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Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man, A
CHAPTER 2
James Joyce
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       _ Chapter 2
       Uncle Charles smoked such black twist that at last his nephew suggested
       to him to enjoy his morning smoke in a little outhouse at the end of
       the garden.
       --Very good, Simon. All serene, Simon, said the old man tranquilly.
       Anywhere you like. The outhouse will do me nicely: it will be more
       salubrious.
       --Damn me, said Mr Dedalus frankly, if I know how you can smoke such
       villainous awful tobacco. It's like gunpowder, by God.
       --It's very nice, Simon, replied the old man. Very cool and
       mollifying.
       Every morning, therefore, uncle Charles repaired to his outhouse but
       not before he had greased and brushed scrupulously his back hair and
       brushed and put on his tall hat. While he smoked the brim of his tall
       hat and the bowl of his pipe were just visible beyond the jambs of the
       outhouse door. His arbour, as he called the reeking outhouse which he
       shared with the cat and the garden tools, served him also as a
       sounding-box: and every morning he hummed contentedly one of his
       favourite songs: O, TWINE ME A BOWER or BLUE EYES AND GOLDEN HAIR or
       THE GROVES OF BLARNEY while the grey and blue coils of smoke rose
       slowly from his pipe and vanished in the pure air.
       During the first part of the summer in Blackrock uncle Charles was
       Stephen's constant companion. Uncle Charles was a hale old man with a
       well tanned skin, rugged features and white side whiskers. On week days
       he did messages between the house in Carysfort Avenue and those shops
       in the main street of the town with which the family dealt. Stephen was
       glad to go with him on these errands for uncle Charles helped him very
       liberally to handfuls of whatever was exposed in open boxes and barrels
       outside the counter. He would seize a handful of grapes and sawdust or
       three or four American apples and thrust them generously into his
       grandnephew's hand while the shopman smiled uneasily; and, on Stephen's
       feigning reluctance to take them, he would frown and say:
       --Take them, sir. Do you hear me, sir? They're good for your bowels.
       When the order list had been booked the two would go on to the park
       where an old friend of Stephen's father, Mike Flynn, would be found
       seated on a bench, waiting for them. Then would begin Stephen's run
       round the park. Mike Flynn would stand at the gate near the railway
       station, watch in hand, while Stephen ran round the track in the style
       Mike Flynn favoured, his head high lifted, his knees well lifted and
       his hands held straight down by his sides. When the morning practice
       was over the trainer would make his comments and sometimes illustrate
       them by shuffling along for a yard or so comically in an old pair of
       blue canvas shoes. A small ring of wonderstruck children and nursemaids
       would gather to watch him and linger even when he and uncle Charles had
       sat down again and were talking athletics and politics. Though he had
       heard his father say that Mike Flynn had put some of the best runners
       of modern times through his hands Stephen often glanced at his
       trainer's flabby stubble-covered face, as it bent over the long stained
       fingers through which he rolled his cigarette, and with pity at the
       mild lustreless blue eyes which would look up suddenly from the task
       and gaze vaguely into the blue distance while the long swollen fingers
       ceased their rolling and grains and fibres of tobacco fell back into
       the pouch.
       On the way home uncle Charles would often pay a visit to the chapel
       and, as the font was above Stephen's reach, the old man would dip his
       hand and then sprinkle the water briskly about Stephen's clothes and on
       the floor of the porch. While he prayed he knelt on his red
       handkerchief and read above his breath from a thumb blackened prayer
       book wherein catchwords were printed at the foot of every page. Stephen
       knelt at his side respecting, though he did not share, his piety. He
       often wondered what his grand-uncle prayed for so seriously. Perhaps he
       prayed for the souls in purgatory or for the grace of a happy death or
       perhaps he prayed that God might send him back a part of the big
       fortune he had squandered in Cork.
       On Sundays Stephen with his father and his grand-uncle took their
       constitutional. The old man was a nimble walker in spite of his corns
       and often ten or twelve miles of the road were covered. The little
       village of Stillorgan was the parting of the ways. Either they went to
       the left towards the Dublin mountains or along the Goatstown road and
       thence into Dundrum, coming home by Sandyford. Trudging along the road
       or standing in some grimy wayside public house his elders spoke
       constantly of the subjects nearer their hearts, of Irish politics, of
       Munster and of the legends of their own family, to all of which Stephen
       lent an avid ear. Words which he did not understand he said over and
       over to himself till he had learnt them by heart: and through them he
       had glimpses of the real world about them. The hour when he too would
       take part in the life of that world seemed drawing near and in secret
       he began to make ready for the great part which he felt awaited him the
       nature of which he only dimly apprehended.
       His evenings were his own; and he pored over a ragged translation of
       THE COUNT OF MONTE CRISTO. The figure of that dark avenger stood forth
       in his mind for whatever he had heard or divined in childhood of the
       strange and terrible. At night he built up on the parlour table an
       image of the wonderful island cave out of transfers and paper flowers
       and coloured tissue paper and strips of the silver and golden paper in
       which chocolate is wrapped. When he had broken up this scenery, weary
       of its tinsel, there would come to his mind the bright picture of
       Marseille, of sunny trellises, and of Mercedes.
       Outside Blackrock, on the road that led to the mountains, stood a small
       whitewashed house in the garden of which grew many rosebushes: and in
       this house, he told himself, another Mercedes lived. Both on the
       outward and on the homeward journey he measured distance by this
       landmark: and in his imagination he lived through a long train of
       adventures, marvellous as those in the book itself, towards the close
       of which there appeared an image of himself, grown older and sadder,
       standing in a moonlit garden with Mercedes who had so many years before
       slighted his love, and with a sadly proud gesture of refusal, saying:
       --Madam, I never eat muscatel grapes.
       He became the ally of a boy named Aubrey Mills and founded with him a
       gang of adventurers in the avenue. Aubrey carried a whistle dangling
       from his buttonhole and a bicycle lamp attached to his belt while the
       others had short sticks thrust daggerwise through theirs. Stephen, who
       had read of Napoleon's plain style of dress, chose to remain unadorned
       and thereby heightened for himself the pleasure of taking counsel with
       his lieutenant before giving orders. The gang made forays into the
       gardens of old maids or went down to the castle and fought a battle on
       the shaggy weed-grown rocks, coming home after it weary stragglers with
       the stale odours of the foreshore in their nostrils and the rank oils
       of the seawrack upon their hands and in their hair.
       Aubrey and Stephen had a common milkman and often they drove out in the
       milk-car to Carrickmines where the cows were at grass. While the men
       were milking the boys would take turns in riding the tractable mare
       round the field. But when autumn came the cows were driven home from
       the grass: and the first sight of the filthy cowyard at Stradbrook with
       its foul green puddles and clots of liquid dung and steaming bran
       troughs, sickened Stephen's heart. The cattle which had seemed so
       beautiful in the country on sunny days revolted him and he could not
       even look at the milk they yielded.
       The coming of September did not trouble him this year for he was not to
       be sent back to Clongowes. The practice in the park came to an end when
       Mike Flynn went into hospital. Aubrey was at school and had only an
       hour or two free in the evening. The gang fell asunder and there were
       no more nightly forays or battles on the rocks. Stephen sometimes went
       round with the car which delivered the evening milk and these chilly
       drives blew away his memory of the filth of the cowyard and he felt no
       repugnance at seeing the cow hairs and hayseeds on the milkman's coat.
