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 coming down along the road
met a nicens little boy named baby tuckoo...
His father told him that story:
his father looked at him through a glass: he
had a hairy face.
He was baby tuckoo. The moocow
came down the road where Betty Byrne lived: she
sold lemon platt.
O, the wild rose blossoms
On the little green place.
He sang that song. That was his song.
O, the green wothe botheth.
When you wet the bed first it is warm
then it gets cold. His mother put on the oilsheet.
That had the queer smell.
His mother had a nicer smell than
his father. She played on the piano the sailor’s
hornpipe for him to dance. He danced:
Tralala lala,
Tralala tralaladdy,
Tralala lala,
Tralala lala.
Uncle Charles and Dante clapped.
They were older than his father and mother but uncle
Charles was older than Dante.
Dante had two brushes in her press.
The brush with the maroon velvet back was for Michael
Davitt and the brush with the green velvet back was
for Parnell. Dante gave him a cachou every time
he brought her a piece of tissue paper.
The Vances lived in number seven.
They had a different father and mother. They
were Eileen’s father and mother. When they
were grown up he was going to marry Eileen. He
hid under the table. His mother said:
O, Stephen will apologize.
Dante said:
O, if not, the eagles will come and pull
out his eyes.
Pull out his eyes,
Apologize,
Apologize,
Pull out his eyes.
Apologize,
Pull out his eyes,
Pull out his eyes,
Apologize.
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 footballers 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 the 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-blanket. And one day he had asked:
What is your name?
Stephen had answered: Stephen Dedalus.
Then Nasty Roche had said:
What kind of a name is that?
And when Stephen had not been able to answer Nasty
Roche had asked:
What is your father?
Stephen had answered:
A gentleman.
Then Nasty Roche had asked:
Is he a magistrate?
He crept about from point to point
on the fringe of his line, making little runs now
and then. But his hands were bluish with cold.
He kept his hands in the side pockets of his belted
grey suit. That was a belt round his pocket.
And belt was also to give a fellow a belt. One
day a fellow said to Cantwell:
I’d give you such a belt in a second.
Cantwell had answered:
Go and fight your match.
Give Cecil Thunder a belt. I’d like to see
you. He’d give you a toe in the rump for
yourself.
That was not a nice expression.
His mother had told him not to speak with the rough
boys in the college. Nice mother! The first
day in the hall of the castle when 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, waving their hands:
Goodbye, Stephen, goodbye!
Goodbye, Stephen, goodbye!
He was caught in the whirl of a scrimmage
and, fearful of the flashing eyes and muddy boots,
bent down to look through the legs. The fellows
were struggling and groaning and their legs were rubbing
and kicking and stamping. Then Jack Lawton’s
yellow boots dodged out the ball and all the other
boots and legs ran after. He ran after them a
little way and then stopped. It was useless to
run on. Soon they would be going home for the
holidays. After supper in the study hall he would
change the number pasted up inside his desk from seventy-seven
to seventy-six.
It would be better to be in the study
hall than out there in the cold. The sky was
pale and cold but there were lights in the castle.
He wondered from which window Hamilton Rowan had thrown
his hat on the ha-ha and had there been flowerbeds
at that time under the windows. One day when
he had been called to the castle the butler had shown
him the marks of the soldiers’ slugs in the
wood of the door and had given him a piece of shortbread
that the community ate. It was nice and warm to
see the lights in the castle. It was like something
in a book. Perhaps Leicester Abbey was like that.
And there were nice sentences in Doctor Cornwell’s
Spelling Book. They were like poetry but they
were only sentences to learn the spelling from.
Wolsey died in Leicester Abbey
Where the abbots buried him.
Canker is a disease of plants,
Cancer one of animals.
It would be nice to lie on the hearthrug
before the fire, leaning his head upon his hands,
and think on those sentences. 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 snuff box for
Wells’s seasoned hacking chestnut, the conqueror
of forty. How cold and slimy the water had been!
A fellow had once seen a big rat jump into the scum.
Mother was sitting at the fire with Dante waiting
for Brigid to bring in the tea. She had her feet
on the fender and her jewelly slippers were so hot
and they had such a lovely warm smell! Dante
knew a lot of things. She had taught him where
the Mozambique Channel was and what was the longest
river in America and what was the name of the highest
mountain in the moon. Father Arnall knew more
than Dante because he was a priest but both his father
and uncle Charles said that Dante was a clever woman
and a well-read woman. And when Dante made that
noise after dinner and then put up her hand to her
mouth: that was heartburn.
A voice cried far out on the playground:
All in!
Then other voices cried from the lower and third lines:
All in! All in!
The players closed around, flushed
and muddy, and he went among them, glad to go in.
Rody Kickham held the ball by its greasy lace.
A fellow asked him to give it one last: but he
walked on without even answering the fellow.
Simon Moonan told him not to because the prefect was
looking. The fellow turned to Simon Moonan and
said:
We all know why you speak. You are
McGlade’s suck.
Suck was a queer word. The fellow
called Simon Moonan that name because Simon Moonan
used to tie the prefect’s false sleeves behind
his back and the prefect used to let on to be angry.
