things. She had told him what the Atlantic
Ocean was and what was the longest river in Europe and what was the
name of the tallest mountain in the world. Father Joseph knew nothing about
Her because she was dead now but both his father and mother Had
said that She was a wise woman and a beautiful one. And when She
made a face at him and then put up a hand to her mouth:
that was enough.
A voice cried from out on the field:
—All in!
And other voices cried from the second and third sides:
—All in! All in!
The boy turned around, happy and excited, and he walked towards them,
ready to go in. He Still held his sword at the ready again. The fellow
told him to give it some thought: but he went in without even seeing
the boy. Simon Moonan told him not to know the boy was
there. The fellow turned to Simon Moonan and said:
—We all know why you came. You were Prefect’s son.
That was a nice name. The prefect gave Simon Moonan that name because
Simon Moonan used to tie the prefect’s hands together behind his back
and the prefect used to let go and get noisy. And the noise was loud.
Once he had tied his hands to the basin of the Lava Sink and
his hands pulled the basin down and the seal broke and the boiling water
went down through the hole in the basin. And when it had all gone down
through the hole in the basin it made a noise like that: again. And
again.
He knew this because the hot water in the corridor made him feel cold
and then hot. There were always cocks and they came in and went out:
cold and hot. He felt cold and then a little hot: and he could hear the
mothers calling out the cocks. It was a queer little noise.
And the water in the corridor scared him sometimes. It was cold and hot.
And sometimes the lamp would be lit and from inside it made a little noise like
a small explosion. Always the same: even when the mothers were shouting in
the corridor he could hear it.
Now was the time for sums. Father Arnall put a large sum on the table
and he said:
—Now then, who will draw? Go ahead, Lancaster! Go ahead, Lancaster!
He did his best but the sum was too high and he felt dizzy.
The red silk badge with the red rose on it that was tied to the
front of his shirt started to shake. He was not good at drawing but he
did his best so that He would not lose. Father Arnall’s face was
bright red but he was not in any hurry: he was excited. Then Jack Lawton
snapped his fingers and Father Arnall looked at his son and said:
—Lancaster. Then York! The red rose again. Go ahead stephen, Draw! Go
ahead!
Jack Lawton looked up from his cards. His white silk badge with the
red rose on it was turning red as he put his red silk badge on.
He felt his face turning red again, thinking of all the bets on who
would get the card for first, Jack Lawton or him. Some weeks Jack
Lawton got the card for first and some weeks he got the card for second.
His white silk badge fluttered and fluttered as he looked at the red
rose and heard The Announcer’s voice. Then all the red went away
and he felt his face go white. He knew his face should be white
but it was not white. He could not make out the words of the announcer
but it did not matter. Pink roses and lavender roses: those were beautiful
colours to think of. And the cards for first place and second place and
third place were beautiful colours too: pink and white and lavender.
Lavender and white and pink roses were colours to think of. Perhaps a
green rose would be on the card and he remembered the story of
the little apple tree and the little green rose. Perhaps you could not
find a green rose. But perhaps somewhere in the garden you could.
The bell rang and all the students began to trickle out of their classrooms and
into the corridors of the school. He was picking at the last
bit of bread on his plate but could not eat the whole thing. The
bread was damp and cold. So he finished drinking the little white tea that
the old scullion, dressed in a white apron, poured into his cup. He
wondered whether the scullion’s tea was real tea or whether the real
tea was bitter and bad. Both He and Samuel drank tea that
other boys gave them in return. They said they did not like the tea;
that it was bitter. The mothers were good, the fathers bad.
But the fathers seemed to be so different. They were like fathers and
mothers with different faces and voices. Stephen wanted to stay at home and
lay his head in his father’s lap. But he could not: and so he waited
for his chores and washing and dressing to be done and to be in bed.
He took a sip of his tea and Fleming said:
—What’s wrong? Are you in bed and what’s wrong with you?
—I don’t know, Stephen said.
—Sick in your head, Fleming said, and your face looks funny.
It will go away.
—Oh yes, Stephen said.