       Whenever the car drew up before a house he waited to catch a glimpse of
       a well scrubbed kitchen or of a softly lighted hall and to see how the
       servant would hold the jug and how she would close the door. He thought
       it should be a pleasant life enough, driving along the roads every
       evening to deliver milk, if he had warm gloves and a fat bag of
       gingernuts in his pocket to eat from. But the same foreknowledge which
       had sickened his heart and made his legs sag suddenly as he raced round
       the park, the same intuition which had made him glance with mistrust at
       his trainer's flabby stubble-covered face as it bent heavily over his long
       stained fingers, dissipated any vision of the future. In a vague way he
       understood that his father was in trouble and that this was the reason
       why he himself had not been sent back to Clongowes. For some time he
       had felt the slight change in his house; and those changes in what he
       had deemed unchangeable were so many slight shocks to his boyish
       conception of the world. The ambition which he felt astir at times in
       the darkness of his soul sought no outlet. A dusk like that of the
       outer world obscured his mind as he heard the mare's hoofs clattering
       along the tramtrack on the Rock Road and the great can swaying and
       rattling behind him.
       He returned to Mercedes and, as he brooded upon her image, a strange
       unrest crept into his blood. Sometimes a fever gathered within him and
       led him to rove alone in the evening along the quiet avenue. The peace
       of the gardens and the kindly lights in the windows poured a tender
       influence into his restless heart. The noise of children at play
       annoyed him and their silly voices made him feel, even more keenly than
       he had felt at Clongowes, that he was different from others. He did not
       want to play. He wanted to meet in the real world the unsubstantial
       image which his soul so constantly beheld. He did not know where to
       seek it or how, but a premonition which led him on told him that this
       image would, without any overt act of his, encounter him. They would
       meet quietly as if they had known each other and had made their tryst,
       perhaps at one of the gates or in some more secret place. They would be
       alone, surrounded by darkness and silence: and in that moment of
       supreme tenderness he would be transfigured.
       He would fade into something impalpable under her eyes and then in a
       moment he would be transfigured. Weakness and timidity and inexperience
       would fall from him in that magic moment.
       * * * * *
       Two great yellow caravans had halted one morning before the door and
       men had come tramping into the house to dismantle it. The furniture had
       been hustled out through the front garden which was strewn with wisps
       of straw and rope ends and into the huge vans at the gate. When all had
       been safely stowed the vans had set off noisily down the avenue: and
       from the window of the railway carriage, in which he had sat with his
       red-eyed mother, Stephen had seen them lumbering along the Merrion
       Road.
       The parlour fire would not draw that evening and Mr Dedalus rested the
       poker against the bars of the grate to attract the flame. Uncle Charles
       dozed in a corner of the half furnished uncarpeted room and near him
       the family portraits leaned against the wall. The lamp on the table
       shed a weak light over the boarded floor, muddied by the feet of the
       van-men. Stephen sat on a footstool beside his father listening to a
       long and incoherent monologue. He understood little or nothing of it at
       first but he became slowly aware that his father had enemies and that
       some fight was going to take place. He felt, too, that he was being
       enlisted for the fight, that some duty was being laid upon his
       shoulders. The sudden flight from the comfort and revery of Blackrock,
       the passage through the gloomy foggy city, the thought of the bare
       cheerless house in which they were now to live made his heart heavy,
       and again an intuition, a foreknowledge of the future came to him. He
       understood also why the servants had often whispered together in the
       hall and why his father had often stood on the hearthrug with his back
       to the fire, talking loudly to uncle Charles who urged him to sit down
       and eat his dinner.
       --There's a crack of the whip left in me yet, Stephen, old chap, said
       Mr Dedalus, poking at the dull fire with fierce energy. We're not dead
       yet, sonny. No, by the Lord Jesus (God forgive me) not half dead.
       Dublin was a new and complex sensation. Uncle Charles had grown so
       witless that he could no longer be sent out on errands and the disorder
       in settling in the new house left Stephen freer than he had been in
       Blackrock. In the beginning he contented himself with circling timidly
       round the neighbouring square or, at most, going half way down one of
       the side streets but when he had made a skeleton map of the city in his
       mind he followed boldly one of its central lines until he reached the
       customhouse. He passed unchallenged among the docks and along the quays
       wondering at the multitude of corks that lay bobbing on the surface of
       the water in a thick yellow scum, at the crowds of quay porters and the
       rumbling carts and the ill-dressed bearded policeman. The vastness and
       strangeness of the life suggested to him by the bales of merchandise
       stocked along the walls or swung aloft out of the holds of steamers
       wakened again in him the unrest which had sent him wandering in the
       evening from garden to garden in search of Mercedes. And amid this new
       bustling life he might have fancied himself in another Marseille but that
       he missed the bright sky and the sum-warmed trellises of the wineshops.
       A vague dissatisfaction grew up within him as he looked on the quays and
       on the river and on the lowering skies and yet he continued to wander up
       and down day after day as if he really sought someone that eluded him.
       He went once or twice with his mother to visit their relatives: and
       though they passed a jovial array of shops lit up and adorned for
       Christmas his mood of embittered silence did not leave him. The causes
       of his embitterment were many, remote and near. He was angry with
       himself for being young and the prey of restless foolish impulses,
       angry also with the change of fortune which was reshaping the world
       about him into a vision of squalor and insincerity. Yet his anger lent
       nothing to the vision. He chronicled with patience what he saw,
       detaching himself from it and tasting its mortifying flavour in secret.
       He was sitting on the backless chair in his aunt's kitchen. A lamp with
       a reflector hung on the japanned wall of the fireplace and by its light
       his aunt was reading the evening paper that lay on her knees. She
       looked a long time at a smiling picture that was set in it and said
       musingly:
       --The beautiful Mabel Hunter!
       A ringletted girl stood on tiptoe to peer at the picture and said softly:
       --What is she in, mud?
       --In a pantomime, love.
       The child leaned her ringletted head against her mother's sleeve,
       gazing on the picture, and murmured as if fascinated:
       --The beautiful Mabel Hunter!
       As if fascinated, her eyes rested long upon those demurely taunting
       eyes and she murmured devotedly:
       --Isn't she an exquisite creature?
       And the boy who came in from the street, stamping crookedly under his
       stone of coal, heard her words. He dropped his load promptly on the
       floor and hurried to her side to see. He mauled the edges of the paper
       with his reddened and blackened hands, shouldering her aside and
       complaining that he could not see.
       He was sitting in the narrow breakfast room high up in the old
       dark-windowed house. The firelight flickered on the wall and beyond the
       window a spectral dusk was gathering upon the river. Before the fire an
       old woman was busy making tea and, as she bustled at the task, she told
       in a low voice of what the priest and the doctor had said. She told too
       of certain changes they had seen in her of late and of her odd ways and
       sayings. He sat listening to the words and following the ways of
       adventure that lay open in the coals, arches and vaults and winding
       galleries and jagged caverns.
       Suddenly he became aware of something in the doorway. A skull appeared
       suspended in the gloom of the doorway. A feeble creature like a monkey
       was there, drawn thither by the sound of voices at the fire. A whining
       voice came from the door asking:
       --Is that Josephine?
       The old bustling woman answered cheerily from the fireplace:
       --No, Ellen, it's Stephen.
       --OO, good evening, Stephen.
       He answered the greeting and saw a silly smile break over the face in
       the doorway.
       --Do you want anything, Ellen? asked the old woman at the fire.
       But she did not answer the question and said:
       --I thought it was Josephine. I thought you were Josephine, Stephen.
       And, repeating this several times, she fell to laughing 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 him, 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 corner, flattering, 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 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 the 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 beneath 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.
       --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: nobody is looking. I could hold her and kiss her.