But the sound was ugly. Once he had washed his
hands in the lavatory of the Wicklow Hotel and his
father pulled the stopper up by the chain after and
the dirty water went down through the hole in the
basin. And when it had all gone down slowly the
hole in the basin had made a sound like that:
suck. Only louder.
To remember that and the white look
of the lavatory made him feel cold and then hot.
There were two cocks that you turned and water came
out: cold and hot. He felt cold and then
a little hot: and he could see the names printed
on the cocks. That was a very queer thing.
And the air in the corridor chilled
him too. It was queer and wettish. But soon
the gas would be lit and in burning it made a light
noise like a little song. Always the same:
and when the fellows stopped talking in the playroom
you could hear it.
It was the hour for sums. Father
Arnall wrote a hard sum on the board and then said:
Now then, who will win?
Go ahead, York! Go ahead, Lancaster!
Stephen tried his best, but the sum
was too hard and he felt confused. The little
silk badge with the white rose on it that was pinned
on the breast of his jacket began to flutter.
He was no good at sums, but he tried his best so that
York might not lose. Father Arnall’s face
looked very black, but he was not in a wax: he
was laughing. Then Jack Lawton cracked his fingers
and Father Arnall looked at his copybook and said:
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 because 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 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 second place and third place were
beautiful colours too: pink and cream and lavender.
Lavender and cream and pink roses were beautiful to
think of. Perhaps a wild rose might be like those
colours and he remembered the song about the wild
rose blossoms on the little green place. But you
could not have a green rose. But perhaps somewhere
in the world you could.
The bell rang and then the classes
began to file out of the rooms and along the corridors
towards the refectory. He sat looking at the two
prints of butter on his plate but could not eat the
damp bread. The tablecloth was damp and limp.
But he drank off the hot weak tea which the clumsy
scullion, girt with a white apron, poured into his
cup. He wondered whether the scullion’s
apron was damp too or whether all white things were
cold and damp. Nasty Roche and Saurin drank
cocoa that their people sent them in tins. They
said they could not drink the tea; that it was hogwash.
Their fathers were magistrates, the fellows said.
All the boys seemed to him very strange.
They had all fathers and mothers and different clothes
and voices. He longed to be at home and lay his
head on his mother’s lap. But he could not:
and so he longed for the play and study and prayers
to be over and to be in bed.
He drank another cup of hot tea and Fleming said:
What’s up? Have you a pain
or what’s up with you?
I don’t know, Stephen said.
Sick in your breadbasket,
Fleming said, because your face looks white.
It will go away.
O yes, Stephen said.
But he was not sick there. He
thought that he was sick in his heart if you could
be sick in that place. Fleming was very decent
to ask him. He wanted to cry. He leaned
his elbows on the table and shut and opened the flaps
of his ears. Then he heard the noise of the refectory
every time he opened the flaps of his ears. It
made a roar like a train at night. And when he
closed the flaps the roar was shut off like a train
going into a tunnel. That night at Dalkey the
train had roared like that and then, when it went
into the tunnel, the roar stopped. He closed
his eyes and the train went on, roaring and then stopping;
roaring again, stopping. It was nice to hear it
roar and stop and then roar out of the tunnel again
and then stop.
Then the higher line fellows began
to come down along the matting in the middle of the
refectory, Paddy Rath and Jimmy Magee and the Spaniard
who was allowed to smoke cigars and the little Portuguese
who wore the woolly cap. And then the lower line
tables and the tables of the third line. And
every single fellow had a different way of walking.
He sat in a corner of the playroom
pretending to watch a game of dominoes and once or
twice he was able to hear for an instant the little
song of the gas. The prefect was at the door with
some boys and Simon Moonan was knotting his false
sleeves. He was telling them something about
Tullabeg.
Then he went away from the door and
Wells came over to Stephen and said:
Tell us, Dedalus, do you
kiss your mother before you go to bed?
Stephen answered:
I do.
Wells turned to the other fellows and said:
O, I say, here’s
a fellow says he kisses his mother every night before
he goes to bed.
The other fellows stopped their game and turned round,
laughing.
Stephen blushed under their eyes and said:
I do not.
Wells said:
O, I say, here’s
a fellow says he doesn’t kiss his mother before
he goes to bed.
They all laughed again. Stephen
tried to laugh with them. He felt his whole body
hot and confused in a moment. What was the right
answer to the question? He had given two and
still Wells laughed. But Wells must know the
right answer for he was in third of grammar. He
tried to think of Wells’s mother but he did
not dare to raise his eyes to Wells’s face.
He did not like Wells’s face. It was Wells
who had shouldered him into the square ditch the day
before because he would not swop his little snuff
box for Wells’s seasoned hacking chestnut, the
conqueror of forty. It was a mean thing to do;
all the fellows said it was. And how cold and
slimy the water had been! And a fellow had once
seen a big rat jump 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? You
put your face up like that to say good night 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: kiss. Why did people do that
with their two faces?
Sitting in the study hall he opened
the lid of his desk and changed the number pasted
up inside from seventy-seven to seventy-six. But
the Christmas vacation was very far away: but
one time it would come because the earth moved round
always.
