Portrait of Artist 00 Joy Crich
Portrait of Artist 00 Joy Crich
as a Young Man
BY THE SAME
A Portrait of the Artist
as a Young Man
BY
JAMES JOYCE
1^^^
NEW YORK
B. W. HUEBSCH
MCMXVI
COPYRIGHT, 1916, BY
B. W. HUEBSCH
CHAPTER I
Once upon a time and a very good time it was there was
a moocow coming down along the road and this moocow
that was down along the road met a nicens little boy
named baby tuckoo. . , .
His father told him that story his father looked at him
:
eyes.
—:
Apologise,
Pull out his eyes,
Pull out his eyes.
Apologise.
TP W w *
12]
The wide playgrounds were swarming with boys. All
were shouting and the prefects urged them on with
strong cries. The evening air was pale and chilly and
after every charge and thud of the foot-ballers the
greasy leather orb flew like a heavy bird through the grey
light. He kept on the fringe of his line, out of sight of
his prefect, out of the reach of the rude feet, feigning to
run now and then. He felt his body small and weak
amid the throng of players and his eyes were weak and
watery. Rody Kickham was not like that: he would be
captain of the third line all the fellows said.
Rody Kickham was a decent fellow but Nasty Roche
was a stink. Rody Kickham had greaves in his number
and a hamper in the refectory. Nasty Roche had big
hands. He called the Friday pudding dog-in-the-blan-
ket. And one day he had asked :
[3]
— you such a belt in a second.
I 'd give
she had said goodbye she had put up her veil double to
her nose to kiss him: and her nose and eyes were red.
But he had pretended not to see that she was going to
cry. She was a nice mother but she was not so nice
when she cried. And his father had given him two five-
shilling pieces for pocket money. And his father had
told him if he wanted anything to write home to him and,
whatever he did, never to peach on a fellow. Then at
the door of the castle the rector had shaken hands with
his father and mother, his soutane fluttering in the
breeze, and the car had driven off with his father and
mother on it. They had cried to him from the car, wav-
ing their hands:
— Good-bye, Stephen, goodbye!
— Good-bye, Stephen, goodbye !
It would be nice
to lie on the hearthrug before the fire,
leaning his head upon his hands, and think on those sen-
tences. He shivered as if he had cold slimy water next
his skin. That was mean of Wells to shoulder him into
the square ditch because he would not swop his little
snuffbox for Wells's seasoned hacking chestnut, the con-
queror of forty. How cold and slimy the water had
been A fellow had once seen a big rat jump into the
!
— All in!
Then other voices cried from the lower and third
lines :
[6]
To remember that and the white look of the lava-
tory made him feel cold and then hot. There were two
cocks that you turned and water came out cold and hot. :
—
Right. Bravo Lancaster! The red rose wins.
Come on now, York! Forge ahead!
Jack Lawton looked over from his side. The little
silk badge with the red rose on it looked very rich be-
cause he had a blue sailor top on. Stephen felt his own
face red too, thinking of all the bets about who would
get first place in Elements, Jack Lawton or he. Some
weeks Jack Lawton got the card for first and some weeks
he got the card for first. His white silk badge fluttered
and fluttered as he worked at the next sum and heard
[7]
Father Arnall's voice. Then all his eagerness passed
away and he felt his face quite cool. He thought his
face must be white because it felt so cool. He could not
get out the answer for the sum but it did not matter.
White roses and red roses those were beautiful colours
:
to think of. And the cards for first place and third place
were beautiful colours too pink and cream and lavender.
:
woolly cap. And then the lower line tables and the ta-
bles of the third line. And every single fellow had a
different way of walking.
He playroom pretending to watch
sat in a corner of the
a game and
of dominos once or twice he was able to
hear for an instant the little song of the gas. The pre-
fect was at the door with some boys and Simon Moonan
was knotting his false sleeves. He was telling them some-
thing about Tullabeg.
Then he went away from the door and Wells came
over to Stephen and said :
[9]
— Tell us, Dedalus, do you kiss your mother before
you go to bed ?
Stephen answered:
—I do.
Wells turned the other fellows and said
to :
— do I not.
Wells said :
the water had been ! And a fellow had once seen a big
ratjump plop into the scum.
The cold slime of the ditch covered his whole body;
and, when the bell rang for study and the lines filed out
of the playrooms, he felt the cold air of the corridor and
staircase inside his clothes. He still tried to think what
was the right answer. Was it right to kiss his mother or
wrong to kiss his mother ? What did that mean, to kiss ?
[10]
You put your face up like that to say goodnight and then
his mother put her face down. That was to kiss. His
mother put her lips on his cheek her lips were soft and
;
they wetted his cheek and they made a tiny little noise
;
:
he was.
Stephen Dedalus
Class of Elements
Clongowes Wood College
Sallins
County Kildare
fill
Ireland
Europe
The World
The Universe
Ireland my nation.
is
Clongowes is my dwellingplace
And heaven my expectation.
his father and Mr. Casey were on the other side but his
mother and Uncle Charles were on no side. Every day
there was something in the paper about it.
It pained him that he did not know well what politics
meant and that he did not know where the universe
ended. He felt small and weak. When would he be
like the fellows in Poetry and Rhetoric? They had big
voices and big boots and they studied trigonometry.
That was very far away. First came the vacation and
then the next term and then vacation again and then
again another term and then again the vacation. It was
like a train going in and out of tunnels and that was like
the noise of the boys eating in the refectory when you
opened and closed the flaps of the ears. Term, vacation ;
breathing the smell of the peasants, air and rain and turf
and corduroy. But, 0, the road there between the trees
was dark ! You would be lost in the dairk. It made him
afraid to think of how it was.
He heard the voice of the prefect of the chapel saying
the last prayer. He prayed it too against the dark out-
the dark was cold and strange. There were pale strange
faces there, great eyes like carriagelamps. They were
the ghosts of murderers, the figures of marshals who had
received their death wound on battlefields far away over
[16]
the sea. What did they wish to say that their faces were
so strange 1
The cars drove past the chapel and all caps were raised.
They drove merrily along the country roads. The
drivers pointed with their whips to Bodenstown. The
fellows cheered. They passed the farmhouse of the Jolly
Farmer. Cheer after cheer after cheer. Through Clane
they drove, cheering and cheered. The peasant women
stood at the halfdoors, the men stood here and there.
The lovely smell there was in the wintry air: the smell
of Clane rain and wintry air and turf smouldering and
:
corduroy.
The train was full of fellows: a long long chocolate
train with cream facings. The guards went to and fro
opening, closing, locking, unlocking the doors. They
were men in dark blue and silver; they had silvery
whistles and their keys made a quick music : click, click :
click, click.
And flat lands and past the
the train raced on over the
Hill of Allen. The telegraph poles were passing, pass-
ing. The train went on and on. It knew. There were
lanterns in the hall of his father's house and ropes of
green branches. There were holly and ivy round the
[17]
pierglass and holly and ivy, green and red, twined round
the chandeliers. There were red holly and green ivy
round the old portraits on the walls. Holly and ivy for
him and for Christmas.
Lovely . . .
Noises . . .
— Quick march !
Hayfoot ! Strawf oot !
[20]
There were two beds in the room and in one bed there
was a fellow and when they went in he called out
: :
Dear Mother,
Iam sick. I want to go home. Please come and
take me home. I am in the infirmary.
Your fond son,
Stephen.
[21]
How far away they were! There was cold sunlight
outside the window. He wondered if he would die.
You could die just the same on a sunny day. He might
die before his mother came. Then he would have a dead
mass in the chapel like the way the fellows had told him
it was when Little had died. All the fellows would be
at the mass, dressed in black, all with sad faces. "Wells
too would be there but no fellow would look at him.
The rector would be there in a cope of black and gold
and there would be tall yellow candles on the altar and
round the catafalque. And they would carry the coffin
out of the chapel slowly and he would be buried in the
little graveyard of the community off the main avenue
Farewell, my mother!
Bury me in the old churchyard
Beside my eldest brother.
cent and always told him the news out of the paper they
got every day up in the castle. There was every kind of
news in the paper: accidents, shipwrecks, sports and
politics.
— Now about
it is all in the papers, he
politics said.
Do your people talk about that too?
— Yes, Stephen said.
— Mine he too, said.
Then he thought for a moment and said:
— You have a queer name, Dedalus, and have a queer I
name too, Athy. My name is the name of a town. Your
name is like Latin.
Then he asked :
Why did he not tell it His father, who kept the race-
?
nice. The fire rose and fell on the wall. It was like
waves. Someone had put coal on and he heard voices.
They were talking. It was the noise of the waves. Or
the waves were talking among themselves as they rose
and fell.
[25]
— He dead. We saw him lying upon the catafalque.
is
— No.
Mr Dedalus dropped his coat tails and went over to
the sideboard. He brought forth a great stone jar of
whisky from the locker and filled the decanter slowly,
bending now and then to see how much he had poured
in. Then replacing the jar in the locker he poured a
little of the whisky into two glasses, added a little water
— . . .
manufacturing that champagne for those
fellows.
Mr Dedalus laughed loudly.
[27]
— Is it Christy? he said. There's more cunning in
one of those warts on his bald head than in a pack of
jack foxes.
He inclined his head, closed his eyes, and, licking his
lips profusely, began to speak with the voice of the
hotel keeper.
— And he has such a soft mouth when he 's speaking
to you, don't you know. He's very moist and watery
about the dewlaps, God bless him.
Mr Casey was still struggling through his fit of cough-
ing and laughter. Stephen, seeing and hearing the hotel
keeper through his father's face and voice, laughed.
Mr Dedalus put up his eyeglass and, staring down at
him, said quietly and kindly :
my hearty.
He looked round to where Uncle Charles sat and said :
— Now then, sir, there 's a bird here waiting for you.
When all had taken their seats he laid his hand on the
cover and then said quickly, withdrawing it :
— Now, Stephen.
Stephen stood up in his place to say the grace before
meals :
[30]
humility to pray to our Maker and not to hear election
addresses.
— Dante said again. They are
It is religion, right.
They must direct their flocks.
— And preach from the
politics asked ^Ir altar, is it ?
Dedalus.
— Certainly, said Dante. a question of public
It is
— For pity sake and for pity sake let us have no po-
litical discussion on this day of all days in the year.
— Quite ma'am, said Uncle Charles. Now
right,
Simon, that's quite enough now. Not another word now.
— Yes, said Mr Dedalus quickly.
yes,
He uncovered the dish and said
— Now then, who for boldly
:
more turkey
's ?
[31]
— Too bad Too bad said Uncle Charles.
! !
coldly.
— Woe be to the man by whom the scandal cometh!
said Mrs Riordan. It would he better for him that a
millstone were tied about his neck and that he were cast
into the depths of the sea rather than that he should
scandalise one of these, my least little ones. That is the
language of the Holy Ghost.
—
And very bad language if you ask me, said Mr
Dedalus coolly.
—
Simon Simon said Uncle Charles. The boy.
! !
—
Yes, yes, said Mr Dedalus. I meant about the
. . I was thinking about the bad language of that
.
[32]
had better eat it myself because I'm not well in my
health lately.
He winked at Stephen and, replacing the dish-cover,
began to eat again.
There was a silence while he ate. Then he said :
[33]
— Really, Simon, you should not speak that way be-
fore Stephen. It's not right.
— 0, he 11 remember all this when he grows up, said
Dante hotly — the language he heard against God and
religion and priests in his own home.
— Let him remember too, cried Mr Casey to her from
across the table, the language with which the priests and
the priests' pawns broke Parnell's heart and hounded
him into his grave. Let him remember that too when he
grows up.