       But he did neither: and, when he was sitting alone in the deserted
       tram, he tore his ticket into shreds and stared gloomily at the
       corrugated footboard.
       * * * * *
       The next day he sat at his table in the bare upper room for many hours.
       Before him lay a new pen, a new bottle of ink and a new emerald
       exercise. From force of habit he had written at the top of the
       first page the initial letters of the jesuit motto: A.M.D.G. On the
       first line of the page appeared the title of the verses he was trying
       to write: To E-- C--. He knew it was right to begin so for he had seen
       similar titles in the collected poems of Lord Byron. When he had
       written this title and drawn an ornamental line underneath he fell into
       a daydream and began to draw diagrams on the cover of the book. He saw
       himself sitting at his table in Bray the morning after the discussion
       at the Christmas dinner table, trying to write a poem about Parnell on
       the back of one of his father's second moiety notices. But his brain
       had then refused to grapple with the theme and, desisting, he had
       covered the page with the names and addresses of certain of his
       classmates:
       Roderick Kickham
       John Lawton
       Anthony MacSwiney
       Simon Moonan
       Now it seemed as if he would fail again but, by dint of brooding on the
       incident, he thought himself into confidence. During this process all
       those elements which he deemed common and insignificant fell out of the
       scene. There remained no trace of the tram itself nor of the tram-men
       nor of the horses: nor did he and she appear vividly. The verses told
       only of the night and the balmy breeze and the maiden lustre of the
       moon. Some undefined sorrow was hidden in the hearts of the
       protagonists as they stood in silence beneath the leafless trees and
       when the moment of farewell had come the kiss, which had been withheld
       by one, was given by both. After this the letters L. D. S. were written
       at the foot of the page, and, having hidden the book, he went into his
       mother's bedroom and gazed at his face for a long time in the mirror of
       her dressing-table.
       But his long spell of leisure and liberty was drawing to its end. One
       evening his father came home full of news which kept his tongue busy
       all through dinner. Stephen had been awaiting his father's return for
       there had been mutton hash that day and he knew that his father would
       make him dip his bread in the gravy. But he did not relish the hash for
       the mention of Clongowes had coated his palate with a scum of disgust.
       --I walked bang into him, said Mr Dedalus for the fourth time, just at
       the corner of the square.
       --Then I suppose, said Mrs Dedalus, he will be able to arrange it. I
       mean about Belvedere.
       --Of course he will, said Mr Dedalus. Don't I tell you he's provincial
       of the order now?
       --I never 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 Micky Mud? No, let him stick to the jesuits in God's name
       since he began with 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 gamecocks.
       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.
       --O, I'm sure he'll 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'll teach you to spell c.a.t. cat. And
       I'll 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.
       Mr Dedalus screwed his glass into his eye and stared hard at both 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 Mr 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 I `Il tell you that after. Well, as I was saying, we
       were chatting away quite friendly and 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 it, Father
       Dolan and I had a great laugh over it. YOU BETTER MIND YOURSELF FATHER
       DOLAN, said I, OR YOUNG DEDALUS WILL SEND YOU UP FOR TWICE NINE. We had
       a famous laugh together over it. Ha! Ha! Ha!
       Mr Dedalus turned to his wife and interjected in his natural voice:
       --Shows you the spirit in which they take the boys there. O, a jesuit
       for your life, for diplomacy!
       He reassumed the provincial's voice and repeated:
       --I TOLD THEM ALL AT DINNER ABOUT IT AND FATHER DOLAN AND I AND ALL OF
       US WE HAD A HEARTY LAUGH TOGETHER OVER IT. HA! HA! HA!
       * * * * *
       The night of the Whitsuntide play had come and Stephen from the window
       of the dressing-room looked out on the small grass-plot across which
       lines of Chinese lanterns were stretched. He watched the visitors come
       down the steps from the house and pass into the theatre. Stewards in
       evening dress, old Belvedereans, loitered in groups about the entrance
       to the theatre and ushered in the visitors with Ceremony. Under the
       sudden glow of a lantern he could recognize the smiling face of a
       priest.
       The Blessed Sacrament had been removed from the tabernacle and the
       first benches had been driven back so as to leave the dais of the altar
       and the space before it free. Against the walls stood companies of
       barbells and Indian clubs; the dumbbells were piled in one corner: and
       in the midst of countless hillocks of gymnasium shoes and sweaters and
       singlets in untidy brown parcels there stood the stout leather-
       jacketed vaulting horse waiting 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 gymnasium, had had no part in the first
       section of the programme but in the play which formed the second
       section he had the chief part, that of a farcical pedagogue. He had
       been cast for it on account of his stature and grave manners for he was
       now at the end of his second year at Belvedere and in number two.
       A score of the younger boys in white knickers and singlets came
       pattering down from the stage, through the vestry and to the chapel.
       The vestry and chapel were peopled with eager masters and boys. The
       plump bald sergeant major was testing with his foot the springboard of
       the vaulting horse. The lean young man in a long overcoat, who was to
       give a special display of intricate club swinging, stood near watching
       with interest, his silver-coated clubs peeping out of his deep
       side-pockets. The hollow rattle of the wooden dumbbells was heard as
       another team made ready to go up on the stage: and in another moment the
       excited prefect was hustling the boys through the vestry like a flock of
       geese, flapping the wings of his soutane nervously and crying to the
       laggards to make haste. A little troop of Neapolitan peasants were
       practising their steps at the end of the chapel, some circling their arms
       above their heads, some swaying their baskets of paper violets and
       curtsying. In a dark corner of the chapel at the gospel side of the altar
       a stout old lady knelt amid her copious black skirts. When she stood up a
       pink-dressed figure, wearing a curly golden wig and an old-fashioned straw
       sunbonnet, with black pencilled eyebrows and cheeks delicately rouged and
       powdered, was discovered. A low murmur of curiosity ran round the chapel
       at the discovery of this girlish figure. One of the prefects, smiling and
       nodding his head, approached the dark corner and, having bowed to the
       stout old lady, said pleasantly:
       --Is this a beautiful young lady or a doll that you have here, Mrs
       Tallon?
       Then, bending down to peer at the smiling painted face under the leaf
       of the bonnet, he exclaimed:
       --No! Upon my word I believe it's little Bertie Tallon after all!
       Stephen at his post by the window heard the old lady and the priest
       laugh together and heard the boys' murmurs of admiration behind him as
       they passed forward to see the little boy who had to dance the
       sunbonnet dance by himself. A movement of impatience escaped him. He
       let the edge of the blind fall and, stepping down from the bench on
       which he had been standing, walked out of the chapel.
       He passed out of the schoolhouse and halted under the shed that flanked
       the garden. From the theatre opposite came the muffled noise of the
       audience and sudden brazen clashes of the soldiers' band. The light
       spread upwards from the glass roof making the theatre seem a festive
       ark, anchored among the hulks of houses, her frail cables of lanterns
       looping her to her moorings. A side door of the theatre opened suddenly
       and a shaft of light flew across the grass plots. A sudden burst of
       music issued from the ark, the prelude of a waltz: and when the side
       door closed again the listener could hear the faint rhythm of the
       music. The sentiment of the opening bars, their languor and supple
       movement, evoked the incommunicable emotion which had been the cause of
       all his day's unrest and of his impatient movement of a moment before.
       His unrest issued from him like a wave of sound: and on the tide of
       flowing music the ark was journeying, trailing her cables of lanterns
       in her wake. Then a noise like dwarf artillery broke the movement. It
       was the clapping that greeted the entry of the dumbbell team on the
       stage.