There was a picture of the earth on
the first page of his geography: a big ball in
the middle of clouds. Fleming had a box of crayons
and one night during free study he had coloured the
earth green and the clouds maroon. That was like
the two brushes in Dante’s press, the brush with
the green velvet back for Parnell and the brush with
the maroon velvet back for Michael Davitt. But
he had not told Fleming to colour them those colours.
Fleming had done it himself.
He opened the geography to study the
lesson; but he could not learn the names of places
in America. Still they were all different places
that had different names. They were all in different
countries and the countries were in continents and
the continents were in the world and the world was
in the universe.
He turned to the flyleaf of the geography
and read what he had written there: himself,
his name and where he was.
Stephen Dedalus
Class of Elements
Clongowes Wood College
Sallins
County Kildare
Ireland
Europe
The World
The Universe
That was in his writing: and
Fleming one night for a cod had written on the opposite
page:
Stephen Dedalus is my name,
Ireland is my nation.
Clongowes is my dwellingplace
And heaven my expectation.
He read the verses backwards but then
they were not poetry. Then he read the flyleaf
from the bottom to the top till he came to his own
name. That was he: and he read down the page
again. What was after the universe?
Nothing. But was there anything
round the universe to show where it stopped before
the nothing place began?
It could not be a wall; but there
could be a thin thin line there all round everything.
It was very big to think about everything and everywhere.
Only God could do that. He tried to think what
a big thought that must be; but he could only think
of God. God was God’s name just as his
name was Stephen. Dieu was the French for
God and that was God’s name too; and when anyone
prayed to God and said dieu then God knew at
once that it was a French person that was praying.
But, though there were different names for God in
all the different languages in the world and God understood
what all the people who prayed said in their different
languages, still God remained always the same God
and God’s real name was God.
It made him very tired to think that
way. It made him feel his head very big.
He turned over the flyleaf and looked wearily at the
green round earth in the middle of the maroon clouds.
He wondered which was right, to be for the green or
for the maroon, because Dante had ripped the green
velvet back off the brush that was for Parnell one
day with her scissors and had told him that Parnell
was a bad man. He wondered if they were arguing
at home about that. That was called politics.
There were two sides in it: Dante was on one side
and 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; tunnel,
out; noise, stop. How far away it was! It
was better to go to bed to sleep. Only prayers
in the chapel and then bed. He shivered and yawned.
It would be lovely in bed after the sheets got a bit
hot. First they were so cold to get into.
He shivered to think how cold they were first.
But then they got hot and then he could sleep.
It was lovely to be tired. He yawned again.
Night prayers and then bed: he shivered and wanted
to yawn. It would be lovely in a few minutes.
He felt a warm glow creeping up from the cold shivering
sheets, warmer and warmer till he felt warm all over,
ever so warm and yet he shivered a little and still
wanted to yawn.
The bell rang for night prayers and
he filed out of the study hall after the others and
down the staircase and along the corridors to the
chapel. The corridors were darkly lit and the
chapel was darkly lit. Soon all would be dark
and sleeping. There was cold night air in the
chapel and the marbles were the colour the sea was
at night. The sea was cold day and night:
but it was colder at night. It was cold and dark
under the seawall beside his father’s house.
But the kettle would be on the hob to make punch.
The prefect of the chapel prayed above
his head and his memory knew the responses:
O Lord open our lips
And our mouths shall announce
Thy praise.
Incline unto our aid, O God!
O Lord make haste to help
us!
There was a cold night smell in the
chapel. But it was a holy smell. It was
not like the smell of the old peasants who knelt at
the back of the chapel at Sunday mass. That was
a smell of air and rain and turf and corduroy.
But they were very holy peasants. They breathed
behind him on his neck and sighed as they prayed.
They lived in Clane, a fellow said: there were
little cottages there and he had seen a woman standing
at the half-door of a cottage with a child in her
arms as the cars had come past from Sallins.
It would be lovely to sleep for one night in that
cottage before the fire of smoking turf, in the dark
lit by the fire, in the warm dark, breathing the smell
of the peasants, air and rain and turf and corduroy.
But O, the road there between the trees was dark!
You would be lost in the dark. It made him afraid
to think of how it was.
He heard the voice of the prefect
of the chapel saying the last prayers. He prayed
it too against the dark outside under the trees.
Visit, we beseech Thee,
O lord, this habitation and drive
away from it all the
snares of the enemy. May
thy holy
angels dwell herein to
preserve us in peace and may
thy
blessings be always upon
us through Christ our lord.
Amen.
His fingers trembled as he undressed
himself in the dormitory. He told his fingers
to hurry up. He had to undress and then kneel
and say his own prayers and be in bed before the gas
was lowered so that he might not go to hell when he
died. He rolled his stockings off and put on his
nightshirt quickly and knelt trembling at his bedside
and repeated his prayers quickly, fearing that the
gas would go down. He felt his shoulders shaking
as he murmured:
God bless my father and my
mother and spare them to me!
God bless my little brothers
and sisters and spare them to me!
God bless Dante and Uncle
Charles and spare them to me!
He blessed himself and climbed quickly
into bed and, tucking the end of the nightshirt under
his feet, curled himself together under the cold white
sheets, shaking and trembling. But he would not
go to hell when he died; and the shaking would stop.