— Sons of bitches cried Mr Dedalus. When he was
!
— Tell me, did I tell you that story about a very fa-
mous spit?
[34]
— You did not, John, said Mr Dedalus.
— Why then, said
Casey, Mr
a most instructiveit is
story. It
happened not long ago in the county Wicklow
where we are now.
He broke off and, turning towards Dante, said with
quiet indignation :
flushing.
'Mr Dedalus, still crooning and swaying his head, began
to sing in a grunting nasal tone :
[37]
— Jesus, Mary and Joseph! says she. I'm blinded!
I'm blinded and drownded!
He stopped in a fit of coughing and laughter, re-
peating :
and so was Dante too 'for one night at the band on the
esplanade she had hit a gentleman on the head with her
umbrella because he had taken off his hat when the band
played God save the Queen at the end.
Mr Dedalus gave a snort of contempt.
— Ah, John, he said. It is true for them. We are an
unfortunate priestridden race and always were and al-
[38].
— A bad business A bad business
! !
Mr Dedalus repeated :
— Right Right!
They were always right
! God and !
Fleming asked:
— But why did they run away, us tell t
— know
I why, Cecil Thunder Because they had said.
f ecked cash out of the rector room. 's
[41]
— Tell us why.
— was told not
I to, "Wells said.
— 0, go Wells, on, all said. You might tell us. We
won't let it out.
itby the smell. And that's why they ran away, if you
want to know.
And the fellow who had
spoken first said :
the fellow had swung gently and had given off a weak
it
sour smell. And then when all were vested he had stood
holding out the boat to the rector and the rector had
[42]
put a spoonful of incense in and it had hissed on the
red coals.
The fellows were talking together in little groups here
and there on the playground. The fellows seemed to
him to have grown smaller that was because a sprinter
:
[43]
— him?
— Why he in
Is it ?
— Caught?
— What doing?
Athy said:
— Smugging.
All the fellows were silent : and Athy said :
drawing :
lows did?
— I won't come back, see I do, Cecil Thunder
if said.
Three days' silence in the refectory and sending us up
for six and eight every minute.
— Yes, said Wells. And old Barrett has a new way
of twisting the note so that you can't open it and fold
it again to see how many ferulae you are to get. I won't
come back too.
— Yes, said Cecil Thunder, and the prefect of studies
was in second of grammar this morning.
— Let us get up a rebellion, Fleming said. Will we ?
All the fellows were silent. The air was very silent
and you could hear the cricket bats but more slowly than
before :
pick, pock.
Wells asked:
— What going to be done them?
is to
— Simon Moonan and Tusker are going to be flogged,
Athy said, and the fellows in the higher line got their
choice of flogging or being expelled.
— And which are they taking? asked the fellow who
had spoken first.
— All are taking expulsion except Corrigan, Athy an-
swered. He going to be flogged by Mr Gleeson.
's
[46]
— I wouldn^t like to be Simon Moonan and Tusker,
Cecil Thunder said. But I don't believe they will be
spot.
Wells rubbed himself and said in a crying voice :
a sound to hear but if you were hit then you would feel
a pain. The pandybat made a sound too but not like
that. The fellows said itwas made of whalebone and
leather with lead inside : and he wondered what was the
pain like. There were different kinds of sounds. A
long thin cane would have a high whistling sound and he
wondered what was that pain like. It made him shivery
to think of it and cold: and what Athy said too. But
what was there to laugh at in it ? It made him shivery :
but that was because you always felt like a shiver when
you let down your trousers. It was the same in the
bath when you undressed yourself. He wondered who
had to let them down, the master or the boy himself.
how could they laugh about it that way?
He looked at Athy 's rolled-up sleeves and knuckly inky
hands. lie had rolled up his sleeves to show how Mr
147]
Gleeson would roll up his sleeves. But Mr Gleeson had
round shiny cuffs and clean white wrists and fattish
white hands and the nails of them were long and pointed.
Perhaps he pared them too like Lady Boyle. But they
were terribly long and pointed nails. So long and cruel
they were though the white fattish hands were not cruel
but gentle. And though he trembled with cold and
fright to think of the cruel long nails and of the high
whistling sound of the cane and of the chill you felt at
the end of your shirt when you undressed yourself yet
he felt a feeling of queer quiet pleasure inside him to
think of the white fattish hands, clean and strong and
gentle. And he thought of what Cecil Thunder had
said; that Mr Gleeson would not flog Corrigan hard.
And Fleming had said he would not because it was best
of his play not to. But that was not why.
A voice from far out on the playground cried :
— All in!
And other voices cried :
— All All
in! in!
During the writinglesson he sat with his arms folded,
listening to the slow scraping of the pens. Mr Harford
went to and fro making little signs in red pencil and
sometimes sitting beside the boy to show him how to
hold his pen. He had tried to spell out the headline for
himself though he knew already what it was for it was
the last of the book. Zeal without prudence is like a
ship adrift. But the lines of the letters were like fine
invisible threads and it was only by closing his right eye
tight tight and staring out of the left eye that he could
make out the full curves of the capital.
But Mr Harford was very decent and never got into a
wax. All the other masters got into dreadful waxes.
[48]
But why were they to suffer for what fellows in the
higher line did? Wells had said that they had drunk
some of the altar wine out of the press in the sacristy
and that had been found out who had done it by the
it
Then he asked the next boy and the next and the next.
Nobody knew. Father Arnall became very quiet, more
and more quiet as each boy tried to answer it and could
not. But his face was black looking and his eyes were
staring though his voice was so quiet. Then he asked
Fleming and Fleming said that that word had no plural.
Father Arnall suddenly shut the book and shouted at
him:
— Kneel out there in the middle of the class. You
are one of the idlest boys I ever met. Copy out your
themes again the rest of you.
Fleming moved heavily out of his place and knelt be-
tween the two last benches. The other boys bent over
their theme-books and began to write. A silence filled
[50]
the classroom and Stephen, glancing timidly at Father
Amall's dark face, saw that it was a little red from the
wax he was in.
Was that a sin for Father Arnall to be in a wax or
was he allowed to get into a wax when
the boys were
idle because that made them study better or was he only
Jesuits. That was called the order and he had heard his
:
father say that they were all clever men. They could
all have become high-up people in the world if they had
— Fleming, sir.
— Hoho, Fleming! An of course. idler I can see
it in your eye. Why is he on his knees, Father Ar-
nall?
.
— He wrote a bad Latin theme. Father Arnall said,
and he missed the in grammar.
all
— Of course he did!questions
cried the prefect of studies, of
course he did ! A bom idler ! I can see it in the corner
of his eye.
He banged his
pandybat down on the desk and cried :
^YBy six.
— Other hand !
[52]
He poked one of the boys in the side with the pandy-
bat, saying :
[53]
ing through the glasses. Why did he say he knew that
trick?
— Lazy idle little loafer ! cried the prefect of studies.
Broke my glasses! An old schoolboy trick! Out with
your hand this moment !
Stephen closed his eyes and held out in the air his
trembling hand with the palm upwards. He felt the
prefect of studies touch it for a moment at the fingers
to straighten it and then the swish of the sleeve of the
soutane as the pandybat was lifted to strike. hot A
burning stinging tingling blow like the loud crack of a
broken stick made his trembling hand crumple together
like a leaf in the fire: and at the sound and the pain
— said.
— Very much, Stephen
I wouldn^t stand Fleming repeated, from Baldy-
it,
washed clothes.
He had reached the door and, turning quickly up to
the right, walked up the stairs; and, before he could
make up his mind to come back, he had entered the low
dark narrow corridor that led to the castle. And as he
crossed the threshold of the door of the corridor he saw,
without turning his head to look, that all the fellows
were looking after him as they went filing by.
He passed along the narrow dark corridor, passing
little doors that were the doors of the rooms of the com-
— Come in !
— 0!
Then he smiled and said:
— Well, we broke our glasses we must write home
if
for a new pair.
— wrote home, said Stephen, and Father Amall
I sir,
said am not
I to they come.
— Quite right study
till
— Yes?
— Father Dolan came in today and pandied me be-
cause I was not writing my theme.
The rector looked at him in silence and he could feel
the blood rising to his face and the tears about to rise
to his eyes.
The rector said :
— No, sir.
— well then, said the Father Dolan did not
rector.
understand. You can say that I excuse you from your
lessons for a few days.
Stephen said quickly for fear his trembling would
prevent him :
— Hurroo 1
[631
They caught their caps and sent them up again spin-
ning skyhigh and cried again;
— Hurroo ! Hurroo !
— Hurroo !
thing kind for him to show him that he was not proud.
The air was soft and grey and mild and evening was
coming. There was the smell of evening in the air, the
smell of the fields in the country where they digged up
turnips to peel them and eat them when they went out
for a walk to Major Barton's, the smell there was in the
little wood beyond the pavilion where the gallnuts were.
[64]
CHAPTER II
[73]
A ringletted girl stood on tiptoe to peer at the picture
and said softly :
[741
— Is that Josephine ?
The old bustling woman answered cheerily from the
fireplace :
feebly.
He was sitting in the midst of a children's party at
Harold's Cross. His silent watchful manner had grown
upon him and he took little part in the games. The
children, wearing the spoils of their crackers, danced
and romped noisily and, though he tried to share their
merriment, he felt himself a gloomy figure amid the gay
cocked hats and sunbonnets.
But when he had sung his song and withdrawn into a
snug corner of the» room he began to taste the joy of
his loneliness. The mirth, which in the beginning of
the evening had seemed to him false and trivial, was like
a soothing air to hin>, passing gaily by his senses, hiding
from other eyes the feverish agitation of his blood while
through the circling of the dancers and amid the music
and laughter her glance travelled to his comer, flatter-
ing, taunting, searching, exciting his heart.
In the hall the children who had stayed latest were
putting on their things: the party was over. She had
thrown a shawl about her and, as they went together
[75]
towards the tram, sprays of her fresh warm breath flew
gaily above her cowled head and her shoes tapped
blithely on the glassy road.
It was the last tram. The lank brown horses knew it
and shook their bells to the clear night in admonition.
The conductor talked with the driver, both nodding often
in tlie green light of the lamp. On the empty seats of
the tram were scattered a few coloured tickets. No
sound of footsteps came up or down the road. No sound
broke the peace of the night save when the lank brown
horses rubbed their noses together and shook their bells.
They seemed to listen, he on the upper step and she
on the lower. She came up to his step many times and
went down to hers again between their phrases and once
or twice stood close beside him for some moments on the
upper step, forgetting to go down, and then went down.
His heart danced upon her movements like a cork upon
a tide. He heard what her eyes said to him from be-
neath their cowl and knew that in some dim past, whether
in life or revery, he had heard their tale before. He
saw her urge her vanities, her fine dress and sash and
long black stockings, and knew that he had yielded to
them a thousand times. Yet a voice within him spoke
above the noise of his dancing heart, asking him would
he take her gift to which he had only to stretch out his
hand. And he remembered the day when he and Eileen
had stood looking into the Hotel Grounds, watching the
waiters running up a trail of bunting on the flagstaff
and the fox terrier scampering to and fro on the sunny
lawn, and how, all of a sudden, she had broken out into a
peal of laughter and had run down the sloping curve of
the path. Now, as then, he stood listlessly in his place,
seemingly a tranquil watcher of the scene before him.
[76]
— She too wants me to catch hold of her, he thought.
That's why she came with me to the tram. I could
easily catch hold of her when she comes up to my step :
Roderick Kickham
John Lawton
Anthony MacSwiney
Simon Moonan
Of he
course, said Mr Dedalus.
will, Don't I tell
you he 's
provincial of the order now ?