       At the far end of the shed near the street a speck of pink light showed
       in the darkness and as he walked towards it he became aware of a faint
       aromatic odour. Two boys were standing in the shelter of a doorway,
       smoking, and before he reached them he had recognised Heron by his
       voice.
       --Here comes the noble Dedalus! cried a high throaty voice. Welcome to
       our trusty friend!
       This welcome ended in a soft peal of mirthless laughter as Heron
       salaamed and then began to poke the ground with his cane.
       --Here I am, said Stephen, halting and glancing from Heron to his
       friend.
       The latter was a stranger to him but in the darkness, by the aid of the
       glowing cigarette tips, he could make out a pale dandyish face over
       which a smile was travelling slowly, a tall overcoated figure and a
       hard hat. Heron did not trouble himself about an introduction but said
       instead:
       --I was just telling my friend Wallis what a lark it would be tonight
       if you took off the rector in the part of the schoolmaster. It would be
       a ripping good joke.
       Heron made a poor attempt to imitate for his friend Wallis the rector's
       pedantic bass and then, laughing at his failure, asked Stephen to do
       it.
       --Go on, Dedalus, he urged, you can take him off rippingly. HE THAT WILL
       NOT HEAR THE CHURCHA LET HIM BE TO THEEA AS THE HEATHENA AND THE
       PUBLICANA.
       The imitation was prevented by a mild expression of anger from Wallis
       in whose mouthpiece the cigarette had become too tightly wedged.
       --Damn this blankety blank holder, he said, taking it from his mouth
       and smiling and frowning upon it tolerantly. It's always getting stuck
       like that. Do you use a holder?
       --I don't smoke, answered Stephen.
       --No, said Heron, Dedalus is a model youth. He doesn't smoke and he
       doesn't go to bazaars and he doesn't flirt and he doesn't damn anything
       or damn all.
       Stephen shook his head and smiled in his rival's flushed and mobile
       face, beaked like a bird's. He had often thought it strange that
       Vincent Heron had a bird's face as well as a bird's name. A shock of
       pale hair lay on the forehead like a ruffled crest: the forehead was
       narrow and bony and a thin hooked nose stood out between the close-set
       prominent eyes which were light and inexpressive. The rivals were
       school friends. They sat together in class, knelt together in the
       chapel, talked together after beads over their lunches. As the fellows
       in number one were undistinguished dullards, Stephen and Heron had been
       during the year the virtual heads of the school. It was they who went
       up to the rector together to ask for a free day or to get a fellow off.
       --O by the way, said Heron suddenly, I saw your governor going in.
       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 sly dog.
       --Why so? said Stephen.
       --You'd think butter wouldn't melt in your mouth said Heron. But I'm
       afraid you're a sly dog.
       --Might I ask you what you are talking about? said Stephen urbanely.
       --Indeed you might, answered Heron. We saw her, Wallis, didn't we? And
       deucedly pretty she is too. And inquisitive! AND WHAT PART DOES STEPHEN
       TAKE, MR DEDALUS? AND WILL STEPHEN NOT SING, MR DEDALUS? 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 corner 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 leave-taking 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 his breast as it had done on the
       night of the party, but had not found an outlet in verse. The growth
       and knowledge of two years of boyhood stood between then 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 prefect
       and 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 moment 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
       adventure in his mind stood in no danger from these words: and his face
       mirrored his rival's false smile.
       --Admit! repeated Heron, striking him again with his cane across the
       calf of the leg.
       The stroke was playful but not so lightly given as the first one had
       been. Stephen felt the skin tingle and glow slightly and almost
       painlessly; and, bowing submissively, as if to meet his companion's
       jesting mood, began to recite the CONFITEOR. The episode ended well,
       for both Heron and Wallis laughed indulgently at the irreverence.
       The confession came only from Stephen's lips and, while they spoke the
       words, a sudden memory had carried him to another scene called up, as
       if by magic, at the moment when he had noted the faint cruel dimples at
       the corners of Heron's smiling lips and had felt the familiar stroke of
       the cane against his calf and had heard the familiar word of
       admonition:
       --Admit.
       It was towards the close of his first term in the college when he was
       in number six. His sensitive nature was still smarting under the lashes
       of an undivined and squalid way of life. His soul was still disquieted
       and cast down by the dull phenomenon of Dublin. He had emerged from a
       two years' spell of revery to find himself in the midst of a new scene,
       every event and figure of which affected him intimately, disheartened
       him or allured and, whether alluring or disheartening, filled him
       always with unrest and bitter thoughts. All the leisure which his
       school life left him was passed in the company of subversive writers
       whose jibes and violence of speech set up a ferment in his brain before
       they passed out of it into his crude writings.
       The essay was for him the chief labour of his week and every Tuesday,
       as he marched from home to the school, he read his fate in the
       incidents of the way, pitting himself against some figure ahead of him
       and quickening his pace to outstrip it before a certain goal was
       reached or planting his steps scrupulously in the spaces of the
       patchwork of the pathway and telling himself that he would be first and
       not first in the weekly essay.
       On a certain Tuesday the course of his triumphs was rudely broken. Mr
       Tate, the English master, pointed his finger at him and said bluntly:
       --This fellow has heresy in his essay.
       A hush fell on the class. Mr Tate did not break it but dug with his
       hand between his thighs while his heavily starched linen creaked about
       his neck and wrists. Stephen did not look up. It was a raw spring
       morning and his eyes were still smarting and weak. He was conscious of
       failure and of detection, of the squalor of his own mind and home, and
       felt against his neck the raw edge of his turned and jagged collar.
       A short loud laugh from Mr Tate set the class more at ease.
       --Perhaps you didn't know that, he said.
       --Where? asked Stephen.
       Mr Tate withdrew his delving hand and spread out the essay.
       --Here. It's about the Creator and the soul. Rrmrrm rrmAh! WITHOUT A
       POSSIBILITY OF EVER APPROACHING NEARER. That's heresy.
       Stephen murmured:
       --I meant WITHOUT A POSSIBILITY OF EVER REACHING.
       It was a submission and Mr Tate, appeased, folded up the essay and
       passed it across to him, saying:
       --OAh! EVER REACHING. That's another story.
       But the class was not so soon appeased. Though nobody spoke to him of
       the affair after class he could feel about him a vague general
       malignant joy.
       A few nights after this public chiding he was walking with a letter
       along the Drumcondra Road when he heard a voice cry:
       --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 attendants, he cleft the air before him with a thin
       cane in time to their steps. Boland, his friend, marched beside him, a
       large grin on his face, while Nash came on a 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 declared 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 prose do you mean?
       --Yes.
       --Newman, I think.
       --Is it Cardinal Newman? asked Boland.
       --Yes, answered Stephen.
       The grin broadened on Nash's freckled face as he turned to Stephen and
       said:
       --And do you like Cardinal Newman, Dedalus?
       --O, many say that Newman has the best prose style, Heron said to the
       other two in explanation, of course he's not a poet.
       --And who is the best poet, Heron? asked Boland.
       --Lord Tennyson, of course, answered Heron.
       --O, yes, Lord Tennyson, said Nash. We have all his poetry at home in a
       book.
       At this Stephen forgot the silent vows he had been making and burst out:
       --Tennyson a poet! Why, he's only a rhymester!
       --O, get out! said Heron. Everyone knows that Tennyson is the greatest
       poet.
       --And who do you think is the greatest poet? asked Boland, nudging his
       neighbour.
       --Byron, of course, answered Stephen.
       Heron gave the lead and all three joined in a scornful laugh.
       --What are you laughing at? asked Stephen.
       --You, said Heron. Byron the greatest poet! He's only a poet for
       uneducated people.