A voice bade the boys in the dormitory good night.
He peered out for an instant over the coverlet and
saw the yellow curtains round and before his bed that
shut him off on all sides. The light was lowered
quietly.
The prefect’s shoes went away.
Where? Down the staircase and along the corridors
or to his room at the end? He saw the dark.
Was it true about the black dog that walked there
at night with eyes as big as carriage-lamps?
They said it was the ghost of a murderer. A long
shiver of fear flowed over his body. He saw the
dark entrance hall of the castle. Old servants
in old dress were in the ironing-room above the staircase.
It was long ago. The old servants were quiet.
There was a fire there, but the hall was still dark.
A figure came up the staircase from the hall.
He wore the white cloak of a marshal; his face was
pale and strange; he held his hand pressed to his
side. He looked out of strange eyes at the old
servants. They looked at him and saw their master’s
face and cloak and knew that he had received his death-wound.
But only the dark was where they looked: only
dark silent air. Their master had received his
death-wound on the battlefield of Prague far away
over the sea. He was standing on the field; his
hand was pressed to his side; his face was pale and
strange and he wore the white cloak of a marshal.
O how cold and strange it was to think
of that! All the dark was cold and strange.
There were pale strange faces there, great eyes like
carriage-lamps. They were the ghosts of murderers,
the figures of marshals who had received their death-wound
on battlefields far away over the sea. What did
they wish to say that their faces were so strange?
Visit, we beseech Thee,
O lord, this habitation and drive
away from it all...
Going home for the holidays!
That would be lovely: the fellows had told him.
Getting up on the cars in the early wintry morning
outside the door of the castle. The cars were
rolling on the gravel. Cheers for the rector!
Hurray! Hurray! Hurray!
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 half-doors, 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 the train raced on over the flat
lands and past the Hill of Allen. The telegraph
poles were passing, passing. 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 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...
All the people. Welcome home,
Stephen! Noises of welcome. His mother kissed
him. Was that right? His father was a marshal
now: higher than a magistrate. Welcome home,
Stephen!
Noises...
There was a noise of curtain-rings
running back along the rods, of water being splashed
in the basins. There was a noise of rising and
dressing and washing in the dormitory: a noise
of clapping of hands as the prefect went up and down
telling the fellows to look sharp. A pale sunlight
showed the yellow curtains drawn back, the tossed beds.
His bed was very hot and his face and body were very
hot.
He got up and sat on the side of his
bed. He was weak. He tried to pull on his
stocking. It had a horrid rough feel. The
sunlight was queer and cold.
Fleming said:
Are you not well?
He did not know; and Fleming said:
Get back into bed. I’ll tell
McGlade you’re not well.
He’s sick.
Who is?
Tell McGlade.
Get back into bed.
Is he sick?
A fellow held his arms while he loosened
the stocking clinging to his foot and climbed back
into the hot bed.
He crouched down between the sheets,
glad of their tepid glow. He heard the fellows
talk among themselves about him as they dressed for
mass. It was a mean thing to do, to shoulder
him into the square ditch, they were saying.
Then their voices ceased; they had gone. A voice
at his bed said:
Dedalus, don’t spy on us, sure you
won’t?
Wells’s face was there. He looked at it
and saw that Wells was afraid.
I didn’t mean to. Sure you
won’t?
His father had told him, whatever he did, never to
peach on a fellow.
He shook his head and answered no and felt glad.
Wells said:
I didn’t mean to, honour bright.
It was only for cod. I’m sorry.
The face and the voice went away.
Sorry because he was afraid. Afraid that it was
some disease. Canker was a disease of plants and
cancer one of animals: or another different.
That was a long time ago then out on the playgrounds
in the evening light, creeping from point to point
on the fringe of his line, a heavy bird flying low
through the grey light. Leicester Abbey lit up.
Wolsey died there. The abbots buried him themselves.
It was not Wells’s face, it
was the prefect’s. He was not foxing.
No, no: he was sick really. He was not foxing.
And he felt the prefect’s hand on his forehead;
and he felt his forehead warm and damp against the
prefect’s cold damp hand. That was the way
a rat felt, slimy and damp and cold. Every rat
had two eyes to look out of. Sleek slimy coats,
little little feet tucked up to jump, black slimy eyes
to look out of. They could understand how to
jump. But the minds of rats could not understand
trigonometry. When they were dead they lay on
their sides. Their coats dried then. They
were only dead things.
The prefect was there again and it
was his voice that was saying that he was to get up,
that Father Minister had said he was to get up and
dress and go to the infirmary. And while he was
dressing himself as quickly as he could the prefect
said:
We must pack off to Brother Michael because
we have the
collywobbles!
He was very decent to say that.
That was all to make him laugh. But he could
not laugh because his cheeks and lips were all shivery:
and then the prefect had to laugh by himself.
The prefect cried:
Quick march! Hayfoot! Strawfoot!
They went together down the staircase
and along the corridor and past the bath. As
he passed the door he remembered with a vague fear
the warm turf-coloured bogwater, the warm moist air,
the noise of plunges, the smell of the towels, like
medicine.