— never
I liked the idea of sending him to the christian
brothers myself, said Mrs Dedalus.
— Christian brothers be damned! said Mr Dedalus.
Is it with Paddy Stink and IMickey Mud ? No, let him
stick to the Jesuits in God's name since he began with
[78]
them. They'll be of service to him in after years.
Those are the fellows that can get you a position.
— And they're a very rich order, aren't they, Simon?
— Rather. They live well, I tell you. You saw their
table at Clongowes. Fed up, by God, like game-
cocks.
Mr Dedalus pushed his plate over to Stephen and bade
him finish what was on it.
— Now then, Stephen, he said, you must put your
shoulder to the wheel, old chap. You've had a fine
long holiday.
— 0, I 'm sure he '11 work very hard now, said Mrs
Dedalus, especially when he has Maurice with him.
— O, Holy Paul, I forgot about Maurice, said Mr
Dedalus. Here, Maurice !Come here, you thick-headed
ruffian ! Do you know I 'm going to send you to a college
where they '11 teach you to spell c.a.t. cat. And I 'II buy
you a nice little penny handkerchief to keep your nose
dry. Won't that be grand fun?
Maurice grinned at his father and then at his brother.
^Ir Dedalus screwed his glass into his eye and stared
hard at both of his sons. Stephen mumbled his bread
without answering his father's gaze.
— By the bye, said Mr Dedalus at length, the rector
or provincial rather, was telling me that story about you
and Father Dolan. You're an impudent thief, he said.
— ^O, he didn't, Simon!
— Not he! said ^Ir Dedalus. But he gave me a great
account of the whole affair. We
were chatting, you
know, and one word borrowed another. And, by the
way, who do you think he told me will get that job in
the corporation? But 111 tell you that after. Well, as
I was saying, we were chatting away quite friendly and
[79]
he asked me did our friend here wear glasses still and
then he told me the whole story.
— And was he annoyed, Simon ?
— Annoyed! Not he! Manly little chap! he said.
Mr Dedalus imitated the mincing nasal tone of the
provincial.
— Father Dolan and I, when I told them all at dinner
about Father Dolan and I had a great laugh over it.
it,
[80]
ner : ami in the midst of countless hillocks of gymnasium
shoes and sweaters and singlets in untidy brown parcels
there stood the stout leatherjacketed vaulting horse wait-
ing its turn to be Carried up on the stage and set in the
middle of the winning team at the end of the gymnastic
display.
Stephen, though in deference to his reputation for
essay writing he had been elected secretary to the gym-
nasium, had had no part in the first section of the
programme, but in the play which formed the second
had the chief part, that of a farcical pedagogue.
section he
He had been cast for it on accoimt of his stature and
narrow and bony and a thin hooked nose stood out be-
tween the closeset prominent eyes which were light and
[84]
The smile waned on Stephen's face. Any allusion
made to his father by a fellow or by a master put his
calm to rout in a moment. He waited in timorous silence
to hear what Heron might say next. Heron, however,
nudged him expressively with his elbow and said :
— You're a
— Why saiddog.
so ?
sly
Stephen.
— You'd think butter wouldn't melt in your mouth,
said Heron. But I'm afraid you're a
— Might ask you what you are talkingdog.about said
I
sly
?
Stephen urbanely.
— Indeed you might, answered Heron. We saw her,
Wallis, didn't And deucedly pretty she is too.
we?
And inquisitive! And what part does Stephen take,
Mr Dedalusf And will Stephen not sing, Mr Dedalust
Your governor was staring at her through that eyeglass
of his for all he was worth so that I think the old man
has found you out too. I wouldn't care a bit, by Jove.
She's ripping, isn't she, Wallis?
— Not half bad, answered Wallis quietly as he placed
his holder once more in a comer of his mouth.
A shaft of momentary anger flew through Stephen's
mind at these indelicate allusions in the hearing of a
stranger. For him there was nothing amusing in a girl 's
interest and regard. All day he had thought of nothing
but their leavetaking on the steps of the tram at Harold's
Cross, the stream of moody emotions it had made to
course through him, and the poem he had written about
it. All day he had imagined a new meeting with her
for he knew that she was to come to the play. The old
restless moodiness had again filled hisbreast as it had
done on the night of the party but had not found an out-
let in verse. The growth and knowledge of two years
[85]
of boyhood stood between them and now, forbidding such
an outlet: and all day the stream of gloomy tenderness
within him had started forth and returned upon itself
in dark courses and eddies, wearying him in the end
until the pleasantry of the prefectand the painted little
boy had drawn from him a movement of impatience.
—
So you may as well admit, Heron went on, that
we've fairly found you out this time. You can't play
the saint on me any more, that's one sure five.
A soft peal of mirthless laughter escaped from his
lips and, bending down as before, he struck Stephen
lightly across the calf of the leg with his cane, as if in
jesting reproof.
Stephen's movement of anger had already passed.
He was neither flattered nor confused but simply wished
the banter to end. He scarcely resented what had seemed
to him a silly indelicateness for he knew that the ad-
venture in his mind stood in no danger from these words :
[86]
familiar stroke of the cane against his calf and had
heard the familiar word of admonition;
— Admit.
—Halt!
He turned and saw three boys of his own class coming
towards him in the dusk. It was Heron who had called
out and, as he marched forward between his two at-
tendants, he cleft the air before him with a thin cane,
in time to their steps. Boland, his friend, marched be-
side him, a large grin on his face, while Nash came on a
[88]
few steps behind, blowing from the pace and wagging
his great red head.
As soon as the boys had turned into Clonliffe Road
together they began to speak about books and writers,
saying what books they were reading and how many
books there were in their fathers' bookcases at home.
Stephen listened to them in some wonderment for Boland
was the dunce and Nash the idler of the class. In fact
after some talk about their favourite writers Nash de-
clared for Captain Marryat who, he said, was the greatest
writer.
— Fudge! said Heron. Ask Dedalus. Who is the
greatest writer, Dedalus?
Stephen noted the mockery in the question and said:
— Of do mean
— Yes.prose you
?
— Newman, think. I
— Cardinal Newman
Is it ? asked Boland.
— Yes, answered Stephen.
The grin broadened on Nash's freckled face as he
turned to Stephen and said :
mery and passed out through the chapel into the college
garden. Now that the play was over his nerves cried
for some further adventure. He hurried onwards as if
to overtake it. The doors of the theatre were all open
and the audience had emptied out. On the lines which
he had fancied the moorings of an ark a few lanterns
swung in the night breeze, flickering cheerlessly. He
mounted the steps from the garden in haste, eager that
some prey should not elude him, and forced his way
through the crowd in the hall and past the two Jesuits
[95]
who stood watching the exodus and bowing and shaking
hands with the visitors. He pushed onward nervously,
feigning a still greater haste and faintly conscious of the
smiles and stares and nudges which his powdered head
wake.
left in its
When he came out on the steps he saw his family
waiting for him at the first lamp. In a glance he noted
that every figure of the group was familiar and ran down
the steps angrily.
—I have to leave a message down in George's Street,
he said to his father quickly. Ill be home after you.
Without waiting for his father's questions he ran
across the road and began to walk at breakneck speed
down the hill. He hardly knew where he was walking.
Pride and hope and desire like crushed herbs in his heart
sent up vapours maddening incense before the eyes
of
of his mind. He
down the hill amid the tumult of
strode
suddenrisen vapours of wounded pride and fallen hope
and baffled desire. They streamed upwards before his
anguished eyes in dense and maddening fumes and
passed away above him till at last the air was clear and
cold again.
Afilm still veiled his eyes but they burned no longer.
A power, akin to that which had often made anger or
resentment from him, brought his steps to rest. He
fall
stood and gazed up at the sombre porch of the
still
[96]
Stephen was once again seated beside his father in the
corner of a railway carriage at Kingsbridge. He was
travelling with his father by the night mail to Cork.
As the train steamed out of the station he recalled his
childish wonder of years before and every event of his
first day at Clongowes. But he felt no wonder now. He
saw the darkening lands slipping away past him, the
silent telegraphpoles passing his window swiftly every
four seconds, the glimmering stations, manned by a
little
''
'Tis youth and folly
Makes young men marry,
So here, my love, 1 11
No longer stay.
What can 't be cured, sure,
Must be injured, sure.
So I'll go to Amerikay.
* '
My love she 's handsome.
My love she bony
's :
all-yous.
— Do think sot asked Mr Dedalus.
— you said Stephen.
I like it,
— a pretty old said Mr Dedalus, twirling the
It's air,
points of his moustache. Ah, but you should have heard
Mick Lacy sing it ! Poor Mick Lacy He had little
!
[103]
an echo of the infuriated cries within him. He could
respond to no earthly or human appeal, dumb and in-
sensible to the call of summer and gladness and com-
[104]
suit. His hands were in his side pockets and his
trousers were tucked in at the knees by elastic bands.
On the evening of the day on which the property was
sold Stephen followed his father meekly about the city
from bar to bar. To the sellers in the market, to the
barmen and barmaids, to the beggars who importuned
him for a lob Mr Dedalus told the same tale, that he
was an old Corkonian, that he had been trying for thirty
years to get rid of his Cork accent up in Dublin and
that Peter Pickackafax beside him was his eldest son
but that he was only a Dublin jackeen.
They had set out early in the morning from New-
combe's coffeehouse, where Mr Dedalus' cup had rattled
noisily against its saucer, and Stephen had tried to cover
that shameful sign of his father's drinking-bout of the
night before by moving his chair and coughing. One
humiliation had succeeded another — the false smiles of
the market sellers, the curvetings and oglings of the bar-
maids with whom his father flirted, the compliments and
encouraging words of his father's friends. They had
told him that he had a great look of his grandfather and
Mr Dedalus had agreed that he was an ugly likeness.
They had unearthed traces of a Cork accent in his speech
and made him admit that the Lee was a much finer river
than the Liffey. One of them, in order to put his Latin
to the proof,had made him translate short passages from
Dilectus, and asked him whether it was correct to say:
Tempora mutantur nos et mutamur in illis, or Tempora
mutantur et nos mutamur in illis. Another, a brisk old
man, whom Mr Dedalus called Johnny Cashman, had
covered him with confusion by asking him to say which
were prettier, the Dublin girls or the Cork girls.
— He 's not that way built, said Mr Dedalus. Leave
[105]
him alone. He's a levelheaded thinking boy who doesn't
bother his head about that kind of nonsense.
— Then he's not father's said the
his old son, little
man.
— I don't know, I'm sure, said Mr Dedalus, smiling
complacently.
—^Your father, said the old man to Stephen,
little
tapping forehead
his and raising his to drain glass it.
**
Art thou pale for weariness
Of climbing heaven and gazing on the earth,
Wandering companionless ? ..."
[110]
From without as from within the water had flowed over
his barriers :their tides began once more to jostle fiercely
above the crumbled mole.
He saw clearly, too, his own futile isolation. He had
not gone one step nearer the lives he had sought to
approach nor bridged the restless shame and rancour
that had divided him from mother and brother and
sister. He felt that he was hardly of the one blood with
them but stood to them rather in the mystical kinship of
fosterage, foster child and foster brother.
He turned to appease the fierce longings of his heart
before which everything else was idle and alien. He
eared little that he was in mortal sin, that his life had
grown to be a tissue of subterfuge and falsehood. Be-
side the savage desire within him to realise the enor-
mities which he brooded on nothing was sacred. He
bore cynicially with the shameful details of his secret
riots inwhich he exulted to defile with patience what-
ever image had attracted his eyes. By day and by night
he moved among distorted images of the outer world. A
figure that had seemed him by day demure and inno-
to
cent came towards him by night through the winding
darkness of sleep, her face transfigured by a lecherous
cunning, her eyes bright with brutish joy. Only the
morning pained him with its dim memory of dark orgi-
astic riot, its keen and humiliating sense of transgression.