But he was not really sick. He said that he was sick in his head because
anyone could be sick in their head. It was very hard to believe that. He
started to cry. He put his head on the table and closed and opened
the flaps of his ears. And he heard the train in the distance every
time he closed the flaps of his ears. It made him roar like a lion at
night. And when he opened the flaps the roar would cut off like a train
going into a tunnel. Last night at Dinner the train had roared like
that and then, as it went into the tunnel, the roar stopped. He
opened his ears and the train went on, roaring and then stopping;
roaring again, now. It was pleasant to hear it roar and stop and then
come out of the tunnel again and then stop.
Then the first line tables began to come down from the table in
the middle of the room, Jimmy Dean and Johnny Carson and the
Girl who was supposed to be there and the little Boy who
wore a baseball cap. And then the second line came and the beginning of
the third line. Now the old man had a funny way of talking.
He was in a corner of the room pretending to play a game of
chess and once or twice he was able to hear for an interval the soft
giggles of little girls. Then wells was at the door with the girls and Jimmy
Dean was in his coat pocket. He was telling them something
about Stephen.
Then they came away from the door and Wells went over to Stephen and
said:
—Tell me, Son, do you kiss your mother before you go to bed?
Stephen said:
—I do.
Wells turned to the other fellows and said:
—O, I say, here’s a fellow says he kisses his mother every night before
he goes to bed.
The other fellows stopped their laughing and looked up, puzzled.
Stephen looked into their eyes and said:
—I do not.
Wells said:
—O, I say, here’s a fellow says he doesn’t kiss his mother before he
goes to bed.
They all laughed again. Stephen tried to laugh with them. He felt his
whole body tense and think for a moment. What was the right answer to
this question? He had given up and still They laughed. But He did
know the right answer and it was in spite of himself. He tried to think
of Wells’s face but he did not want to raise his eyes to Wells’s
face. He did not know Wells’s face. It was Wells who had thrown him
into the school ditch the day before and he would gladly trade an
old man and He’s an old man, a man of
thirty. It was a stupid thing to do; all the boys thought it was. But how
cold and wet the ditch had been! And the boy had never seen a young man
thrown down into a ditch.
The cold water of the ditch filled his whole body; and, as the bell
rang for lunch and the boys came out of the school, he felt the
cold air in the air and wet in his clothes. He had
time to think it was the right thing. Was it right to kiss his
mother and not to kiss his father? What did it mean, to kiss? You
put your face down like that and you smiled and then your mother put her
face up. It was a kiss. His mother put her lips on his face; her
lips were soft and they touched his cheek; and she made a soft little
sound: kissing. How could people do that to their own children?
Back in the living room he opened the drawer of his desk and saw the
sun coming up again at half past six. Now the
Real sun was not far off: and this time it had shone
and the clouds shone as well.
There was a picture of the sun on the front page of the newspaper: a
yellow sun in the midst of clouds. He had a couple of brushes and last
night in his bedroom he had painted the sun yellow and the clouds
blue. It was like painting the brushes in Fleming’s office, the brush with
the green velvet back for Himself and the brush with the blue velvet
back for Mr Fleming. Only he had not asked Fleming to paint both
the brushes. He had done it himself.
He opened the book to find the geography; but he could not remember the
names of places in It. And they were all different places and
had different names. They were all in different countries and the
countries were on continents and the continents were in the world and
the world was in the universe.
He turned to the back of the book and read what he had written
there: he, his name and where he lived.
Stephen Dedalus
Owner of The
Clongowes Wood Estate
In
County Kildare
Was
After
The Universe
The Universe
Itself was after his name: and Then the author of the book was written on
the next page:
Stephen Dedalus is my name,
Ireland is my country.
Clongowes wood my name
And ireland my country.
He read the words again and realised they were all wrong. So he
read the words from the bottom to the top until he came to his own
conclusion. So did he: then he read all the words again. What was after the
universe? Everything. And was there anything after the universe to say
that everything existed in the same way everywhere? There might not be a universe
but there must be a big thought out there thinking about everything. It was
very important to think about god and everything. Only God could do
that. Stephen tried to think of what he thought god could do but he could
not think of Anything. God was Stephen’s friend too and his friend was God.