Brother Michael was standing at the
door of the infirmary and from the door of the dark
cabinet on his right came a smell like medicine.
That came from the bottles on the shelves. The
prefect spoke to Brother Michael and Brother Michael
answered and called the prefect sir. He had reddish
hair mixed with grey and a queer look. It was
queer that he would always be a brother. It was
queer too that you could not call him sir because
he was a brother and had a different kind of look.
Was he not holy enough or why could he not catch up
on the others?
There were two beds in the room and
in one bed there was a fellow: and when they
went in he called out:
Hello! It’s young Dedalus!
What’s up?
The sky is up, Brother Michael said.
He was a fellow out of the third of
grammar and, while Stephen was undressing, he asked
Brother Michael to bring him a round of buttered toast.
Ah, do! he said.
Butter you up! said Brother
Michael. You’ll get your walking papers
in the morning when the doctor comes.
Will I? the fellow said. I’m
not well yet.
Brother Michael repeated:
You’ll get your walking papers.
I tell you.
He bent down to rake the fire.
He had a long back like the long back of a tramhorse.
He shook the poker gravely and nodded his head at the
fellow out of third of grammar.
Then Brother Michael went away and
after a while the fellow out of third of grammar turned
in towards the wall and fell asleep.
That was the infirmary. He was
sick then. Had they written home to tell his
mother and father? But it would be quicker for
one of the priests to go himself to tell them.
Or he would write a letter for the priest to bring.
Dear Mother,
I am sick. I want to
go home. Please come and take me home.
I am in the infirmary.
Your fond son,
Stephen
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 of limes. And Wells would be
sorry then for what he had done. And the bell
would toll slowly.
He could hear the tolling. He
said over to himself the song that Brigid had taught
him.
Dingdong! The castle
bell!
Farewell, my mother!
Bury me in the old churchyard
Beside my eldest brother.
My coffin shall be black,
Six angels at my back,
Two to sing and two to pray
And two to carry my soul away.
How beautiful and sad that was!
How beautiful the words were where they said bury
me in the old churchyard!
A tremor passed over his body. How sad and how
beautiful! He wanted to cry quietly but not for
himself: for the words, so beautiful and sad,
like music. The bell! The bell! Farewell!
O farewell!
The cold sunlight was weaker and Brother
Michael was standing at his bedside with a bowl of
beef-tea. He was glad for his mouth was hot and
dry. He could hear them playing in the playgrounds.
And the day was going on in the college just as if
he were there.
Then Brother Michael was going away
and the fellow out of the third of grammar told him
to be sure and come back and tell him all the news
in the paper. He told Stephen that his name was
Athy and that his father kept a lot of racehorses
that were spiffing jumpers and that his father would
give a good tip to Brother Michael any time he wanted
it because Brother Michael was very decent 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 it is all about politics
in the papers, he said. Do your people talk about
that too?
Yes, Stephen said.
Mine too, he said.
Then he thought for a moment and said:
You have a queer name, Dedalus, and I
have a queer name too, Athy.
My name is the name of a town. Your name is like
Latin.
Then he asked:
Are you good at riddles?
Stephen answered:
Not very good.
Then he said:
Can you answer me this
one? Why is the county of Kildare like the leg
of a fellow’s breeches?
Stephen thought what could be the answer and then
said:
I give it up.
Because there is a thigh
in it, he said. Do you see the joke? Athy
is the town in the county Kildare and a thigh is the
other thigh.
Oh, I see, Stephen said.
That’s an old riddle, he said.
After a moment he said:
I say!
What? asked Stephen.
You know, he said, you can ask that riddle
another way.
Can you? said Stephen.
The same riddle, he said. Do you
know the other way to ask it?
No, said Stephen.
Can you not think of the other way? he
said.
He looked at Stephen over the bedclothes
as he spoke. Then he lay back on the pillow and
said:
There is another way but I won’t
tell you what it is.
Why did he not tell it? His father,
who kept the racehorses, must be a magistrate too
like Saurin’s father and Nasty Roche’s
father. He thought of his own father, of how
he sang songs while his mother played and of how he
always gave him a shilling when he asked for sixpence
and he felt sorry for him that he was not a magistrate
like the other boys’ fathers. Then why
was he sent to that place with them? But his
father had told him that he would be no stranger there
because his granduncle had presented an address to
the liberator there fifty years before. You could
know the people of that time by their old dress.
It seemed to him a solemn time: and he wondered
if that was the time when the fellows in Clongowes
wore blue coats with brass buttons and yellow waistcoats
and caps of rabbitskin and drank beer like grown-up
people and kept greyhounds of their own to course
the hares with.
He looked at the window and saw that
the daylight had grown weaker. There would be
cloudy grey light over the playgrounds. There
was no noise on the playgrounds. The class must
be doing the themes or perhaps Father Arnall was reading
out of the book.
It was queer that they had not given
him any medicine. Perhaps Brother Michael would
bring it back when he came. They said you got
stinking stuff to drink when you were in the infirmary.
But he felt better now than before. It would
be nice getting better slowly. You could get a
book then. There was a book in the library about
Holland. There were lovely foreign names in it
and pictures of strange looking cities and ships.