He returned to his wanderings. The veiled autumnal
evenings led him from street to street as they had led
him years before along the quiet avenues of Blackrock.
But no vision of trim front gardens or of kindly lights
in the windows poured a tender influence upon him now.
[112]
It broke from him like a wail of despair from a hell of
sufferers and died in a wail of furious entreaty, a cry
for an iniquitous abandonment, a cry which was but the
echo of an obscene scrawl which he had read on the ooz-
ing wall of a urinal.
He had wandered into a maze of narrow and dirty
From the foul laneways he heard bursts of
streets.
hoarse riot and wrangling and the drawling of drunken
singers. He walked onward, undismayed, wondering
whether he had strayed into the quarter of the Jews.
Women and girls dressed in long vivid gowns traversed
the street from house to house. They were leisurely and
perfumed. A trembling seized him and his eyes grew
dim. The yellow gasflames arose before his troubled
vision against the vapoury sky, burning as if before an
altar. Before the doors and in the lighted halls groups
were gathered arrayed as for some rite. He was in
another world: he had awakened from a slumber of
centuries.
He stood in the middle of the roadway, his heart
still
[114]
CHAPTER III
[115]
— Bertie, any good in your mind
— Hello,
that you, pigeon
Is ?
?
— Number Fresh
ten. waiting on you.
is
— Good night, husband Nelly
Coming in to have a short
!
time?
The equation on the page of his scribbler began to
spread out a widening tail, eyed and starred like a pea-
cock's; and, when the eyes and stars of its indices had
been eliminated, began slowly to fold itself together
again. The indices appearing and disappearing were
eyes opening and closing; the eyes opening and closing
were stars being born and being quenched. The vast
cycle of starry life bore his weary mind outward to its
verge and inward to its centre, a distant music accom-
panying him outward and inward. What music? The
music came nearer and he recalled the words, the words
of Shelley's fragment upon the moon wandering com-
panionless, pale for weariness. The stars began to crum-
bleand a cloud of fine star-dust fell through space.
The dull light more faintly upon the page whereon
fell
another equation began to unfold itself slowly and to
spread abroad its widening tail. It was his own soul
going forth to experience, unfolding itself sin by sin,
spreading abroad the balefire of its burning stars and
folding back upon itself, fading slowly, quenching its
own lights and fires. They were quenched and the cold
:
[116]
maimed, but a dark peace had been established between
them. The chaos in which his ardour extinguished itself
was a cold indifferent knowledge of himself. He had
sinned mortally not once but many times and he knew
that, while he stood in danger of eternal damnation for
the first by every succeeding sin he multiplied
sin alone,
his guilt and His days and works and
his punishment.
[117]
pelled him from the altar they prayed at. He stooped
to the evil of hypocrisy with others, sceptical of their
innocence which he could cajole so easily.
On the wall of his bedroom hung an illuminated scroll,
the certificate of his prefecture in the college of the
sodality of the Blessed Virgin Mary. On Saturday
mornings when the sodality met in the chapel to recite
the little office his place was a cushioned kneeling-desk
at the right of the altar from which he led his wing of
His sin, which had covered him from the sight of God,
had led him nearer to the refuge of sinners. Her eyes
[118].
seemed to regard him with mild pity; her holiness, a
strange light glowing faintly upon her frail flesh, did
not humiliate the sinner who approached her. If ever he
was impelled to cast sin from him and to repent, the
impulse that moved him was the wish to be her knight.
If ever his soul, re-entering her dwelling shyly after the
frenzy of his body's lust had spent itself, was turned
*'
towards her whose emblem is the morning star, bright
and musical, telling of heaven and infusing peace," it
was when her names were murmured softly by lips
whereon there still lingered foul and shameful words,
the savour itself of a lewd kiss.
That was strange. He tried to think how it could be
but the dusk, deepening in the schoolroom, covered over
his thoughts. The bell rang. The master marked the
sums and cuts to be done for the next lesson and went
out. Heron, beside Stephen, began to hum tunelessly.
[126]
heavily upon his mind, pushing one another surily hither
and thither with slow boorish insistence. His soul was
fattening and congealing into a gross grease, plunging
ever deeper in its dull fear into a sombre threatening
dusk, while the body that was his stood, listless and dis-
honoured, gazing out of darkened eyes, helpless, per-
turbed and human for a bovine god to stare upon.
The next day brought death and judgment, stirring
his soul slowly from its listless despair. The faint glim-
mer of fear became a terror of spirit as the hoarse voice
of the preacher blew death into his soul. He suffered
its agony. He felt the death-chill touch the extremities
and creep onward towards the heart, the film of death
veiling the eyes, the bright centres of the brain extin-
guished one by one like lamps, the last sweat oozing upon
the skin, the powerlessness of the dying limbs, the speech
thickening and wandering and failing, the heart throb-
bing faintly and more faintly, all but vanquished, the
breath, the poor breath, the poor helpless human spirit,
sobbing and sighing, gurgling and rattling in the throat.
No help! No help! He — he himself — his
body to
which he had yielded was dying. Into the grave with it.
Nail it down into a wooden box, the corpse. Carry it
out of the house on the shoulders of hirelings. Thrust
it out of men's sight into a long hole in the ground, into
was too great and stern and the Blessed Virgin too pure
and holy. But he imagined that he stood near Emma
in a wide land and, humbly and in tears, bent and kissed
the elbow of her sleeve.
In the wide land under a tender lucid evening sky, a
cloud drifting westward amid a pale green sea of heaven,
they stood together, children that had erred. Their
error had offended deeply God's majesty though it was
the error of two children; but it had not offended her
whose beauty *' is not like earthly beauty, dangerous to
look upon, but like the morning star which is its emblem,
bright and musical.'' The eyes were not offended which
she turned upon him nor reproachful. She placed their
hands together, hand in hand, and said, speaking to their
hearts.
— Take hands, Stephen and Emma. It is a beautiful
[132]
evening now in heaven. You have erred hut you are
always my children. It is one heart that loves another
heart. Take hands together, my dear children, and you
will be happy together and your hearts will love each
other.
The chapel was flooded by the dull scarlet light that
filtered through the lowered blinds; and through the
fissure between the last blind and the sash a shaft of
wan light entered like a spear and touched the embossed
brasses of the candlesticks upon the altar that gleamed
like the battle-worn mail armour of angels.
Rain was falling on the chapel, on the garden, on the
college. would rain for ever, noiselessly. The water
It
would rise inch by inch, covering the grass and shrubs,
covering the trees and houses, covering the monuments
and the mountain tops. All life would be choked off,
noiselessly: birds, men, elephants, pigs, children: noise-
lessly floating corpses amid the litter of the wreckage of
the world. Forty days and forty nights the rain would
fall till the waters covered the face of the earth.
It might be. "Why not ?
— Hell has enlarged its soul and its mouth
without any limits —^-words taken, myopened
dear little broth-
ers in Christ Jesus, from the book of Isaias, fifth chap-
ter, fourteenth verse. In the name of the Father and of
theSon and of the Holy Ghost. Amen.
The preacher took a chainless watch from a pocket
within his soutane and, having considered its dial for
a moment in silence, placed it silently before him on the
table.
He began speak toquiet in a tone.
— Adam and Eve, my dear boys, were, as you know,
our first parents, and you will remember that they were
[133],
created by God in order that the seats in heaven left
vacant by the fall of Lucifer and his rebellious angels
might be filled again. Lucifer, we are told, was a son
of the morning, a radiant and mighty angel yet he fell
;
:
he fell and there fell with him a third part of the host
[134]
fruit they would become as gods, nay as God Himself.
Eve yielded to the wiles of the arch tempter. She ate
the apple and gave it also to Adam who had not the
moral courag'e to resist her. The poison tongue of Satan
had done its work. They fell.
— And then the voice of God was heard in that garden,
calling His creature man to account and Michael, prince
:
[136]
— They lie For, remember, the
in exterior darkness.
fire As, at the command of
of hell gives forth no light.
God, the fire of the Babylonian furnace lost its heat but
not its light so, at the command of God, the fire of hell,
while retaining the intensity of its heat, bums eternally
in darkness. It is a neverending storm of darkness, dark
flames and dark smoke of burning brimstone, amid which
the bodies are heaped one upon another without even
a glimpse of air. Of all the plagues with which the land
of the Pharaohs was smitten one plague alone, that of
darkness, was called horrible. What name, then, shall
we give to the darkness of hell which is to last not for
three days alone but for all eternity ?
— The horror of this strait and dark prison is increased
by its awful stench. All the filth of the world, all the
offal and scum of the world, we are told, shall run there
as to a vast reeking sewer when the terrible conflagration
of the last day has purged the world. The brimstone,
too, which burns there in such prodigious quantity fills
are overturned —
there is no thought of family or coun-
try, of ties, of relationships. The damned howl and
scream at one another, their torture and rage intensified
by the presence of beings tortured and raging like them-
selves. All sense of humanity is forgotten. The yells of
the suffering sinners fill the remotest corners of the vast
abyss. The mouths of the damned are full of blasphemies
against God and of hatred for their fellow sufferers and
of curses against those souls which were their accomplices
in sin. In olden times it was the custom to punish the
parricide, the man who had raised his murderous hand
against his father, by casting him into the depths of the
sea in a sack in which were placed a cock, a monkey and a
serpent. The intention of those law-givers who framed
such a law, which seems cruel in our times, was to punish
the criminal by the company of hurtful and hateful
beasts. But what is the fury of those dumb beasts com-
pared with the fury of execration which bursts from the
parched lips and aching throats of the damned in hell
when they behold in their companions in misery those
who aided and abetted them in sin, those whose words
sowed the first seeds of evil thinking and evil living in
their minds, those whose immodest suggestions led them
on to sin, those whose eyes tempted and allured them
from the path of virtue. They turn upon those accom-
plices and upbraid them and curse them. But they are
and it is too late now for repentance.
— Last of hopeless
helpless :
[142]
God was almighty. God could call him now, call him as
he sat at his desk, before he had time to be conscious of
the summons. God had called him. Yes? What?
Yes ? His flesh shrank together as it felt the approach of
the ravenous tongues of flames, dried up as it felt about
it the swirl of stifling air. He had died. Yes. He was
judged. A wave of fire swept through his body the first. :
— On hell.—
— I suppose he rubbed into you — it well.
— You bet he did. He put us into a blue funk.— all
— That what you fellows
's want and plenty of to : it
[143],
tercede for him! Virgin Undefiled, save him from
the gulf of death !
No
escape. He had to confess, to speak out in words
what he had done and thought, sin after sin. How?
How?
[144]
— Father, I . . .—
The thought slid like a cold shining rapier Into his
tender flesh : confession. But not there in the chapel of
the college. lie would confess all, every sin of deed
and thought, sincerely: but not there among his school
[146]
for a few moments the nature of the spiritual torments
of hell.
— Sin, remember, is a twofold enormity. It is a base
consent to the promptings of our corrupt nature to the
lower instincts, to that which is gross and beastlike;
and it is also a turning away from the counsel of our
higher nature, from all that is pure and holy, from the
Holy God Himself. For this reason mortal sin is
punished in hell by two different forms of punishment,
physical and spiritual.