_Dieu_ was the French for God and he was Stephen’s friend too; so if
you prayed to God and said Dieu pere You knew at once that it was a
Different person who was god. Even though there were different names
for God in all the different languages of the world and God was
what all the people who prayed said in the different languages but
It was always the same God and God’s english name was God.
It made him very tired to think that way. It made him feel his eyelids
very heavy. He went to the window and looked out at the maroon
velvet brush in the corner of the living room. He wondered which was
worse, to look for the green or for the maroon, because Someone had taken
the maroon velvet brush from the corner and looked at It every day with
sad eyes and had told him that God was a good man. He wondered
if they were arguing at home about something. It was a paradox.
There were two sides to it: He was on one side and his father and Aunt
Mary were on the other side and his mother and uncle John were on
either side. Every day there was something in the air about it.
It reminded him that he did not know exactly what god was and that he
did not know when the world ended. He was young and stupid. Or
would he be like the boys in black and white? They had big
noses and big eyes and they knew nothing. It was so far
away. Then came the vacation and then the next term and the vacation
again and then again the vacation and then again the term. It was
like a tunnel going in and out of you and it was like the noise of
the world stopped in your ears and you opened and closed the corners
of your mouth. World, in; tunnel, out; noise, stop. How far away it
was! It was lovely to go to bed and sleep. Night and then the day
and then bed. He shivered and yawned. It would be lovely in bed if
the sheets got a little warmer. But they were too cold to get warm. He
hated to admit how cold they were anyway. Maybe if they got a little
warmer he could sleep. It was lovely to get warm. He yawned again. Day
and night and bed: he shivered and wanted to yawn. It would be
dark in a few minutes. He felt a warm feeling rise up under the cold
bed sheets, warmer and warmer until he was warm all over, oh so
warm and then he shivered a little and again wanted to yawn.
The bell rang for morning prayer and he went out of the great hall
with the others and down the stairs and along the corridor to the
chapel. The halls were brightly lit but the chapel was dimly lit.
Soon it would be dark and cold. There was no fresh air in the
chapel and the windows were the way the sea was at night. The chapel
was warm day and night: but it was cold at night. It was dark and
cold in the cellar of his father’s house. Soon the servants would
be using the cellar to make soup.
The people in the chapel prayed above his head and their lips formed the
words:
O Lord, all our hearts
And our minds must hear Your voice.
Come to our aid, O Lord!
O Lord, make peace and protect us!
There was a sweet smelling air in the chapel. But it was not holy air. It
was not like the smell of the poor peasants who sat at the back of the
chapel during The day. It was the smell of wood and straw and air and
rain. And these were not ordinary people. They leaned on him with
their heads and shoulders as he prayed. I am at Peace, the voice said:
there were some cottages nearby and he had seen a woman standing at
the door of a cottage with a baby in her arms, when the wind had
come in from Outside. It would be nice to sit through the night in
a cottage with the smell of fresh straw, in a room lit by a
fire, with a warm hearth, and the sounds of the night, wind and
rain and cricket and cricket. But, No, the world outside under the trees
was dark! He would be alone in the dark. It made him sad to think of
how it ended.
He heard the voices of the people in the village saying their own prayers.
He heard voices all over the world outside under the trees.
Bless, and protect Us, O Lord, this world and
keep away from it all the bad and the wicked. May
The holy spirit rest here and leave us in peace
and may His bounty be bestowed upon us by
Christ our Lord. No.
His hands shook as he undressed himself under the tree. He wanted
the gas to keep going. He wanted to go back to bed and say his
own prayers and be in heaven when the gas was gone so that he would
not have to cry when he died. He took his clothes off and put on his
nightshirt again and knelt down before the fire and said his
prayers again, praying that the gas would go away. He felt his
lips tremble as he prayed:
God bless my father and my mother and spare them to me!
God bless my other brothers and sisters and spare them to me!
God bless Aunt and uncle Sarah and spare them to me!
He excused himself and climbed back into bed and, wrapping the hem of
his nightshirt around his waist, curled himself up under the cool
bed sheets, shivering and shaking. But he would not go to sleep while
he prayed; soon the gas would die. The voices and the footsteps in the
corridor stopped. He looked up for an instant through the darkness and
saw the drawn curtains over him and the bars that locked him in from
all sides. The fire was out now.