       --He must be a fine poet! said Boland.
       --You may keep your mouth shut, said Stephen, turning on him boldly.
       All you know about poetry is what you wrote up on the slates in the
       yard and were going to be sent to the loft for.
       Boland, in fact, was said to have written on the slates in the yard a
       couplet about a classmate of his who often rode home from the college
       on a pony:
       As Tyson was riding into Jerusalem
       He fell and hurt his Alec Kafoozelum.
       This thrust put the two lieutenants to silence but Heron went on:
       --In any case Byron was a heretic and immoral too.
       --I don't care what he was, cried Stephen hotly.
       --You don't care whether he was a heretic or not? said Nash.
       --What do you know about it? shouted Stephen. You never read a line of
       anything in your life except a trans, or Boland either.
       --I know that Byron was a bad man, said Boland.
       --Here, catch hold of this heretic, Heron called out. In a moment
       Stephen was a prisoner.
       --Tate made you buck up the other day, Heron went on, about the heresy
       in your essay.
       --I'll tell him tomorrow, said Boland.
       --Will you? said Stephen. You'd be afraid to open your lips.
       --Afraid?
       --Ay. Afraid of your life.
       --Behave yourself! cried Heron, cutting at Stephen's legs with his
       cane.
       It was the signal for their onset. Nash pinioned his arms behind while
       Boland seized a long cabbage stump which was lying in the gutter.
       Struggling and kicking under the cuts of the cane and the blows of the
       knotty stump Stephen was borne back against a barbed wire fence.
       --Admit that Byron was no good.
       --No.
       --Admit.
       --No.
       --Admit.
       --No. No.
       At last after a fury of plunges he wrenched himself free. His
       tormentors set off towards Jones's Road, laughing and jeering at him,
       while he, half blinded with tears, stumbled on, clenching his fists
       madly and sobbing.
       While he was still repeating the CONFITEOR amid the indulgent laughter
       of his hearers and while the scenes of that malignant episode were
       still passing sharply and swiftly before his mind he wondered why he
       bore no malice now to those who had tormented him. He had not forgotten
       a whit of their cowardice and cruelty but the memory of it called forth
       no anger from him. All the descriptions of fierce love and hatred which
       he had met in books had seemed to him therefore unreal. Even that night
       as he stumbled homewards along Jones's Road he had felt that some power
       was divesting him of that sudden-woven anger as easily as a fruit is
       divested of its soft ripe peel.
       He remained standing with his two companions at the end of the shed
       listening idly to their talk or to the bursts of applause in the
       theatre. She was sitting there among the others perhaps waiting for him
       to appear. He tried to recall her appearance but could not. He could
       remember only that she had worn a shawl about her head like a cowl and
       that her dark eyes had invited and unnerved him. He wondered had he
       been in her thoughts as she had been in his. Then in the dark and
       unseen by the other two he rested the tips of the fingers of one hand
       upon the palm of the other hand, scarcely touching it lightly. But the
       pressure of her fingers had been lighter and steadier: and suddenly the
       memory of their touch traversed his brain and body like an invisible
       wave.
       A boy came towards them, running along under the shed. He was excited
       and breathless.
       --O, Dedalus, he cried, Doyle is in a great bake about you. You're to
       go in at once and get dressed for the play. Hurry up, you better.
       --He's coming now, said Heron to the messenger with a haughty drawl,
       when he wants to.
       The boy turned to Heron and repeated:
       --But Doyle is in an awful bake.
       --Will you tell Doyle with my best compliments that I damned his eyes?
       answered Heron.
       --Well, I must go now, said Stephen, who cared little for such points
       of honour.
       --I wouldn't, said Heron, damn me if I would. That's no way to send
       for one of the senior boys. In a bake, indeed! I think it's quite
       enough that you're taking a part in his bally old play.
       This spirit of quarrelsome comradeship which he had observed lately in
       his rival had not seduced Stephen from his habits of quiet obedience.
       He mistrusted the turbulence and doubted the sincerity of such
       comradeship which seemed to him a sorry anticipation of manhood. The
       question of honour here raised was, like all such questions, trivial to
       him. While his mind had been pursuing its intangible phantoms and
       turning in irresolution from such pursuit he had heard about him the
       constant voices of his father and of his masters, urging him to be a
       gentleman above all things and urging him to be a good catholic above all
       things. These voices had now come to be hollow-sounding in his ears. When
       the gymnasium had been opened he had heard another voice urging him to be
       strong and manly and healthy and when the movement towards national
       revival had begun to be felt in the college yet another voice had bidden
       him be true to his country and help to raise up her language and
       tradition. In the profane world, as he foresaw, a worldly voice would bid
       him raise up his father's fallen state by his labours and, meanwhile, the
       voice of his school comrades urged him to be a decent fellow, to shield
       others from blame or to beg them off and to do his best to get free days
       for the school. And it was the din of all these hollow-sounding voices
       that made him halt irresolutely in the pursuit of phantoms. He gave them
       ear only for a time but he was happy only when he was far from them,
       beyond their call, alone or in the company of phantasmal comrades.
       In the vestry a plump fresh-faced jesuit and an elderly man, in shabby
       blue clothes, were dabbling in a case of paints and chalks. The boys
       who had been painted walked about or stood still awkwardly, touching
       their faces in a gingerly fashion with their furtive fingertips. In the
       middle of the vestry a young jesuit, who was then on a visit to the
       college, stood rocking himself rhythmically from the tips of his toes
       to his heels and back again, his hands thrust well forward into his
       side-pockets. His small head set off with glossy red curls and his
       newly shaven face agreed well with the spotless decency of his soutane
       and with his spotless shoes.
       As he watched this swaying form and tried to read for himself the
       legend of the priest's mocking smile there came into Stephen's memory a
       saying which he had heard from his father before he had been sent to
       Clongowes, that you could always tell a jesuit by the style of his
       clothes. At the same moment he thought he saw a likeness between his
       father's mind and that of this smiling well-dressed priest: and he was
       aware of some desecration of the priest's office or of the vestry
       itself whose silence was now routed by loud talk and joking and its air
       pungent with the smells of the gas-jets and the grease.
       While his forehead was being wrinkled and his jaws painted black and
       blue by the elderly man, he listened distractedly to the voice of the
       plump young jesuit which bade him speak up and make his points clearly.
       He could hear the band playing THE LILY OF KILLARNEY and knew that in a
       few moments the curtain would go up. He felt no stage fright but the
       thought of the part he had to play humiliated him. A remembrance of
       some of his lines made a sudden flush rise to his painted cheeks. He
       saw her serious alluring eyes watching him from among the audience and
       their image at once swept away his scruples, leaving his will compact.
       Another nature seemed to have been lent him: the infection of the
       excitement and youth about him entered into and transformed his moody
       mistrustfulness. For one rare moment he seemed to be clothed in the
       real apparel of boyhood: and, as he stood in the wings among the other
       players, he shared the common mirth amid which the drop scene was
       hauled upwards by two able-bodied priests with violent jerks and all awry.
       A few moments after he found himself on the stage amid the garish gas
       and the dim scenery, acting before the innumerable faces of the void.
       It surprised him to see that the play which he had known at rehearsals
       for a disjointed lifeless thing had suddenly assumed a life of its own.
       It seemed now to play itself, he and his fellow actors aiding it with
       their parts. When the curtain fell on the last scene he heard the void
       filled with applause and, through a rift in a side scene, saw the
       simple body before which he had acted magically deformed, the void of
       faces breaking at all points and falling asunder into busy groups.
       He left the stage quickly and rid himself of his mummery 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 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 left in its wake.