It made you feel so happy.
How pale the light was at the window!
But that was 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.
He saw the sea of waves, long dark
waves rising and falling, dark under the moonless
night. A tiny light twinkled at the pierhead where
the ship was entering: and he saw a multitude
of people gathered by the waters’ edge to see
the ship that was entering their harbour. A tall
man stood on the deck, looking out towards the flat
dark land: and by the light at the pierhead he
saw his face, the sorrowful face of Brother Michael.
He saw him lift his hand towards the
people and heard him say in a loud voice of sorrow
over the waters:
He is dead. We saw
him lying upon the catafalque. A wail of sorrow
went up from the people.
Parnell! Parnell! He is dead!
They fell upon their knees, moaning in sorrow.
And he saw Dante in a maroon velvet
dress and with a green velvet mantle hanging from
her shoulders walking proudly and silently past the
people who knelt by the water’s edge.
A great fire, banked high and red,
flamed in the grate and under the ivy-twined branches
of the chandelier the Christmas table was spread.
They had come home a little late and still dinner was
not ready: but it would be ready in a jiffy his
mother had said. They were waiting for the door
to open and for the servants to come in, holding the
big dishes covered with their heavy metal covers.
All were waiting: uncle Charles,
who sat far away in the shadow of the window, Dante
and Mr Casey, who sat in the easy-chairs at either
side of the hearth, Stephen, seated on a chair between
them, his feet resting on the toasted boss. Mr
Dedalus looked at himself in the pierglass above the
mantelpiece, waxed out his moustache ends and then,
parting his coat-tails, stood with his back to the
glowing fire: and still from time to time he
withdrew a hand from his coat-tail to wax out one
of his moustache ends. Mr Casey leaned his head
to one side and, smiling, tapped the gland of his
neck with his fingers. And Stephen smiled too
for he knew now that it was not true that Mr Casey
had a purse of silver in his throat. He smiled
to think how the silvery noise which Mr Casey used
to make had deceived him. And when he had tried
to open Mr Casey’s hand to see if the purse of
silver was hidden there he had seen that the fingers
could not be straightened out: and Mr Casey had
told him that he had got those three cramped fingers
making a birthday present for Queen Victoria.
Mr Casey tapped the gland of his neck and smiled at
Stephen with sleepy eyes: and Mr Dedalus said
to him:
Yes. Well now, that’s
all right. O, we had a good walk, hadn’t
we, John? Yes... I wonder if there’s
any likelihood of dinner this evening. Yes...
O, well now, we got a good breath of ozone round the
Head today. Ay, bedad.
He turned to Dante and said:
You didn’t stir out at all, Mrs
Riordan?
Dante frowned and said shortly:
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 and came back with
them to the fireplace.
A thimbleful, John, he said, just to whet
your appetite.
Mr Casey took the glass, drank, and
placed it near him on the mantelpiece. Then he
said:
Well, I can’t help thinking of our
friend Christopher manufacturing...
He broke into a fit of laughter and coughing and added:
...manufacturing that champagne for those
fellows.
Mr Dedalus laughed loudly.
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 coughing 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:
What are you laughing at, you little puppy,
you?
The servants entered and placed the
dishes on the table. Mrs Dedalus followed and
the places were arranged.
Sit over, she said.
Mr Dedalus went to the end of the table and said:
Now, Mrs Riordan, sit over. John,
sit you down, 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:
Bless us, O Lord, and these Thy gifts which through
Thy bounty we are about to receive through Christ
our
Lord. Amen.
All blessed themselves and Mr Dedalus
with a sigh of pleasure lifted from the dish the heavy
cover pearled around the edge with glistening drops.
Stephen looked at the plump turkey
which had lain, trussed and skewered, on the kitchen
table. He knew that his father had paid a guinea
for it in Dunn’s of D’Olier Street and
that the man had prodded it often at the breastbone
to show how good it was: and he remembered the
man’s voice when he had said:
Take that one, sir. That’s
the real Ally Daly.
Why did Mr Barrett in Clongowes call
his pandybat a turkey? But Clongowes was far
away: and the warm heavy smell of turkey and ham
and celery rose from the plates and dishes and the
great fire was banked high and red in the grate and
the green ivy and red holly made you feel so happy
and when dinner was ended the big plum pudding would
be carried in, studded with peeled almonds and sprigs
of holly, with bluish fire running around it and a
little green flag flying from the top.
It was his first Christmas dinner
and he thought of his little brothers and sisters
who were waiting in the nursery, as he had often waited,
till the pudding came. The deep low collar and
the Eton jacket made him feel queer and oldish:
and that morning when his mother had brought him down
to the parlour, dressed for mass, his father had cried.
That was because he was thinking of his own father.
And uncle Charles had said so too.
Mr Dedalus covered the dish and began
to eat hungrily. Then he said:
Poor old Christy, he’s
nearly lopsided now with roguery.
Simon, said Mrs Dedalus,
you haven’t given Mrs Riordan any sauce.
Mr Dedalus seized the sauceboat.
Haven’t I? he cried.