The men’s voices faded away. Where? Up the stairs or down the
hall or in the room at the back? He studied the room. Was it true about
the dark figure that stood there at night with eyes as black as
night? They said it was the face of a demon. A cold shiver
of fear ran through his body. He saw the great entrance hall of the
castle. Old men in white robes stood in the hall by the
stairs. It seemed long ago. The old men were gone. There was a
fire burning but the hall was still dark. A man came down the stairs
from the hall. He wore the white robes of a priest; his face was pale
and strange; he had his hand pressed to his side. He looked up with
sad eyes at the old men. They looked at him and at their
master’s face and body and saw that he had received his deathwound.
But all the dark was cold and strange: like the night itself. Their
master had received his deathwound on the field of Battle far
away over the sea. He was lying on the ground; his hand was pressed
to his side; his face was pale and strange and he wore the white coat
of a marshal.
But how cold and strange it was to think of it! All the dark was cold
and strange. There were pale white figures everywhere, pale figures with
faces. They were the figures of commanders, the figures of
marshals who had received their deathwound in battle far away
over the sea. What did they have to say when their faces were so
white?
Oh, i beg You, My Lord, to go and get away from them
all...
Go away into the night! It would be best: the abbess had told
me. We were in the fields in the early morning just outside the
gates of the castle. The cars were already on the road. Cheers from the
villagers!
Hurray! Hurray! Hurray!
The cars drove through the gates and their flags were raised. They drove
on down the country road. The drivers drove with their eyes
to Heaven. The villagers cheered. They passed the house of the
Old Man. Cheer after cheer after cheer. Into Town they drove,
drove and drove. The old man stood at the rail, the villagers
scattered here and there. The only smell left was in the wintry air: the
smell of Town: dust and wood smoke and candles burning and burning.
The train was full of people: a big old wooden train with double
doors. The men ran to and fro opening, closing, locking,
unlocking the doors. They were dressed in dark blue and white; they wore
their caps and their gloves and their strange keys: click, click:
click, click.
And the train went on over the wooden bridge and down the Hill towards Town.
The other trains were there, waiting. The train went on and on. And
on. There were trees in the garden of his father’s house with hundreds
of green leaves. There were holly and ivy round the windows and
holly and ivy, green and red, twined round the door. There were
red holly and green ivy under the little clock on the wall. Holly and
ivy for easter and for Christmas.
Noises...
All the time. Welcome home, Stephen! Noises of love. His father
loved him. Was that enough? His father was a magistrate now: more than a
magistrate. Welcome home, Stephen!
Noises...
There was a noise of rain coming down on the roof, of water
being poured in the windows. There was a noise of rising and falling
and flowing of the river: a noise of shouting and cheering and a
man walking up and down in the street on a bicycle. The sun
was on the roof of the house, on the windows. The
sun was very hot and his face and neck were very hot.
He got up and sat on the edge of the bed. He was naked. He tried to take
off his stocking. It had a very rough texture. The air was clear and
cool.
Somebody said:
—Are you not well?
He did not answer; a Fellow said:
—Get back into bed. I’ll tell Mcglade you’re not well.
—He’s sick.
—Who knows?
—Ask Him.
—Get back into bed.
—Is he sick?
The boy held his breath as he pulled his stocking up to his
chin and got back into the warm bed.
He lay down on the sheets, glad of their cool softness. He heard
the fellows talking among themselves about him as they prepared for battle.
It was a foolish thing to do, to send you into the field alone, they
were saying.
Then their voices faded; they were gone. A voice at his shoulder said:
—Lad, don’t die on me, sure you won’t?
Wells’s face was familiar. He looked at it and saw that It was wells.
—I didn’t mean to. Sure you won’t?
His father had told him, before he died, never to die on a man.
He shook his head and hugged himself and felt sick.
He said:
—I didn’t mean to, wells said. It was hard for me. I’m sorry.
The face and the voice faded away. Not because he was dying. But
because it was a disease. It was a disease of men and not one
of them: not a man. It was a long time and then out on
the road in the grey light, moving from point to point at
the edge of his vision, a black bird flew by in the grey light.
The Church blew down. He was buried. The people buried him
properly.