       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. I'll 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 of, maddening incense before the eyes of his mind. He
       strode down the hill amid the tumult of sudden-risen 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.
       A film still veiled his eyes but they burned no longer. A power, akin
       to that which had often made anger or resentment fall from him, brought
       his steps to rest. He stood still and gazed up at the sombre porch of
       the morgue and from that to the dark cobbled laneway at its side. He
       saw the word LOTTS on the wall of the lane and breathed slowly the rank
       heavy air.
       That is horse piss and rotted straw, he thought. It is a good odour to
       breathe. It will calm my heart. My heart is quite calm now. I will go
       back.
       * * * * *
       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 telegraph-poles passing his
       window swiftly every four seconds, the little glimmering stations,
       manned by a few silent sentries, flung by the mail behind her and
       twinkling for a moment in the darkness like fiery grains flung
       backwards by a runner.
       He listened without sympathy to his father's evocation of Cork and of
       scenes of his youth, a tale broken by sighs or draughts from his pocket
       flask whenever the image of some dead friend appeared in it or whenever
       the evoker remembered suddenly the purpose of his actual visit. Stephen
       heard but could feel no pity. The images of the dead were all strangers
       to him save that of uncle Charles, an image which had lately been
       fading out of memory. He knew, however, that his father's property was
       going to be sold by auction, and in the manner of his own dispossession
       he felt the world give the lie rudely to his phantasy.
       At Maryborough he fell asleep. When he awoke the train had passed out
       of Mallow and his father was stretched asleep on the other seat. The
       cold light of the dawn lay over the country, over the unpeopled fields
       and the closed cottages. The terror of sleep fascinated his mind as he
       watched the silent country or heard from time to time his father's deep
       breath or sudden sleepy movement. The neighbourhood of unseen sleepers
       filled him with strange dread, as though they could harm him, and he
       prayed that the day might come quickly. His prayer, addressed neither
       to God nor saint, began with a shiver, as the chilly morning breeze
       crept through the chink of the carriage door to his feet, and ended in
       a trail of foolish words which he made to fit the insistent rhythm of
       the train; and silently, at intervals of four seconds, the
       telegraph-poles held the galloping notes of the music between punctual
       bars. This furious music allayed his dread and, leaning against the
       windowledge, he let his eyelids close again.
       They drove in a jingle across Cork while it was still early morning and
       Stephen finished his sleep in a bedroom of the Victoria Hotel. The
       bright warm sunlight was streaming through the window and he could hear
       the din of traffic. His father was standing before the dressing-table,
       examining his hair and face and moustache with great care, craning his
       neck across the water-jug and drawing it back sideways to see the better.
       While he did so he sang softly to himself with quaint accent and phrasing:
       'Tis youth and folly
       Makes young men marry,
       So here, my love, I'll
       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's bony:
       She's like good whisky
       When it is new;
       But when 'tis old
       And growing cold
       It fades and dies like
       The mountain dew.
       The consciousness of the warm sunny city outside his window and the
       tender tremors with which his father's voice festooned the strange sad
       happy air, drove off all the mists of the night's ill humour from
       Stephen's brain. He got up quickly to dress and, when the song had
       ended, said:
       --That's much prettier than any of your other COME-ALL-YOUS.
       --Do you think so? asked Mr Dedalus.
       --I like it, said Stephen.
       --It's a pretty old air, said Mr Dedalus, twirling the points of his
       moustache. Ah, but you should have heard Mick Lacy sing it! Poor Mick
       Lacy! He had little turns for it, grace notes that he used to put in
       that I haven't got. That was the boy who could sing a COME-ALL-YOU, if
       you like.
       Mr Dedalus had ordered drisheens for breakfast and during the meal he
       cross-examined the waiter for local news. For the most part they spoke
       at cross purposes when a name was mentioned, the waiter having in mind
       the present holder and Mr Dedalus his father or perhaps his
       grandfather.
       --Well, I hope they haven't moved the Queen's College anyhow, said Mr
       Dedalus, for I want to show it to this youngster of mine.
       Along the Mardyke the trees were in bloom. They entered the grounds of
       the college and were led by the garrulous porter across the quadrangle.
       But their progress across the gravel was brought to a halt after every
       dozen or so paces by some reply of the porter's.
       --Ah, do you tell me so? And is poor Pottlebelly dead?
       --Yes, sir. Dead, sir.
       During these halts Stephen stood awkwardly behind the two men, weary of
       the subject and waiting restlessly for the slow march to begin again.
       By the time they had crossed the quadrangle his restlessness had risen
       to fever. He wondered how his father, whom he knew for a shrewd
       suspicious man, could be duped by the servile manners of the porter;
       and the lively southern speech which had entertained him all the
       morning now irritated his ears.
       They passed into the anatomy theatre where Mr Dedalus, the porter
       aiding him, searched the desks for his initials. Stephen remained in
       the background, depressed more than ever by the darkness and silence of
       the theatre and by the air it wore of jaded and formal study. On the
       desk he read the word FOETUS cut several times in the dark stained
       wood. The sudden legend startled his blood: he seemed to feel the
       absent students of the college about him and to shrink from their
       company. A vision of their life, which his father's words had been
       powerless to evoke, sprang up before him out of the word cut in the
       desk. A broad-shouldered student with a moustache was cutting in the
       letters with a jack-knife, seriously. Other students stood or sat near
       him laughing at his handiwork. One jogged his elbow. The big student
       turned on him, frowning. He was dressed in loose grey clothes and had
       tan boots.
       Stephen's name was called. He hurried down the steps of the theatre so
       as to be as far away from the vision as he could be and, peering
       closely at his father's initials, hid his flushed face.
       But the word and the vision capered before his eyes as he walked back
       across the quadrangle and towards the college gate. It shocked him to
       find in the outer world a trace of what he had deemed till then a
       brutish and individual malady of his own mind. His monstrous reveries
       came thronging into his memory. They too had sprung up before him,
       suddenly and furiously, out of mere words. He had soon given in to them
       and allowed them to sweep across and abase his intellect, wondering
       always where they came from, from what den of monstrous images, and
       always weak and humble towards others, restless and sickened of himself
       when they had swept over him.
       --Ay, bedad! And there's the Groceries sure enough! cried Mr Dedalus.
       You often heard me speak of the Groceries, didn't you, Stephen. Many's
       the time we went down there when our names had been marked, a crowd of
       us, Harry Peard and little Jack Mountain and Bob Dyas and Maurice
       Moriarty, the Frenchman, and Tom O'Grady and Mick Lacy that I told you
       of this morning and Joey Corbet and poor little good-hearted Johnny
       Keevers of the Tantiles.
       The leaves of the trees along the Mardyke were astir and whispering in
       the sunlight. A team of cricketers passed, agile young men in flannels
       and blazers, one of them carrying the long green wicket-bag. In a quiet
       bystreet a German band of five players in faded uniforms and with
       battered brass instruments was playing to an audience of street arabs
       and leisurely messenger boys. A maid in a white cap and apron was
       watering a box of plants on a sill which shone like a slab of limestone
       in the warm glare. From another window open to the air came the sound
       of a piano, scale after scale rising into the treble.
       Stephen walked on at his father's side, listening to stories he had
       heard before, hearing again the names of the scattered and dead
       revellers who had been the companions of his father's youth. And a
       faint sickness sighed in his heart.