Now of all these spiritual pains by far the greatest
is the pain of loss, so great, in
fact, that in itself it is
a torment greater than all the others. Saint Thomas,
the greatest doctor of the Church, the angelic doctor, as
he is called, says that the worst damnation consists in
this that the understanding of man is totally deprived
of Divine light and his affection obstinately turned
away from the goodness of God. God, remember, is a
being infinitely good and therefore the loss of such a
being must be a loss infinitely painful. In this life we
have not a very clear idea of what such a loss must be
but the damned in hell, for their greater torment, have
a full understanding of that which they have lost and
understand that they have lost it through their own sins
and have lost it for ever. At the very instant of death
the bonds of the flesh are broken asunder and the soul
at once flies towards God as towards the centre of her
existence. Remember, my dear little boys, our souls
long to be with God. We come from God, we live by
God, we belong to God: we are His, inalienably His.
God loves with a divine love every human soul and
every human soul lives in that love. How could it be
otherwise? Every breath that we draw, every thought
[146]
of our brain, every instant of life proceed from God's
inexhaustible goodness. And if it be pain for a mother
to be parted from her child, for a man to be exiled from
hearth and home, for friend to be sundered from friend,
think what pain, what anguish, it must be for the
poor soul to be spurned from the presence of the
supremely good and loving Creator Who has called that
soul into existence from nothingness and sustained it
in life and loved it with an immeasurable love. This,
then, to be separated for ever from its greatest good,
from God, and to feel the anguish of that separation,
knowing full well that it is unchangeable, this is the
. [148]
to love Him "WTio made you and to keep Ilis law. No.
You would not. And
now, though you were to flood all
hell with your tears if you could still weep, all that sea
of repentance would not gain for you what a single tear
of true repentance shed during your mortal life would
have gained for you. You implore now a moment of
earthly life wherein to repent: in vain. That time is
gone :
gone for ever.
— Such is the threefold sting of conscience, the viper
which gnaws the very heart's core of the wretches in
hell so that filled with hellish fury they curse themselves
for their folly and curse the evil companions who have
brought them to such ruin and curse the devils who
tempted them in life and now mock them in eternity
and even revile and curse the Supreme Being Whose
goodness and patience they scorned and slighted but
Whose justice and power they cannot evade.
— The next spiritual pain to which the damned are
subjected is the pain of extension. Man, in this earthly
life,though he be capable of many evils, is not capable
of them all at once inasmuch as one evil corrects and
counteracts another, just as one poison frequently cor-
rects another. In hell, on the contrary, one torment,
instead of counteracting another, lends it still greater
force: and, moreover, as the internal faculties are more
perfect than the external senses, so are they more
capable of suffering. Just as every sense is afflicted with
a fitting torment so is every spiritual faculty; the
fancy with horrible images, the sensitive faculty with
alternate longing and rage, the mind and understanding
with an interior darkness more terrible even than the
exterior darkness which reigns in that dreadful prison.
The malice, impotent though it be, which possesses
[149]
these demon souls is an evil of boundless extension, of
limitless duration, a frightful state of wickedness which
we can scarcely realise unless we bear in mind the
enormity of sin and the hatred God bears to it.
— Opposed and yet co-exist-
to this pain of extension
ent with it we have
the pain of intensity. Hell is the cen-
tre of evils and, as you know, things are more intense at
their centres than at their remotest points. There are
no contraries or admixtures of any kind to temper or
soften in the least the pains of hell. Nay, things which
are good in themselves become evil in hell. Company,
elsewhere a source of comfort to the afflicted, will be
there a continual torment: knowledge, so much longed
for as the chief good of the intellect, will there be hated
worse than ignorance: light, so much coveted by all
creatures from the lord of creation down to the humblest
plant in the forest, will be loathed intensely. In this
life our sorrows are either not very long or not very
and set aside for the lustful and low pleasures of the
[150]
corrupt flesh, requires, this is what the blood of the
innocent Lamb
of God, shed for the redemption of sin-
ners, trampled upon by the vilest of the vile, insists
upon.
— Last and crowning torture of all the tortures of that
awful place is the eternity of hell. O, dread
Eternity !
and word.
dire "What mind of man can
Eternity!
understand it? And remember, it is an eternity of
pain. Even though the pains of hell were not so ter-
rible as they are yet they would become infinite as they
are destined to last for ever. But while they are ever-
lasting they are at the same time, as you know, in-
tolerably intense, unbearably extensive. To bear even
the sting of an insect for all eternity would be a dread-
ful torment. What must it be, then, to bear the mani-
fold tortures of hell for ever? For ever! For all
eternity! Not for a year or for an age but for ever.
Try to imagine the awful meaning of this. You have
often seen the sand on the seashore. How fine are its
tiny grains! And how many of those tiny little grains
go to make up the small handful which a child grasps
in its play. Now imagine a mountain of that sand, a
million miles high, reaching from the earth to the
and a million miles broad, extending
farthest heavens,
and a million miles in thickness and
to remotest space, :
— God! —
— my my God! —
— / am sorry —
— 7 am heartily
heartily sorry
—
— for having Thee —
— for having offended Thee —
— and I detestoffended —
— I detest my
sins
aiid my — sins
— above every other — evil
— above every other — evil
[155]
— because they displease Thee, my God —
— because they displease Thee, my God —
— Who art deserving —
so
— Who art deservingso —
— of my love —
all
— of my love —
all
— and I firmly purpose — •
— and I firmly —
— by Thy Holypurpose
grace —
— by Thy Holy grace —
— never more offend Thee —
to
— never more offend Thee —
to
— and amend my —
•
to life
— and amend my —
to life
* * # *
His hands were cold and damp and his limbs ached
with chill. Bodily unrest and chill and weariness beset
him, routing his thoughts. Why was he kneeling there
like a child saying his evening prayers? To be alone
with his soul, to examine his conscience, to meet his sins
face to face, to recall their times and manners and
circumstiuices, to weep over them. He could not weep.
He could not summon them to his memory. He felt
Help!
He flung the blankets from him madly to free his face
and neck. That was his hell. God had allowed him to
see the hell reserved for his sins: stinking, bestial, ma-
lignant, a hell of lecherous goatish fiends. For him!
For him!
He sprang from the bed, the reeking odour pouring
down his throat,clogging and revolting his entrails.
Air! The air of heaven! He stumbled towards the
window, groaning and almost fainting with sickness.
At the washstand a convulsion seized him within; and,
clasping his cold forehead wildly, he vomited profusely
in agony.
When the fit had spent
he walked weakly to the
itself
window and sat in a comer of the
lifting the sash,
embrasure and leaned his elbow upon the sill. The
rain had drawn off ;
and amid the moving vapours from
point to point of light the city was spinning about her-
self a soft cocoon of yellowish haze. Heaven was still
and faintly luminous and the air sweet to breathe, as
in a thicket drenched with showers: and amid peace
and shimmering lights and quiet fragrance he made a
covenant with his heart.
He prayed:
[161]
held back from what awaited him, fearing to arrive at
that towards which he still turned with longing. How
beautiful must be a soul in the state of grace when God
looked upon it with love !
[164]
He would love God Who had made and loved him. He
would kneel and pray with others and be happy. God
would look down on him and on them and would love
them all.
It was easy to be good. God's yoke was sweet and
light. It was better never to have sinned, to have re-
mained always a child, for God loved little children and
suffered them to come to Him. It was a terrible and
a sad thing to sin. But God was merciful to poor
sinners who were truly sorry. How true that was!
That was indeed goodness.
The slide was shot to suddenly. The penitent came
out. He was next. He stood up in terror and walked
blindly into the box.
At last it had come. He knelt in the silent gloom
and raised his eyes to the white crucifix suspended above
him. God could see that he was sorry. He would tell
all his sins. His confession would be long, long.
Everybody in the chapel would know then what a sinner
he had been. Let them know. It was true. But God
had promised to forgive him if he was sorry. He was
sorry. He clasped his hands and raised them towards
the white form, praying with his darkened eyes, praying
with all his trembling body, swaying his head to and
— Longer, father. —
— Three months, my child — ? ^
— Longer, father.—
— Six months — ?
— And yourself,
with
. .
—
. others.
— With women, my child — ?
— Yes, father.—
— Were they married women, my child? —
He did not know. His sins trickled from his lips, one
by one, trickled in shameful drops from his soul fester-
ing and oozing like a sore, a squalid stream of vice.
The last sins oozed forth, sluggish, filthy. There was no
more to tell. He bowed his head, overcome.
The priest was silent. Then he asked:
— How old are you, my child — ?
— Sixteen, — father.
[166]
The priest passed his hand several times over his face.
Then, resting his forehead against his hand, he leaned
towards the grating and, with eyes still averted, spoke
slowly. His voice was weary and old.
— You are very young, my child he said, — and let —
me implore of you to give up that sin. It is a terrible
sin. It kills the body and it kills the soul. It is the
cause of many crimes and misfortunes. Give it up, my
child, for God's sake. It is dishonourable and unmanly.
You cannot know where that wretched habit will lead
you or where it will come against you. As long as you
commit that sin, my poor child, you will never be worth
one farthing to God. Pray to our mother Mary to help
you. She will help you, my child. Pray to Our Blessed
Lady when that sin comes into your mind. I am sure
you will do that, will you not? You repent of all those
sins. I am sure you do. And you will promise God
now that by His holy grace you will never offend Him
any more by that wicked sin. You will make that
solemn promise to God, will you not ? —
— Yes, father. —
The old and weary voice fell like sweet rain upon his
quaking parching heart. How sweet and sad !
would hold upon his tongue the host and God would
enter his purified body.
— In vitam eternam. Amen. —
Another life ! A life of grace and virtue and happi-
ness It was true.
! It was not a dream from which he
would wake. The past was past.
— Corpus Domini nostri. —
The ciborium had come to him.
[169]
CHAPTER IV
Sunday was dedicated to the mystery of the Holy
Trinity, Monday to the Holy Ghost, Tuesday to the
Guardian Angels, "Wednesday to Saint Joseph, Thursday
to theMost Blessed Sacrament of the Altar, Friday to
the Suffering Jesus, Saturday to the Blessed Virgin
Mary.
Every morning he hallowed himself anew in the
presence of some holy image or mystery. His day began
with an heroic offering of its every moment of thought
or action for the intentions of the sovereign pontiff and
with an early mass. The raw morning air whetted his
resolute piety; and often as he knelt among the few
worshippers at the side altar, following with his inter-
leaved prayer book the murmur of the priest, he glanced
up for an instant towards the vested figure standing in
the gloom between the two candles, which were the old
and the new testaments, and imagined that he was kneel-
ing at mass in the catacombs.
His daily life was laid out in devotional areas. By
means of ejaculations and prayers he stored up ungrudg-
ingly for the souls in purgatory centuries of days and
quarantines and years; yet the spiritual triumph which
he achieving with ease so many fabulous ages of
felt in
canonical penances did not wholly reward his zeal of
mea commordbitiir.
This idea of surrender had a perilous attraction for
his mind now that he felt his soul beset once again by
the insistent voices of the flesh which began to murmur
to him again during his prayers and meditations. It
gave him an intense sense of power to know that he
could by a single act of consent, in a moment of thought,
undo all that he had done. He seemed to feel a flood
slowly advancing towards his naked feet and to be wait-
ing for the first faint timid noiseless wavelet to touch
his fevered skin. Then, almost at the instant of that
touch, almost at the verge of sinful consent, he found
himself standing far away from the flood upon a dry
[176]
shore, saved by a sudden act of the will or a sudden
ejaculation: and, seeing the silver line of the floor far
away and beginning again its slow advance towards his
feet, a new thrill of power and satisfaction shook his
soul to know that he had not yielded nor undone all.