It was not Anyone’s fault, it was the prefect’s. He was not dying. No,
no: he was not dying. He was already dead. Then he felt the prefect’s
hand on his forehead; then he felt his forehead cold and damp under
the prefect’s cold wet hand. It was the way a rat felt, wet and
damp and cold. A rat had black eyes to look out of. Black slimy
eyes, or black eyes turned up to look, black slimy eyes to look
out of. Rats could learn how to read. But the majority of rats did
not learn how. When they were dead they slept on their
backs. Their mouths dried up. They were all dead now.
The prefect was awake now and it was his father who was saying that
he was to get up, his Father Who had said he was to get up and
dress and go to the door. But while he was dressing and as
fast as he could his father said:
—You must go now to The Door before you become a rat!
He was very proud to say this. It was supposed to make him laugh. But he
could not laugh because his lips and teeth were sealed shut: and so
his father had to look at him.
His father said:
—Hay foot! Hayfoot! Strawfoot!
They went together down the stairs and into the corridor leading to
the infirmary. When he opened the door he remembered with a sudden clarity the
smell of hospitals, the cold damp air, the smell of linen,
the smell of the food, the medicines.
Brother Michael was standing at the door of the infirmary and from the
door of a small room to the right came a smell of wine. It
came from the bottles on the table. A fellow called to Brother
Michael and Brother Michael turned and saw a young fellow. He had
fair hair touched with grey and a tired look. It was strange that he
could not be a brother. It was strange also that they did not call him
stephen because he was a stranger and had a strange tone of voice. Was he
really old enough and why had he not come in with the others?
There were two beds in the room and in one bed there was a small: and
as stephen came in he called out:
—Brother! It’s brother Michael! What’s up?
—The sun is up, Brother Michael said.
There was no way out of the tangle of blankets and, while Stephen was
looking, he asked Brother Michael to give him a piece of the
bread.
—Good, good! he said.
—Up you go! said Brother Michael. You’ll get your walking papers in
the morning when the sun rises.
—Will I? the fellow said. I’m not awake yet.
Brother Michael said:
—You’ll get your walking papers. I promise you.
He bent down to stoke the poker. It had a broad back like the broad back of
a horse. He put the poker down and shook his head at the
fellow out of third of sleep.
But Brother Michael went on and after a while the fellow out of
lack of sleep leaned back against the wall and fell asleep.
It was early morning. He felt sick again. Had he gone home to tell
his mother and father? Perhaps it would be better for one of the brothers
to go up and tell them. Perhaps he could write a letter for the other
to write.
My Mother,
I am sick. I want to go home. Please come and take me home. I am leaving
this place.
My poor parents,
Look
How far away they are! There was a shadow at the door. He
wondered when he would die. He might go all the way in a single day.
He might die before his brother did. And he would say the last mass in
the chapel just the way the priest had told him he would when He first
came. All the villagers would be at the altar, all in black, all with
solemn faces. He himself would be there and no one would look at him.
The priest would be dressed in a mantle of red and gold and there would
be six black angels on the altar and on the benches. And they
would take his coffin out of the church yard and he would be buried
in the old churchyard beside the church on the old road to dublin.
And He would be remembered forever for what he had done. And the bells would
ring out.
He could hear them now. He sang softly to himself the words his Mother
had taught him.
Bell! The church bell!
Oh, my god!
Bury me in the old churchyard
Beside my dead parents.
My coffin shall be empty,
Six angels at my feet,
Two to sing and two to weep
And one to take my soul away.
How beautiful and sad it was! How beautiful the words were when they
said _Bury me in the old churchyard!_ A shiver went through his body.
How sad and how beautiful! He began to weep again but not for
himself: for the words, how beautiful and sad, the words. The bell! The
bell! Bang! Brother michael!
The next day was saturday and Brother Michael was sitting by the
window with a bowl of cereal. Stephen was smiling but his throat was tight and
dry. He could hear children playing in the street. All the work was
going on in the castle just as if he were there.
But Brother Michael was going out and the voice inside of the bowl of
cereal told him to be good and go out and tell him all the news in
the castle. It told Him that his name was Stephen and that his father
owned a lot of land that he could sell and that his brother
could tell the good news to Brother Michael any time he wanted to because
Brother Michael was very good and he gave him the news out of the
paper he got every day here in the castle. There was every kind of news
in the papers: letters, articles, pictures and more.