       He recalled his own equivocal position in Belvedere, a free boy, a
       leader afraid of his own authority, proud and sensitive and suspicious,
       battling against the squalor of his life and against the riot of his
       mind. The letters cut in the stained wood of the desk stared upon him,
       mocking his bodily weakness and futile enthusiasms and making him
       loathe himself for his own mad and filthy orgies. The spittle in his
       throat grew bitter and foul to swallow and the faint sickness climbed
       to his brain so that for a moment he closed his eyes and walked on in
       darkness.
       He could still hear his father's voice--
       --When you kick out for yourself, Stephen--as I daresay you will one
       of these days--remember, whatever you do, to mix with gentlemen. When
       I was a young fellow I tell you I enjoyed myself. I mixed with fine
       decent fellows. Everyone of us could lo something. One fellow had a
       good voice, another fellow was a good actor, another could sing a good
       comic song, another was a good oarsman or a good racket player, another
       could tell a good story and so on. We kept the ball rolling anyhow and
       enjoyed ourselves and saw a bit of life and we were none the worse of
       it either. But we were all gentlemen, Stephen--at least I hope we were
       -and bloody good honest Irishmen too. That's the kind of fellows I
       want you to associate with, fellows of the right kidney. I'm talking to
       you as a friend, Stephen. I don't believe a son should be afraid of his
       father. No, I treat you as your grandfather treated me when I was a
       young chap. We were more like brothers than father and son. I `Il never
       forget the first day he caught me smoking. I was standing at the end of
       the South Terrace one day with some maneens like myself and sure we
       thought we were grand fellows because we had pipes stuck in the corners
       of our mouths. Suddenly the governor passed. He didn't say a word, or
       stop even. But the next day, Sunday, we were out for a walk together
       and when we were coming home he took out his cigar case and said:--By
       the by, Simon, I didn't know you smoked, or something like that.--Of
       course I tried to carry it off as best I could.--If you want a good
       smoke, he said, try one of these cigars. An American captain made me a
       present of them last night in Queenstown.
       Stephen heard his father's voice break into a laugh which was almost a
       sob.
       --He was the handsomest man in Cork at that time, by God he was! The
       women used to stand to look after him in the street.
       He heard the sob passing loudly down his father's throat and opened his
       eyes with a nervous impulse. The sunlight breaking-suddenly on his
       sight turned the sky and clouds into a fantastic world of sombre masses
       with lakelike spaces of dark rosy light. His very brain was sick and
       powerless. He could scarcely interpret the letters of the signboards of
       the shops. By his monstrous way of life he seemed to have put himself
       beyond the limits of reality. Nothing moved him or spoke to him from
       the real world unless he heard in it an echo of the infuriated cries
       within him. He could respond to no earthly or human appeal, dumb and
       insensible to the call of summer and gladness and companionship,
       wearied and dejected by his father's voice. He could scarcely recognize
       as his own thoughts, and repeated slowly to himself:
       --I am Stephen Dedalus. I am walking beside my father whose name is
       Simon Dedalus. We are in Cork, in Ireland. Cork is a city. Our room is
       in the Victoria Hotel. Victoria and Stephen and Simon. Simon and
       Stephen and Victoria. Names.
       The memory of his childhood suddenly grew dim. He tried to call forth
       some of its vivid moments but could not. He recalled only names. Dante,
       Parnell, Clane, Clongowes. A little boy had been taught geography by an
       old woman who kept two brushes in her wardrobe. Then he had been sent
       away from home to a college, he had made his first communion and eaten
       slim jim out of his cricket cap and watched the firelight leaping and
       dancing on the wall of a little bedroom in the infirmary and dreamed of
       being dead, of mass being said for him by the rector in a black and
       gold cope, of being buried then in the little graveyard of the
       community off the main avenue of limes. But he had not died then.
       Parnell had died. There had been no mass for the dead in the chapel and
       no procession. He had not died but he had faded out like a film in the
       sun. He had been lost or had wandered out of existence for he no longer
       existed. How strange to think of him passing out of existence in such a
       way, not by death but by fading out in the sun or by being lost and
       forgotten somewhere in the universe! It was strange to see his small
       body appear again for a moment: a little boy in a grey belted 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 Newcombe's coffee-house,
       where Mr Dedalus's 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 barmaids 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 him alone. He's a
       level-headed thinking boy who doesn't bother his head about that kind
       of nonsense.
       --Then he's not his father's son, said the little old man.
       --I don't know, I'm sure, said Mr Dedalus, smiling complacently.
       --Your father, said the little old man to Stephen, was the boldest flirt
       in the City of Cork in his day. Do you know that?
       Stephen looked down and studied the tiled floor of the bar into which
       they had drifted.
       --Now don't be putting ideas into his head, said Mr Dedalus Leave him
       to his Maker.
       --Yerra, sure I wouldn't put any ideas into his head. I'm old enough
       to be his grandfather. And I am a grandfather, said the little old man
       to Stephen. Do you know that?
       --Are you? asked Stephen.
       --Bedad I am, said the little old man. I have two bouncing
       grandchildren out at Sunday's Well. Now, then! What age do you think I
       am? And I remember seeing your grandfather in his red coat riding out
       to hounds. That was before you were born.
       --Ay, or thought of, said Mr Dedalus.
       --Bedad I did, repeated the little old man. And, more than that, I can
       remember even your great-grandfather, old John Stephen Dedalus, and a
       fierce old fire-eater he was. Now, then! There's a memory for you!
       --That's three generations--four generations, said another of the
       company. Why, Johnny Cashman, you must be nearing the century.
       --Well, I'll tell you the truth, said the little old man. I'm just
       twenty-seven years of age.
       --We're as old as we feel, Johnny, said Mr Dedalus. And just finish
       what you have there and we'll have another. Here, Tim or Tom or
       whatever your name is, give us the same again here. By God, I don't
       feel more than eighteen myself. There's that son of mine there not half
       my age and I'm a better man than he is any day of the week.
       --Draw it mild now, Dedalus. I think it's time for you to take a back
       seat, said the gentleman who had spoken before.
       --No, by God! asserted Mr Dedalus. I'll sing a tenor song against him
       or I'll vault a five-barred gate against him or I'll run with him after
       the hounds across the country as I did thirty years ago along with the
       Kerry Boy and the best man for it.
       --But he'll beat you here, said the little old man, tapping his
       forehead and raising his glass to drain it.
       --Well, I hope he'll be as good a man as his father. That's all I can
       say, said Mr Dedalus.
       --If he is, he'll do, said the little old man.
       --And thanks be to God, Johnny, said Mr Dedalus, that we lived so long
       and did so little harm.
       --But did so much good, Simon, said the little old man gravely. Thanks
       be to God we lived so long and did so much good.
       Stephen watched the three glasses being raised from the counter as his
       father and his two cronies drank to the memory of their past. An abyss
       of fortune or of temperament sundered him from them. His mind seemed
       older than theirs: it shone coldly on their strifes and happiness and
       regrets like a moon upon a younger earth. No life or youth stirred in
       him as it had stirred in them. He had known neither the pleasure of
       companionship with others nor the vigour of rude male health nor filial
       piety. Nothing stirred within his soul but a cold and cruel and
       loveless lust. His childhood was dead or lost and with it his soul
       capable of simple joys and he was drifting amid life like the barren
       shell of the moon.
       Art thou pale for weariness
       Of climbing heaven and gazing on the earth,
       Wandering companionless?
       He repeated to himself the lines of Shelley's fragment. Its alternation
       of sad human ineffectiveness with vast inhuman cycles of activity
       chilled him and he forgot his own human and ineffectual grieving.