When he had eluded the flood of temptation many
times in this way he grew troubled and wondered whether
the grace which he had refused to lose was not being
filched from him little by little. The clear certitude of
his own immunity grew dim and to it succeeded a vague
fear that his soul had really fallen unawares. It was
with difficulty that he won back his old consciousness of
his state of grace by telling himself that he had prayed
to God at every temptation and that the grace which he
had prayed for must have been given to him inasmuch
as God was obliged to give
it. The very frequency and
violence of temptations showed him at last the truth of
what he had heard about the trials of the saints. Fre-
'
said Stephen.
— 0, — said the
certainly,
— For the director. cloister it
but for the
is all right, think would be
street I really it
The priest let the blindcord fall to one side and, unit-
ing his hands, leaned his chin gravely upon them, com-
muning with himself.
— In a college like this, — he said at length, — there is
[182]
one boy or perhaps two or three boys whom God calls
to the religious life. Such a boy is marked off from his
companions by his piety, by the good example he shows
to others. He is looked up to by them; he is chosen
perhaps as prefect by his fellow sodalists. And you,
Stephen, have been such a boy in this college, prefect
of Our Blessed Lady's sodality. Perhaps you are the
boy in this college whom God designs to call to Him-
self.—
A
strong note of pride reinforcing the gravity of the
priest's voice made Stephen's heart quicken in response.
— To receive that call, Stephen, — said the priest,
— is the
greatest honour that the Almighty God can bestow upon
a man. No king or emperor on this earth has the power
of the priest of God. No angel or archangel in heaven,
no saint, not even the Blessed Virgin herself has the
power of a priest of God; the power of the keys, the
power to bind and to loose from sin, the power of exor-
cism, the power to cast out from the creatures of God
the evil spirits that have power over them, the power,
the authority, to make the great God of Heaven come
down upon the altar and take the form of bread and wine.
What an awful power, Stephen !
—
A
flame began to flutter again on Stephen's cheek as
he heard in this proud address an echo of his own proud
musings. Howoften had he seen himself as a priest
wielding calmly and humbly the awful power of which
angels and saints stood in reverence His soul had loved
!
[185]
cause on it the salvation of your eternal
may depend
soul. But we pray to God together.
will —
He held open the heavy hall door and gave his hand as
if already to a companion in the spiritual life. Stephen
passed out on to the wide platform above the steps and
was conscious of the caress of mild evening air. Towards
Findlater's church a quartette of young men were
striding along with linked arms, swaying their heads and
stepping to the agile melody of their leader 's concertina.
The music passed in an instant, as the first bars of sud-
den music always did, over the fantastic fabrics of his
mind, dissolving them painlessly and noiselessly as a
sudden wave dissolves the sandbuilt turrets of children.
Smiling at the he raised his eyes to the priest 's
trivial air
face and, seeing in it a mirthless reflection of the sunken
dere, had often asked him with a silly laugh why they
moved so often. A frown of scorn darkened quickly his
forehead as he heard again the silly laugh of the ques-
tioner.
[189]
He asked :
[192]
swirling water under the bridge but he still saw a reflec-
tion therein of their topheavy silk hats, and humble
tapelike collars and clerical clothes.
— Brother Ilickey.loosely hanging
Brother Quaid.
Brother MacArdle.
Brother Keogh. —
Their piety would be like their names, like their ffices,
like their clothes and it was idle for him to tell himself
;
softly to himself ;
[194]
an instant; then the music seemed to recede, to recede,
to recede and from each receding trail of nebulous music
:
Ao! —
— Good man, Towser Duck him — ! !
(195]
pain to see the signs of adolescence that made repellent
their pitiable nakedness. Perhaps they had taken refuge
in number and noise from the secret dread in their souls.
But he, apart from them and in silence, remembered in
what dread he stood of the mystery of his own body.
— Stephanos Dedalos Bous Stephanoumenos
! Bous !
Stephaneforos !
—
Their banter was not new to him and now it flattered
his mild proud sovereignty. Now, as never before, his
strange name seemed him a prophecy. So timeless
to
seemed the grey warm air, so fluid and impersonal his
own mood, that all ages were as one to him. A moment
before the ghost of the ancient kingdom of the Danes
had looked forth through the vesture of the hazewrapped
city. Now, at the name of the fabulous artificer, he
seemed to hear the noise of dim waves and to see a
winged form flying above the waves and slowly climbing
the air. What did it mean? Was it a quaint device
opening a page of some medieval book of prophecies and
symbols, a hawklike man flying sunward above the sea,
a prophecy of the end he had been born to serve and
had been following through the mists of childhood and
boyhood, a symbol of the artist forging anew in his
workshop out of the sluggish matter of the earth a new
soaring impalpable imperishable being?
His heart trembled his breath came faster and a wild
;
[196]
breath and tremulous and wild and radiant his wind-
swept limbs.
— One Two
! Look out —
! . . . !
— One! Uk! —
. . .
— Stephaneforos — !
[197]
seemed to Evening would deepen above the sea,
cry.
night upon the plains, dawn glimmer before the
fall
wanderer and show him strange fields and hills and faces.
.Where?
He looked northward towards Howth. The sea had
fallen below the line of seawrack on the shallow side of
the breakwater and already the tide was running out
fast along the foreshore. Already one long oval bank of
sand lay warm and dry amid the wavelets. Here and
there warm isles of sand gleamed above the shallow tide :
and about the isles and around the long bank and amid
the shallow currents of the beach were lightclad figures,
wading and delving.
In a few moments he was barefoot, his stockings folded
in his pockets, and his canvas shoes dangling by their
knotted laces over his shoulders :
and, picking a pointed
salteaten stick out of the jetsam among the rocks, he
clambered down the slope of the breakwater.
There was a long rivulet in the strand: and, as he
waded slowly up its course, he wondered at the endless
drift of seaweed. Emerald and black and russet and
olive, it moved beneath the current, swaying and turn-
ing. The water of the rivulet was dark with endless
drift and mirrored the highdrifting clouds. The clouds
were drifting above him silently and silently the sea-
tangle was drifting below him and- the grey warm air
;
was still and a new wild life was singing in his veins.
:
Where was his boyhood now ? Where was the soul that
had hung back from her destiny, to brood alone upon the
shame of her wounds and in her house of squalor and
subterfuge to queen it in faded cerements and in wreaths
that withered at the touch ? Or, where was he.
He was alone. He was unheeded, happy, and near to
[198]
the wild heart of life. He was alone and young and
wilful and wildhearted, alone amid a waste of wild air
and brackish waters and the seaharvest of shells and
tangle and veiled grey sunlight and gayclad lightclad
figures of children and girls and voices childish and
girlish in the air.
A girl stood beforehim in midstream alone and still,
:
of profane joy. —
[199]
He turned away from her suddenly and set off across
the strand. His cheeks were aflame his body was aglow
; ;
[201]
CHAPTER V
He drained his third cup of watery tea to the dregs
and set to chewing the crusts of fried bread that were
scattered near him, staring into the dark pool of the jar.
The yellow dripping had been scooped out like a boghole,
and the pool under it brought back to his memory the
dark turfcoloured water of the bath in Clongowes. The
box of pawn tickets at his elbow had just been rifled and
he took up idly one after another in his greasy fingers the
blue and white dockets, scrawled and sanded and creased
and bearing the name of the pledger as Daly or Mac-
Evoy.
1 Pair Buskins.
1 D. Coat.
3 Articles and White.
1 Man's Pants.
Then he put them asideand gazed thoughtfully at
the lid of the box, speckled with louse marks, and asked
vaguely :
An
ear splitting whistle was heard from upstairs and
his mother thrust a damp overall into his hands, saying :
— Dry yourself and hurry out for the love of goodness.
A second shrill whistle, prolonged angrily, brought one
of the girls to the foot of the staircase.
—
Yes, father?
— Is lazy bitch of a brother gone out yet?
— Yes,your
father.
— Sure?
— Hm!
The girl came back, making signs to him to be quick
and go out quietly by the back. Stephen laughed and
said:
— He has a curious idea of genders he thinks a bitch
if
is masculine.
— Ah, a scandalous shame for you, Stephen, said
it 's
his mother, and you'll live to rue the day you set your
foot in that place. I know how it has changed you.
[203]
— Good morning, everybody, said Stephen, smiling
and kissing the tips of his fingers in adieu.
The lane behind the terrace was waterlogged and as
he went down it slowly, choosing his steps amid heaps
of wet rubbish, he heard a mad nun screeching in the
nun's madhouse beyond the wall.
— Jesus ! Jesus Jesus ! !
[207]
up sighing with age as he walked on in a lane among
heaps of dead language. His own consciousness of lan-
guage was ebbing from his brain and trickling into the
very words themselves which set to band and disband
themselves in wayward rhythms :
that was all right. Yellow ivory also. And what about
ivory ivy 1
ing this way and that to free his feet from the fetters of
the reformed conscience he came upon the droll statue of
the national poet of Ireland.
He looked at it without anger: for, though sloth of
the body and of the soul crept over it like unseen vermin,
over the shuffling feet and up the folds of the cloak and
around the servile head, it seemed humbly conscious of
it a
by quiet inbred courtesy of attention or by a quaint
turn of old English speech or by the force of its delight
in rude bodily skill —
for Davin had sat at the feet of
Michael Cusack, the Gael —
repelling swiftly and sud-
denly by a grossness of intelligence or by a bluntness of
feeling or by a dull stare of terror in the eyes, the terror
of soul of a starving Irish village in which the curfew
was still a nightly fear.
[213]
— Do, gentleman! Don't forget your own girl, sir!
— have no money, said Stephen.
I
— Buy them lovely ones, will
you, Only a penny.
sir ?
culty.
— Can you solve that question now — he asked. ?
your lamp. —
— That? — said Stephen. — that called a Is funnel?
Is not a tundish —
it ?
— What a tundish — is ?
[219]
— that called a tundish in Ireland? — asked the
Is
dean. — never heard the word in my
I — life.
— called a tundish in Lower Drumcondra — said
It is
Stephen, laughing
— where they speak the best Eng-
lish.—
—'A tundish — said the dean — That
reflectively. is
artist
struggles express from lumps of earth
to — said
Stephen coldly.
The little word seemed to have turned a rapier point
of his sensitiveness against this courteous and vigilant
foe. lie felt with a smart of dejection that the man
to whom he was speaking was a countryman of Ben
Jonson. He
thought:
— The language in which we are speaking is his before
it is mine.IIow different are the words home, Christ,
ale, master, on his lips and on mine! I cannot speak
or write these words without unrest of spirit. His
language, so familiar and so foreign, will always be for
me an acquired speech. I have not made or accepted
My them
— bay. My
its words. voice holds at soul frets
in the shadow of his language.
— And to distinguish between the beautiful and the
sublime — the dean added — to distinguish between
moral beauty and material beauty. And to inquire
what kind of beauty is proper to each of the various
arts. These are some interesting points we might take
up.—
Stephen, disheartened suddenly by the dean's firm
dry tone, was silent: and through the silence a distant
noise of many boots and confused voices came up the
staircase.
— In pursuing these speculations —
said the dean
conclusively
—
there is, however, the danger of perishing
of inanition. First you must take your degree. Set
that before you as your first aim. Then, little by little,
you will see your way. I mean in every sense, your
way in life and in thinking. It may be uphill pedalling
[221]
at first. Take Mr Moonan. He was a long time before
he got to the top. But he got there. —
— I may not have his talent —
said Stephen quietly.
— You never know —
said the dean brightly. We —
never can say what is in us. I most certainly should
not be despondent. Per aspera ad astra. —
He left the hearth quickly and went towards the
landing to oversee the arrival of the first arts' class.
— Cranly — !
No answer.