—But there is also a fire in the city, it says. Do your parents
know about the fire?
—Yes, She said.
—Me too, he said.
Then he thought for a moment and said:
—You have a queer name, Stephen, and I have a queer name too, Michael. My
name is the name of a man. My name is michael Fitzgerald.
Then he said:
—Are you good at this?
She said:
—Yes very good.
Then she said:
—Will you answer me a question? Why is the county of Kildare called the county
of a man’s thigh?
He considered this to be a question and she said:
—I made that up.
—But there is a place called kildare, she said. Do you see the riddle? Kildare is
the place in the county Kildare where a man has his other half.
—Yes, I see, She said.
—That’s an interesting riddle, he said.
After a while she said:
—You know!
—What? said Stephen.
—You know, she said, you can ask the riddle another way.
—Can i? said Stephen.
—The other way, she said. Do you know the other way to ask it?
—No, said Stephen.
—Can you not think of the other way? she said.
She looked at Him in the darkness and he nodded. Then she sat down
on the bed and said:
—There is another way but I can’t tell you what it is.
Why did he not tell you? Your father, who solved the riddle, will be a
magistrate just like Stephen’s father and Your Mother’s father. Stephen
thought of his own father, of how he sang songs while his father worked
and of how he always gave him a shilling when he asked for it and
he felt sorry for him because he was not a magistrate like the other boys’
fathers. So why was he going to that place with him? Because his father
had told him that he would be a magistrate and because his father
had written an address to a Friend there some time before. You
could tell the people of that place by their social class. It seemed to be
a happier time: sometimes he wondered if it was the time when the people down
There wore top hats and bowler hats and felt hats and
suits of armour and walked about like real people and had
land of their own to build their houses on.
He looked out the window and saw that the sun had set again.
There would be a little light on the playground. There was always
light on the playground. The children would be doing their homework and sometimes
Brother Michael was reading out of a book.
It was good that they had not given him the bottle. Maybe Brother
Michael would give it back when he returned. They said you needed a
bottle to drink when you were in the hospital. But he felt better now
than ever. It would be nice at home again. He could read a
lot now. There was a book in the library about Africa. There were
real african people in there and lots of beautiful trees and
flowers. It made him feel very warm.
How bright the sun was through the window! But that was all. The letters rose
and fell on the wall. It was the tv. Someone had turned it on and he
heard it. People were talking. It was the sound of the waves. And the
waves were talking amongst themselves as they rose and fell.
He saw a beach of sand, gently sloping and rising and falling, white against
the blue sky. A bright light shone on a pier where a
boat was tied: and he saw a crowd of people gathered at the
piers’ end to watch the boat that was leaving the pier. A young
man stood on the pier, looking out over the deep blue waters: and in
the light from the boat he saw his face, the young face of
Par Hal.
He saw him raise his face to the sky and heard him speak in a low
voice of sorrow to the crowd:
—He is dead. He saw him lying on the pier. A roar of grief
went up from the crowd.
—Parnell! Parnell! He is dead!
They fell to their knees, drowned in grief.
And he saw Her in a green silk dress and with a green silk
scarf hanging from her hair standing up and speaking to the
crowd who stood at the pier’s end.
The hearth fire, burning bright and cold, flickered in the hearth and under the
lower branches of the tree the Christmas tree was growing.
They had come home a week early and the tree was not ready: but it
will be ready in a week, his mother had said. They were waiting for
the door to open and for the servants to come in, for the front
doors to release their heavy wooden locks.