Mrs Riordan, pity the poor blind. Dante covered
her plate with her hands and said:
No, thanks.
Mr Dedalus turned to uncle Charles.
How are you off, sir?
Right as the mail, Simon.
You, John?
I’m all right. Go on yourself.
Mary? Here, Stephen, here’s
something to make your hair curl.
He poured sauce freely over Stephen’s
plate and set the boat again on the table. Then
he asked uncle Charles was it tender. Uncle Charles
could not speak because his mouth was full; but he
nodded that it was.
That was a good answer our friend made
to the canon. What? said Mr
Dedalus.
I didn’t think he had that much
in him, said Mr Casey.
I’ll pay your dues,
father, when you cease turning
the house of god
into A polling-Booth.
A nice answer, said Dante,
for any man calling himself a catholic to give to
his priest.
They have only themselves
to blame, said Mr Dedalus suavely. If they took
a fool’s advice they would confine their attention
to religion.
It is religion, Dante
said. They are doing their duty in warning the
people.
We go to the house of
God, Mr Casey said, in all humility to pray to our
Maker and not to hear election addresses.
It is religion, Dante
said again. They are right. They must direct
their flocks.
And preach politics from
the altar, is it? asked Mr Dedalus.
Certainly, said Dante.
It is a question of public morality. A priest
would not be a priest if he did not tell his flock
what is right and what is wrong.
Mrs Dedalus laid down her knife and fork, saying:
For pity sake and for
pity sake let us have no political discussion on this
day of all days in the year.
Quite right, ma’am,
said uncle Charles. Now, Simon, that’s quite
enough now. Not another word now.
Yes, yes, said Mr Dedalus quickly.
He uncovered the dish boldly and said:
Now then, who’s for more turkey?
Nobody answered. Dante said:
Nice language for any catholic to use!
Mrs Riordan, I appeal
to you, said Mrs Dedalus, to let the matter drop now.
Dante turned on her and said:
And am I to sit here and
listen to the pastors of my church being flouted?
Nobody is saying a word
against them, said Mr Dedalus, so long as they don’t
meddle in politics.
The bishops and priests
of Ireland have spoken, said Dante, and they must
be obeyed.
Let them leave politics
alone, said Mr Casey, or the people may leave their
church alone.
You hear? said Dante, turning to Mrs Dedalus.
Mr Casey! Simon! said Mrs Dedalus,
let it end now.
Too bad! Too bad! said uncle Charles.
What? cried Mr Dedalus. Were we to
desert him at the bidding of the
English people?
He was no longer worthy to lead, said
Dante. He was a public sinner.
We are all sinners and black sinners,
said Mr Casey coldly.
Woe be to
the man by whom the scandal
cometh! said Mrs Riordan. It would
be 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 scandalize 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 the railway porter. Well now,
that’s all right. Here, Stephen, show me
your plate, old chap. Eat away now. Here.
He heaped up the food on Stephen’s
plate and served uncle Charles and Mr Casey to large
pieces of turkey and splashes of sauce. Mrs Dedalus
was eating little and Dante sat with her hands in her
lap. She was red in the face. Mr Dedalus
rooted with the carvers at the end of the dish and
said:
There’s a tasty
bit here we call the pope’s nose. If any
lady or gentleman...
He held a piece of fowl up on the
prong of the carving fork. Nobody spoke.
He put it on his own plate, saying:
Well, you can’t
say but you were asked. I think I 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:
Well now, the day kept
up fine after all. There were plenty of strangers
down too.
Nobody spoke. He said again:
I think there were more strangers down
than last Christmas.
He looked round at the others whose
faces were bent towards their plates and, receiving
no reply, waited for a moment and said bitterly:
Well, my Christmas dinner has been spoiled
anyhow.
There could be neither
luck nor grace, Dante said, in a house where there
is no respect for the pastors of the church.
Mr Dedalus threw his knife and fork noisily on his
plate.
Respect! he said.
Is it for Billy with the lip or for the tub of guts
up in Armagh? Respect!
Princes of the church, said Mr Casey with
slow scorn.
Lord Leitrim’s coachman, yes, said
Mr Dedalus.
They are the Lord’s
anointed, Dante said. They are an honour to their
country.
Tub of guts, said Mr Dedalus
coarsely. He has a handsome face, mind you, in
repose. You should see that fellow lapping up
his bacon and cabbage of a cold winter’s day.
O Johnny!
He twisted his features into a grimace
of heavy bestiality and made a lapping noise with
his lips.
Really, Simon, you should
not speak that way before Stephen. It’s
not right.
O, he’ll 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 down they turned on him
to betray him and rend him like rats in a sewer.
Low-lived dogs! And they look it! By Christ,
they look it!
They behaved rightly,
cried Dante. They obeyed their bishops and their
priests. Honour to them!
Well, it is perfectly
dreadful to say that not even for one day in the year,
said Mrs Dedalus, can we be free from these dreadful
disputes!
Uncle Charles raised his hands mildly and said:
Come now, come now, come
now! Can we not have our opinions whatever they
are without this bad temper and this bad language?
It is too bad surely.
Mrs Dedalus spoke to Dante in a low
voice but Dante said loudly:
I will not say nothing.