       * * * * *
       Stephen's mother and his brother and one of his cousins waited at the
       corner of quiet Foster Place while he and his father went up the steps
       and along the colonnade where the Highland sentry was parading. When
       they had passed into the great hall and stood at the counter Stephen
       drew forth his orders on the governor of the bank of Ireland for thirty
       and three pounds; and these sums, the moneys of his exhibition and
       essay prize, were paid over to him rapidly by the teller in notes and
       in coin respectively. He bestowed them in his pockets with feigned
       composure and suffered the friendly teller, to whom his father chatted,
       to take his hand across the broad counter and wish him a brilliant
       career in after life. He was impatient of their voices and could not
       keep his feet at rest. But the teller still deferred the serving of
       others to say he was living in changed times and that there was nothing
       like giving a boy the best education that money could buy. Mr Dedalus
       lingered in the hall gazing about him and up at the roof and telling
       Stephen, who urged him to come out, that they were standing in the
       house of commons of the old Irish parliament.
       --God help us! he said piously, to think of the men of those times,
       Stephen, Hely Hutchinson and Flood and Henry Grattan and Charles Kendal
       Bushe, and the noblemen we have now, leaders of the Irish people at
       home and abroad. Why, by God, they wouldn't be seen dead in a ten-acre
       field with them. No, Stephen, old chap, I'm sorry to say that they are
       only as I roved out one fine May morning in the merry month of sweet
       July.
       A keen October wind was blowing round the bank. The three figures
       standing at the edge of the muddy path had pinched cheeks and watery
       eyes. Stephen looked at his thinly clad mother and remembered that a
       few days before he had seen a mantle priced at twenty guineas in the
       windows of Barnardo's.
       --Well that's done, said Mr Dedalus.
       --We had better go to dinner, said Stephen. Where?
       --Dinner? said Mr Dedalus. Well, I suppose we had better, what?
       --Some place that's not too dear, said Mrs Dedalus.
       --Underdone's?
       --Yes. Some quiet place.
       --Come along, said Stephen quickly. It doesn't matter about the
       dearness.
       He walked on before them with short nervous steps, smiling. They tried
       to keep up with him, smiling also at his eagerness.
       --Take it easy like a good young fellow, said his father. We're hot
       out for the half mile, are we?
       For a swift season of merrymaking the money of his prizes ran through
       Stephen's fingers. Great parcels of groceries and delicacies and dried
       fruits arrived from the city. Every day he drew up a bill of fare for
       the family and every night led a party of three or four to the theatre
       to see INGOMAR or THE LADY OF LYONS. In his coat pockets he carried
       squares of Vienna chocolate for his guests while his trousers' pocket
       bulged with masses of silver and copper coins. He bought presents for
       everyone, overhauled his room, wrote out resolutions, marshalled his
       books up and down their shelves, pored upon all kinds of price lists,
       drew up a form of commonwealth for the household by which every member
       of it held some office, opened a loan bank for his family and pressed
       loans on willing borrowers so that he might have the pleasure of making
       out receipts and reckoning the interests on the sums lent. When he
       could do no more he drove up and down the city in trams. Then the
       season of pleasure came to an end. The pot of pink enamel paint gave out
       and the wainscot of his bedroom remained with its unfinished and
       ill-plastered coat.
       His household returned to its usual way of life. His mother had no
       further occasion to upbraid him for squandering his money. He too
       returned to his old life at school and all his novel enterprises fell
       to pieces. The commonwealth fell, the loan bank closed its coffers and
       its books on a sensible loss, the rules of life which he had drawn
       about himself fell into desuetude.
       How foolish his aim had been! He had tried to build a break-water of
       order and elegance against the sordid tide of life without him and to
       dam up, by rules of conduct and active interest and new filial
       relations, the powerful recurrence of the tides within him. Useless.
       From without as from within the waters 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, fosterchild and
       fosterbrother.
       He turned to appease the fierce longings of his heart before which
       everything else was idle and alien. He cared little that he was in
       mortal sin, that his life had grown to be a tissue of subterfuge and
       falsehood. Beside the savage desire within him to realize the
       enormities which he brooded on nothing was sacred. He bore cynically
       with the shameful details of his secret riots in which he exulted to
       defile with patience whatever image had attracted his eyes. By day and
       by night he moved among distorted images of the outer world. A figure
       that had seemed to him by day demure and innocent 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 orgiastic 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. Only at
       times, in the pauses of his desire, when the luxury that was wasting
       him gave room to a softer languor, the image of Mercedes traversed the
       background of his memory. He saw again the small white house and the
       garden of rose-bushes on the road that led to the mountains and he
       remembered the sadly proud gesture of refusal which he was to make
       there, standing with her in the moonlit garden after years of
       estrangement and adventure. At those moments the soft speeches of
       Claude Melnotte rose to his lips and eased his unrest. A tender
       premonition touched him of the tryst he had then looked forward to and,
       in spite of the horrible reality which lay between his hope of then and
       now, of the holy encounter he had then imagined at which weakness and
       timidity and inexperience were to fall from him.
       Such moments passed and the wasting fires of lust sprang up again. The
       verses passed from his lips and the inarticulate cries and the unspoken
       brutal words rushed forth from his brain to force a passage. His blood
       was in revolt. He wandered up and down the dark slimy streets peering
       into the gloom of lanes and doorways, listening eagerly for any sound.
       He moaned to himself like some baffled prowling beast. He wanted to sin
       with another of his kind, to force another being to sin with him and to
       exult with her in sin. He felt some dark presence moving irresistibly
       upon him from the darkness, a presence subtle and murmurous as a flood
       filling him wholly with itself. Its murmur besieged his ears like the
       murmur of some multitude in sleep; its subtle streams penetrated his
       being. His hands clenched convulsively and his teeth set together as he
       suffered the agony of its penetration. He stretched out his arms in the
       street to hold fast the frail swooning form that eluded him and incited
       him: and the cry that he had strangled for so long in his throat issued
       from his lips. 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 oozing wall of a urinal.
       He had wandered into a maze of narrow and dirty streets. From the foul
       laneways he heard bursts of hoarse riot and wrangling and the drawling
       of drunken singers. He walked onward, dismayed, 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 gas-flames 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 still in the middle of the roadway, his heart clamouring
       against his bosom in a tumult. A young woman dressed in a long pink
       gown laid her hand on his arm to detain him and gazed into his face.
       She said gaily:
       --Good night, Willie dear!
       Her room was warm and lightsome. A huge doll sat with her legs apart in
       the copious easy-chair beside the bed. He tried to bid his tongue speak
       that he might seem at ease, watching her as she undid her gown, noting
       the proud conscious movements of her perfumed head.
       As he stood silent in the middle of the room she came over to him and
       embraced him gaily and gravely. Her round arms held him firmly to her
       and he, seeing her face lifted to him in serious calm and feeling the
       warm calm rise and fall of her breast, all but burst into hysterical
       weeping. Tears of joy and relief shone in his delighted eyes and his
       lips parted though they would not speak.
       She passed her tinkling hand through his hair, calling him a little
       rascal.
       --Give me a kiss, she said.
       His lips would not bend to kiss her. He wanted to be held firmly in her
       arms, to be caressed slowly, slowly, slowly. In her arms he felt that
       he had suddenly become strong and fearless and sure of himself. But his
       lips would not bend to kiss her.
       With a sudden movement she bowed his head and joined her lips to his
       and he read the meaning of her movements in her frank uplifted eyes. It
       was too much for him. He closed his eyes, surrendering himself to her,
       body and mind, conscious of nothing in the world but the dark pressure
       of her softly parting lips. They pressed upon his brain as upon his
       lips as though they were the vehicle of a vague speech; and between
       them he felt an unknown and timid pressure, darker than the swoon of
       sin, softer than sound or odour. _