— Mr Cranly — !
whispering :
On a cloth untrue
With a twisted cue
And elliptical billiard halls.
it is wound on
the ebonite bobbins just where my
finger is. were wound single an extra current would
If it
[225]
pure science and applied science. A heavybuilt student,
wearing gold spectacles, stared with some wonder at the
questioner. Moynihan murmured from behind in his
natural voice :
[226]
On a table near the door were two photographs in frames
and between them a long roll of paper bearing an irregu-
— Ego haheo. —
— What for? —
is it
— Quodf —
— What for? —
is it
[227]
— MacCann in tiptop form. Eeady to shed the
is last
— A sugar — !
;
[228]
— Here am! — said Stephen.
I
— Late as usual. Can you not combine the progres-
sive with a respect for punctuality —
—tendency
?
Next —
business.
Ilis smiling eyes were fixed on a silver wrapped tablet
of milk chocolate which peeped out of the propagandist 's
breast-pocket. A
little ring of listeners closed round to
[229]
the times, of the new humanity and
the new gospel of
life which would make the business of the community
it
— Pip pip — ! !
[230]
— am I waiting for your answer — said MacCann
briefly.
— The me in the
affair doesn't interest — said least
[231]
— I am curious to know now what he meant by that
expression.
—
He turned to Stephen and said in a whisper
— Do you again
:
doubt of it !
—
In the middle of the hall the prefect of the college
sodality was speaking earnestly, in a soft querulous voice,
with a boarder. As he spoke he wrinkled a little his
freckled brow, and bit, between his phrases, at a tiny
bone pencil.
—
I hope the matric men will all come. The first arts
men are pretty sure. Second arts, too. We must make
sure of the newcomers. —
Temple bent again across Cranly, as they were passing
through the doorway, and said in a swift whisper :
—
Do you know that he is a married man ? He was
a married man before they converted him. He has a
wife and children somewhere. By hell, I think that 's the
queerest notion I ever heard !Eh ? —
His whisper trailed off into sly cackling laughter.
The moment they were through the doorway Cranly
seized him rudely by the neck and shook him, saying :
[233]
content, while Cranly repeated flatly at every rude
shake :
go-by-the-wall 1 —
His phrase was greeted by a strange laugh from a
student who lounged against the wall, his peaked cap
down on his eyes. The laugh, pitched in a high key
and coming from a so muscular frame, seemed like the
whinny of an elephant. The student's body shook all
over and, to ease his mirth, he rubbed both his hands
delightedly, over his groins.
— Lynch is awake —
said Cranly.
Lynch, for answer, straightened himself and thrust
forward his chest.
— Lynch puts out his chest — said Stephen
— as a
criticism of life. —
Lynch smote himself
sonorously on the chest and said :
[235]
Stephen shook his head. —
You're a terrible man,
Stevie— said Davin, taking the short pipe from his
mouth — always alone. —
— Now that you have signed the petition for universal
peace — said Stephen — I
suppose you will burn that
littlecopybook I saw in your room. —
As Davin did not answer Stephen began to quote:
—
Long pace, fianna Right incline, fianna
!
Fianna, !
me those things ? —
— —
Thanks said Stephen.
— You mean I am a
—
monster.
— No — said Davin — but I wish you had not told
me.—
A tide began to surge beneath the calm surface of
Stephen 's friendliness.
— This race and country and this life produced
this
me — he — said. myself as I am.
I shall express —
— Try be one
to of us —
repeated Davin. In your —
heart you are an Irishman but your pride is too power-
ful.—
— My ancestors threw off their language and took
another — Stephen said. — They allowed a handful of
foreigners to subject them. Do you fancy I am going
to pay in my own life and person debts they made?
What for? —
— For our freedom — said Davin.
— No honourable and sincere man — said Stephen —
has given up to you his life and his youth and his affec-
— Your soul !
—
Stephen stood with Lynch till the score began to rise.
Then he plucked him by the sleeve to come away.
Lynch obeyed, saying :
—
Stop I won 't listen
! I am sick. I was out
! last
apprehension of which
— pleases.
Lynch nodded.
— remember that — he said — Fulcra sunt qucB visa
I
placent.
—
— He uses the word visa — said Stephen — to cover
esthetic apprehensions of all kinds, whether through
sight or hearing or through any other avenue of appre-
hension. This word, though it is vague, is clear enough
to keep away good and evil, which excite desire and loath-
energetically.
— There remains another way out — said Stephen,
laughing.
— To wit? — said
— This hypothesis —Lynch.
Stephen began.
A long dray laden with old iron came round the
corner of sir Patrick Dun's hospital covering the end
of Stephen's speech with the harsh roar of jangled and
rattling metal. Lynch closed his and gave out
ears
oath after oath till the dray Then he turned
had passed.
on his heel rudely. Stephen turned also and waited for
a few moments till his companion's ill-humour had had
its vent.
— This hypothesis — Stephen repeated — is the other
way out: that, though the same object may not seem
beautiful to all people, all people who admire a beautiful
object find in it certain relations which satisfy and co-
incide with the stages themselves of all esthetic appre-
hension. These relations of the sensible, visible to you
through one form and to me through another, must be
therefore the necessarj'- qualities of beauty. Now, we
can return to our old friend saint Thomas for another
penny^vorth of wisdom. —
Lynch laughed.
— amuses me vastly — he said — to hear you quot-
It
[245]
duction, I require a new terminology and a new personal
experience.
—
— Of course — said Lynch. — After all Aquinas, in
spite of his intellect, was exactly a good round friar.
But you will tell me about the new personal experience
and new terminology some other day. Hurry up and
finish the first part. —
— Who knows? — said Stephen, smiling.
— Perhaps
Aquinas would understand me better than you. He was
a poet himself. He wrote a hymn for Maundy Thursday.
It begins with the words Pange lingua gloriosi. They
say it is the highest glory of the hymnal. It is an in-
tricate and soothing hymn. I like it: but there is no
hymn that can be put beside that mournful and majestic
processional song, the Vexilla Regis of Venantius For-
tunatus. —
Lynch began to sing softly and solemnly in a deep
bass voice:
Inpleta sunt quce concinit
David fideli carmine
Dicendo nationihus
Begnavit a lingo Deus,
— That's great!
— he said, well pleased.
— Great
music — !
Donovan hand on
laid his chest and said
his
— Our endagainthe acquisition of knowledge.—
:
is
[251]
The simplest epical form is seen emerging out of lyrical
literature whenthe artist prolongs and broods upon
himself as the centre of an epical event and this form
progresses till the centre of emotional gravity is equi-
distant from the artist himself and from others. The
narrativeis no longer purely personal. The personality
of the artist passes into the narration itself, flowing
round and round the persons and the action like a vital
sea. This progress you will see easily in that old English
ballad Turpin Hero, which begins in the first person
and ends in the third person. The dramatic form is
reached when the vitality which has flowed and eddied
round each person fills every person with such vital force
paring
different, his fingernails. —
— Trying to refine them also out of existence — said
Lynch.
A fine rain began to fall from the high veiled sky and
they turned into the duke's lawn, to reach the national
library before the shower came.
— —
What do you mean Lynch asked surlily by —
prating about beauty and the imagination in this miser-
able God forsaken island ? No wonder the artist retired
[252]
within or behind his handiwork after having perpetrated
this country. —
The rain fell faster. When they passed through the
passage beside the royal Irish academy they found many
students sheltering under the arcade of the library.
Cranly, leaning against a pillar, was picking his teeth
with a sharpened match, listening to some companions.
Some girls stood near the entrance door. Lynch whis-
pered to Stephen :
midwifery — cases.
— Do you mean say better
to have a job here
it is to
in the country than a rich in that? I know acity like
fellow .
— . .
soul was all dewy wet. Over his limbs in sleep pale
cool waves of light had passed. He lay still, as if his soul
lay amid cool waters, conscious of faint sweet music.
His mind was waking slowly to a tremulous morning
knowledge, a morning inspiration. A spirit filled him,
pure as the purest water, sweet as dew, moving as music.
But how faintly it was inbreathed, how passionlessly,
as if the seraphim themselves were breathing upon him !
forth silently.
An enchantment of the heart! The night had been
enchanted. In a dream or vision he had known the
ecstasy of seraphic life. Was it an instant of enchant-
ment only or long hours and years and ages?
The instant of inspiration seemed now to be reflected
from all sides at once from a multitude of cloudy cir-
cumstances of what had happened or of what might
have happened. The instant flashed forth like a point
of light and now from cloud on cloud of vague circum-
stance confused form was veiling softly its afterglow.
0! In the virgin womb of the imagination the word
was made flesh. Gabriel the seraph had come to the
virgin's chamber. An afterglow deepened within his
spirit,whence the white flame had passed, deepening to
a rose and ardent light. That rose and ardent light was
her strange wilful heart, strange that no man had known
or would know, wilful from before the beginning of the
world and lured by that ardent roselike glow the choirs
:
The verses passed from his mind to his lips and, mur-
muring them over, he felt the rhythmic movement of a
villanelle pass through them. The roselike glow sent
forth its rays of rhjrme ; ways, days, blaze, praise, raise.
burned up the world, consumed the hearts of
Its rays
men and angels: the rays from the rose that was her
wilful heart.
[255]'
Your eyes have set man^s heart ablaze
And you have had your will of him.
Are you not weary of ardent ways?
For answer she had danced away from him along the
chain of hands, dancing lightly and discreetly, giving
herself to none. The white spray nodded to her dancing
and when she was in shadow the glow was deeper on
her cheek.
A monk His own image started forth a prof aner of
!
[259]
to him, a priest of the eternal imagination, transmuting
the daily bread of experience into the radiant body of
everliving life.
He spoke the verses aloud from the first lines till the
music and rhythm suffused his mind, turning it to
quiet indulgence; then copied them painfully to feel
them the better by seeing them; then lay back on his
bolster.
The full light had come.
morning No sound was to
be heard: but he knew that all around him life was
about to awaken in common noises, hoarse voices, sleepy
prayers. Shrinking from that life he turned towards
the wall, making a cowl of the blanket and staring at the
great overblown scarlet flowers of the tattered wallpaper.
He tried to warm his perishing joy in their scarlet glow,
imaging a roseway from where he lay upwards to heaven
all strewn with scarlet flowers. Weary! Weary! He
too was weary of ardent ways.
A gradual warmth, a languorous weariness passed
over him, descending along his spine from his closely
cowled head. He felt it descend and, seeing himself as
he la^, smiled. Soon he would sleep,
[260],
He had written verses for her again after ten years.
Ten years before she had worn her shawl cowlwise
about her head, sending sprays of her warm breath into
the night air, tapping her foot upon the glassy road.
It was the last tram; the lank brown horses knew it
and shook their bells to the clear night in admonition.
The conductor talked with the driver, both nodding often
in the green light of the lamp. They stood on the steps
of the tram, he on the upper, she on the lower. She
came up to his step many times between their phrases
and went down again and once or twice remained beside
him forgetting to go down and then went down. Let be !
Let be !
she would not show them to others. No, no: she could
not.
He began had wronged her.
to feel that he A sense
of her innocence moved him almost to pity her, an
innocence he had never understood till he had come to
the knowledge of it through sin, an innocence which
she too had not understood while she was innocent or
before the strange humiliation of her nature had first
come upon her. Then first her soul had begun to live
as his soul had when he had first sinned : and a tender
compassion filled his heart as he remembered her frail
[261]
pallor and her eyes, humbled and saddened by the dark
shame of womanhood.
While his soul had passed from ecstasy to lan^or
where had she been? Might it be, in the mysterious
ways of spiritual life, that her soul at those same
moments had been conscious of his homage? It might
be.
from the upper sky. They were flying high and low but
ever round and round in straight and curving lines and
ever flying from left to right, circling about a temple
of air.