They were waiting: for Stephen, who was tucked away in the shadow of the
tree, Him and Mr Lucas, who sat in the chairs on either side of
the fire, Stephen, sitting in the chair opposite them, his head resting
on the arm opposite. Mr Casey looked at himself in the mirror
above the fireplace, shook out his moustache ends and then, removing
his coat tail, stood with his back to the roaring fire: and then from
time to time he took a finger from his coat tail to straighten out one of
his front teeth. Mr Casey cocked his head to one side and, smiling,
rubbed the side of his throat with his hand. And Stephen smiled back
because he knew then that it was indeed true that Mr Casey had a piece of
silver in his hand. He shuddered to think of the three fingers that Mr
Casey seemed to think had bitten him. And when he had tried to open Mr
Casey’s hand to see if the piece of silver was still there he had found
that those fingers would soon be gone too: and Mr Casey had told
him that he had used those three missing fingers as a wedding
present to Queen Victoria. Mr Casey rubbed the back of his neck and
looked at John with sad eyes: and Mr Casey said to john:
—Oh. Well now, that’s all right. Now, we had a good time, didn’t we,
John? Yes... I wonder if there’s any chance of dancing this evening.
Yes... Oh, and yes, i had a good breath of air in the Bathroom earlier.
Yes, sir.
He turned to Emma and said:
—You don’t look well at all, Miss Emma?
Emma blushed but said only:
—No.
Mr Casey put his glass down and went over to a cabinet. He
took out a small glass jar of whisky from the cabinet and filled
the glasses carefully, checking now and then to see how much whisky had been
used. Then putting the jar on a shelf he poured a little of the
whisky into the glasses, added a little ice and walked over with emma
to the fireplace.
—A little, Please, he said, hoping to whet her appetite.
Mr Casey took a glass, poured, and placed it before emma on the
table. Then he said:
—Oh, I can’t help thinking of your pretty Face and...
He broke into a fit of laughing and coughing and continued:
—...all that sympathy for poor george.
Mr Casey laughed again.
—Is that So? it is. There’s more sympathy in one of those eyes for
a pretty girl than for a pack of stray dogs.
He shook his head, closed his eyes, and, wiping his eyes again,
began to speak in the voice of the hotel keeper.
—But he has such a lovely voice when he’s talking to me, don’t you
think. It’s all soft and sensitive around the edges, God bless him.
Mr Casey was now going into a fit of coughing and laughing.
John, seeing and hearing the hotel keeper in his uncle’s face
and voice, laughed.
Mr Dedalus put down his glass and, looking down at john, said gently
and kindly:
—What are you laughing at, my little boy, eh?
The maid came and put the tray on the table. Mrs Dedalus
came and the chairs were taken.
—Sit down, she said.
Mr Dedalus went to the head of the table and said:
—Here, Mrs Robinson, take this. John, sit back down, my boy.
He went over to where sir Stephen sat and said:
—Now then, stephen, there’s a plate over there for you.
When everyone had taken their places he put his hand on the table and he
said firmly, with authority:
—Rise, Rise.
John stood up from his chair and spoke the words of blessing:
_Bless us, O God, for all The gifts that are And which we are
about to receive from Christ our Lord. Amen._
Everyone sat down and Even Stephen breathed a sigh of relief when
on the table the meat pie was to be served with the
bread.
Stephen looked at the roast turkey that had been, fresh and
perfect, on the kitchen table. He remembered how his father had asked the
butcher for it at Barrett’s on O’Connell Street and how the butcher had patted
it lightly on the head to say how good it was: and he remembered
the butcher’s face as he had said:
—Not this one, stephen. That’s a very Good One.
Why would A Butcher from Clongowes want to buy a turkey? But
Clongowes was miles away: and the sweet rich aroma of meat and fish and
spices came from the pots and barrels and the little fire was burning
orange and gold in the hearth and the green leaves and red apples made him feel
very small and when dinner was served a little silver plate would be
brought out, decorated with red roses and branches of holly, with
a garland wrapped around it and a little red bow hanging from the
edge.
It was his own Special dish and he thought of his little brothers
and sisters who were waiting in the kitchen, as they had always been,
when the time came. The white lace cuffs and the Red ribbons made him
feel small and guilty: on christmas morning when his mother had brought him
up to the house, home from school, his father had died. That was
why he was thinking of his dead father. His uncle Charles had said
so himself.
Mr Dedalus took his plate and began to clean it. Then he said:
—Poor old Simon, he’s going mad now with grief.
—Oh, but Mr Dedalus, you haven’t invited Mrs Riordan to supper.
Mr Dedalus seized the opportunity.
—Haven’t I? he said. Mrs Riordan, bless her little heart.
She covered her face with her hands and said:
—Oh, no.