He listened to the cries: like the squeak of mice be-
hind the wainscot a shrill twofold note. But the notes
:
— Made in Germany —
— Blasphemy — !
touch Walter
sir —Scott.
He moved a thin shrunken brown hand gently in the
air in time to his praise and his thin quick eyelids beat
often over his sad eyes.
Sadder to Stephen's ear was his speech: a genteel ac-
cent, low and moist, marred by errors: and, listening
to it, he wondered was the story true and was the thin
blood that flowed in his shrunken frame noble and come
of an incestuous love ?
The park trees were heavy with rain and rain fell
still and ever in the lake, lying grey like a shield. A
game of swans flew there and the water and the shore
beneath were fouled with their greenwhite slime. They
embraced softly impelled by the grey rainy light, the
wet silent trees, the shield like witnessing lake, the
swans. They embraced without joy or passion, his
arm about his sister's neck. A grey woollen cloak was
wrapped athwart her from her shoulder to her waist:
and her fair head was bent in willing shame. He had
loose redbrown hair and tender shapely strong freckled
hands. Face? There was no face seen. The brother's
face was bent upon her fair rain fragrant hair. The
hand freckled and strong and shapely and caressing
was Davin's hand.
[268]
He frowned angrily upon his thought and on the
shrivelled mannikin who had called it forth. His
father's gibes at the Bantry gang leaped out of his
memory. He held them at a distance and brooded un-
easily on his own thought again. Why were they not
Cranly's hands? Had Davin's simplicity and innocence
stung him more secretly ?
He walked on across the hall with Dixon, leaving
Cranly to take leave elaborately of the dwarf.
Under the colonnade Temple was standing in the midst
of a little group of students. One of them cried :
Belgium ? — he asked.
Cranly came out through the door of the entrance
hall, his hat thrust back on the nape of his neck and pick-
ing his teeth with care.
— And here's the wiseacre — said Temple.
— Do you
know that about the Forsters ? —
He paused for an answer. Cranly dislodged a fig seed
from his teeth on the point of his rude toothpick and
gazed at it intently.
— The Forster family —
Temple said —
is descended
asked.
— I know the history of your family too — Temple
all
Stephen.
[270]
The stout student who stood below them on the steps
farted briefly. Dixon turned towards him saying in a
soft voice :
tive.
— —
Do you believe in the law of heredity ?
— Are you drunk or what are you or what are you try-
ing to say
— asked Cranly, facing round on him with an
?
expression of wonder.
— The most profound sentence ever written — Temple
said with enthusiasm — the sentence at the end of the
is
[271]
— Do you how profound that because you are a
feel is
poet
— ?
— allude
I — to that.
— Um — Cranly said as before.
— Do intend that now — the squat student said
— as ipsoyou
facto us as
or, let speak —
say, so to 1
[277]
— Were you baptised yourself, Temple — the con- ?
Temple said.
— Are you quite orthodox on that point. Temple — ?
saying much.
so —
— You are — Glynn said in a firm — On that tone.
point Ireland united. —
is
limbo? —
— Put him back into the perambulator, Cranly —
O'Keeffe called out.
Cranly made a swift step towards Temple, halted,
stamping his foot, crying as if to a fowl :
— Hoosh — !
scornfully
— And that what 's limbo. —
I call
— Give us that stick here — Cranly said.
He snatched the ashplant roughly from Stephen's
hand and sprang down the steps: but Temple, hearing
him move in pursuit, fled through the dusk like a wild
creature, nimbleand fleet footed. Cranly 's heavy boots
were heard loudly charging across the quadrangle and
then returning heavily, foiled and spuming the gravel
at each step.
His step was angry and with an angry abrupt gesture
he thrust the stick back into Stephen's hand. Stephen
felt that his anger had another cause, but feigning pa-
away. —
Cranly looked him for a few moments and asked
at :
— Now? —
[279]
— Yes, now
— Stephen said — We can't speak here.
Come away. —
They crossed the quadrangle together without speak-
ing. The bird call from Siegfried whistled softly fol-
lowed them from the steps of the porch. Cranly turned :
offering him a cup of milk, had all but wooed him to her
[280]
bed: for Davin had the mild eyes of one who could be
secret. But him no woman's eyes had wooed.
Ilis arm was taken in a strong grip and Cranly's voice
said:
— Let us eke — go.
They walked southward in silence. Then Cranly said :
— With my mother. —
— About —
religion ?
my caster duty.
—
— And you — will ?
— not —
I will said.
— Why not — Stephen
Cranly
? said.
— not serve — answered Stephen.
I will
— That remark was made before — Cranly said calmly.
— made behind now — said Stephen
It is hotly.
Cranly pressed Stephen's arm, saying:
— Go my
easy, dear man. You're an excitable bloody
man, do you know. —
[281]
He laughed nervously as he spoke and, looking up
into Stephen's face with moved and friendly eyes,
said:
— Do you know that you are an excitable man — ?
— do not — Stephen
I said.
— Do you disbelieve then — ?
answered.
— Many persons have doubts, even religious persons,
yet they overcome them or put them aside
— Cranly said.
— Are your doubts on that point too strong — ?
of studies — ?
[282]
— Remember — Cranly said — that he would be glori-
fied. —
— Ay — Stephen said somewhat bitterly — bright
and, above subtle.
— impassible
agile, all,
a curious thing, do you know — Cranly said
It is
dispassionately
— how your mind supersaturated with is
simply.
— Have never loved — asked.
— Do youyoumean women —anyone Cranly
?
— —
Has your mother had a happy life ?
— —
How do I know ? Stephen said.
— How many children had she ? —
— Nine or ten — Stephen answered. — Some — died.
— Was your father — Cranly interrupted him-
. . . .
pry into your family affairs. But was your father what
is called well-to-do? I mean when you were growing
up? —
— Yes — Stephen said.
— "What was he — Cranly asked after a pause.
?
look
I — asked bluntly.
— So then — CranlyStephen
it ?
[284]
— Your mother must have gone through a good deal
—
of suffering he said then.— Would you not try to
save her from suffering more even if ... or would
you? —
— If I could — Stephen said — that would cost me
very —
little.
— Then do so — Cranly — Do as she wishes you said.
to do. What is it for you ? You disbelieve in it. It is
a form: nothing else. And you will set her mind at
rest. —
He ceased and, as Stephen did not reply, remained
silent. Then, as if giving utterance to the process of his
own he said
— thought,
:
[285]
— Cranly said rudely and flatly.
— I call him a pig.
—
Stephen, preparing the words neatly in his mind, con-
tinued :
— Mulier ca7itat. —
The word touched with an
soft beauty of the Latin
— want
I Rosie
to see — said first
— She's easy to find — Cranly Stephen. said.
His hat had come down on his forehead. lie shoved
it back: and in the shadow of the trees Stephen saw
his pale face, framed by the dark, and his large dark
eyes. Yes. His face was handsome; and his body was
strong and hard. He had spoken of a mother's love.
He felt then the sufferings of women, the weaknesses of
their bodies and souls: and would shield them with a
strong and resolute arm and bow his mind to them.
Away then it is time to go. A voice spoke softly to
:
you rob ? —
— I would beg first —
Stephen said.
— And if you got nothing, would you rob ? —
— You wish me to say —
Stephen answered that —
the rights of property are provisional and that in certain
circumstances it is not unlawful to rob. Everyone would
act in that belief. So I will not make you that answer.
Apply to the Jesuit theologian Juan Mariana de Tala-
vera who will also explain to you in what circumstances
you may lawfully kill your king and whether you had
[290]
better hand him his poison in a goblet or smear it for
him upon his robe or his saddlebow. Ask me rather
would I suffer others to rob me or, if they did, would I
down upon them what
call I believe is called the chastise-
—
ment of the secular arm ?
— And would you — ?
Let the dead bury the dead. Ay. And let the dead
marry the dead.
March 22. In company with Lynch followed a sizable
hospital nurse. Lynch 's idea. Dislike it. Two lean
hungry greyhounds walking after a heifer.
March 23. Have not seen her since that night. Un-
well? Sits at the fire perhaps with mamma's shawl on
her shoulders.But not peevish. A nice bowl of gruel?
Won't you now?
[293]
March 24. Began with a discussion with my mother.
Subject: B.V.M. Handicapped by my sex and youth.
To escape held up relations between Jesus and Papa
against those between Mary and her son. Said religion
was not a lying-in hospital. Mother indulgent. Said
I have a queer mind and have read too much. Not true.
Have read little and understood less. Then she said I
would come back to faith because I had a restless mind.
This means to leave church by backdoor of sin and re-
enter through the skylight of repentance. Cannot re-
pent. Told her so and asked for sixpence. Got three-
pence.
Then went to college. Other wrangle with little round
head rogue's eye Ghezzi. This time about Bruno the
Nolan. Began in Italian and ended in pidgin English.
He said Bruno was a terrible heretic. I said he was ter-
ribly burned. He agreed to this with some sorrow.
Then gave me recipe for what he calls ristollo alia her-
gamasca. "When he pronounces a soft o he protrudes
his full carnal lips as if he kissed the vowel. Has he?
And could he repent? Yes, he could: and cry two
round rogue's tears, one from each eye.
Crossing Stephen's, that is, my Green, remembered
that his countrymen and not mine had invented what
Cranly the other night called our religion. A quartet of
them, soldiers of the ninetyseventh infantry regiment,
sat at the foot of the cross and tossed up dice for the
overcoat of the crucified.
"Went to library. Tried to read three reviews. Use-
less. She is not out yet. Am
I alarmed ? About what ?
That she will never be out again.
Blake wrote :
I 294]
7 wonder if William Bond will die,
For assuredly he is very HI.
[295]
April 1. Disapprove of this last phrase.
April 2. Saw her drinking tea and eating cakes in
Johnston's, Mooney and O'Brien's. Rather, lynx eyed
Lynch saw her as we passed. He tells me Cranly was
invited there by brother. Did he bring his crocodile?
Is he the shining light now? Well, I discovered him.
I protest I did. Shining quietly behind a bushel of
Wicklow bran.
April 3. Met Davin at the cigar shop opposite Find-
later 's church. He was in a black sweater and had a
hurley stick. Asked me was it true I was going away
and why. Told him the shortest way to Tara was via
Holyhead. Just then my father came up. Introduction.
Father, polite and observant. Asked Davin if he might
offer him some refreshment. Davin could not, was go-
ing to a meeting. When we came away father told me he
had a good honest eye. Asked me why I did not join a
rowing club. I pretended to think it over. Told me
then how he broke Pennyfeather 's heart. Wants me to
read law. Says I was cut out for that. More mud, more
crocodiles.
April 5. Wild
spring. Scudding clouds. life!
Dark stream of swirling bogwater on which apple trees
have cast down their delicate flowers. Eyes of girls
among the leaves. demure and romping. All fair
Girls
or auburn : no dark ones.
They blush better. Houp-la !
[296]
hand of the woman feeling regretfully her own hinder
parts.
April, 6, later, Michael Robartes remembers forgot-
ten beauty and, when his arms wrap her round, he presses
in his arms the loveliness which has long faded from the
world. Not this. Not at all. I desire to press in my
arms the loveliness which has not yet come into the
world.
April 10. Faintly, under the heavy night, through
the silence of the city which has turned from dreams
to dreamless sleep as a weary lover whom no caresses
move, the sound of hoofs upon the road. Not so faintly
now as they come near the bridge and in a moment as
:
[298]
their promise of close embraces and the black arms of
tall ships that stand against the moon, their tale of dis-
tant nations. They are held out to say We are alone
:
THE END
Dublin, 1904.
Trieste, 1914.
[299]