I will defend my church and my religion when it is
insulted and spit on by renegade catholics.
Mr Casey pushed his plate rudely into
the middle of the table and, resting his elbows before
him, said in a hoarse voice to his host:
Tell me, did I tell you
that story about a very famous spit?
You did not, John, said Mr Dedalus.
Why then, said Mr Casey,
it is a most instructive 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:
And I may tell you, ma’am,
that I, if you mean me, am no renegade catholic.
I am a catholic as my father was and his father before
him and his father before him again, when we gave
up our lives rather than sell our faith.
The more shame to you
now, Dante said, to speak as you do.
The story, John, said
Mr Dedalus smiling. Let us have the story anyhow.
Catholic indeed! repeated
Dante ironically. The blackest protestant in
the land would not speak the language I have heard
this evening.
Mr Dedalus began to sway his head
to and fro, crooning like a country singer.
I am no protestant, I
tell you again, said Mr Casey, flushing.
Mr Dedalus, still crooning and swaying
his head, began to sing in a grunting nasal tone:
O, come all you Roman catholics
That never went to mass.
He took up his knife and fork again
in good humour and set to eating, saying to Mr Casey:
Let us have the story, John. It will
help us to digest.
Stephen looked with affection at Mr
Casey’s face which stared across the table over
his joined hands. He liked to sit near him at
the fire, looking up at his dark fierce face.
But his dark eyes were never fierce and his slow voice
was good to listen to. But why was he then against
the priests? Because Dante must be right then.
But he had heard his father say that she was a spoiled
nun and that she had come out of the convent in the
Alleghanies when her brother had got the money from
the savages for the trinkets and the chainies.
Perhaps that made her severe against Parnell.
And she did not like him to play with Eileen because
Eileen was a protestant and when she was young she
knew children that used to play with protestants and
the protestants used to make fun of the litany of
the Blessed Virgin. Tower of ivory,
they used to say, house of gold!
How could a woman be a tower of ivory or a house of
gold? Who was right then? And he remembered
the evening in the infirmary in Clongowes, the dark
waters, the light at the pierhead and the moan of
sorrow from the people when they had heard.
Eileen had long white hands.
One evening when playing tig she had put her hands
over his eyes: long and white and thin and cold
and soft. That was ivory: a cold white thing.
That was the meaning of tower of ivory.
The story is very short
and sweet, Mr Casey said. It was one day down
in Arklow, a cold bitter day, not long before the chief
died. May God have mercy on him!
He closed his eyes wearily and paused.
Mr Dedalus took a bone from his plate and tore some
meat from it with his teeth, saying:
Before he was killed, you mean.
Mr Casey opened his eyes, sighed and went on:
It was down in Arklow
one day. We were down there at a meeting and
after the meeting was over we had to make our way to
the railway station through the crowd. Such booing
and baaing, man, you never heard. They called
us all the names in the world. Well there was
one old lady, and a drunken old harridan she was surely,
that paid all her attention to me. She kept dancing
along beside me in the mud bawling and screaming into
my face: Priest-hunter! The
Paris funds! Mr fox!
Kitty O’SHEA!
And what did you do, John? asked Mr Dedalus.
I let her bawl away, said
Mr Casey. It was a cold day and to keep up my
heart I had (saving your presence, ma’am) a quid
of Tullamore in my mouth and sure I couldn’t
say a word in any case because my mouth was full of
tobacco juice.
Well, John?
Well. I let her bawl
away, to her heart’s content, Kitty O’SHEA
and the rest of it till at last she called that lady
a name that I won’t sully this Christmas board
nor your ears, ma’am, nor my own lips by repeating.
He paused. Mr Dedalus, lifting his head from
the bone, asked:
And what did you do, John?
Do! said Mr Casey.
She stuck her ugly old face up at me when she said
it and I had my mouth full of tobacco juice. I
bent down to her and PHTH! says I to her like that.
He turned aside and made the act of spitting.
PHTH! says I to her like that, right into
her eye.
He clapped his hand to his eye and gave a hoarse scream
of pain.
O Jesus, Mary and Joseph!
says she. I’m blinded! I’m
blinded and
drownded!
He stopped in a fit of coughing and laughter, repeating:
I’m blinded entirely.
Mr Dedalus laughed loudly and lay
back in his chair while uncle Charles swayed his head
to and fro.
Dante looked terribly angry and repeated while they
laughed:
Very nice! Ha! Very nice!
It was not nice about the spit in the woman’s
eye.
But what was the name the woman had
called Kitty O’Shea that Mr Casey would not
repeat? He thought of Mr Casey walking through
the crowds of people and making speeches from a wagonette.
That was what he had been in prison for and he remembered
that one night Sergeant O’Neill had come to
the house and had stood in the hall, talking in a low
voice with his father and chewing nervously at the
chinstrap of his cap. And that night Mr Casey
had not gone to Dublin by train but a car had come
to the door and he had heard his father say something
about the Cabinteely road.
He was for Ireland and Parnell and
so was his father: 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 priest-ridden
race and always were and always will be till the end
of the chapter.
Uncle Charles shook his head, saying:
A bad business! A bad business!
Mr Dedalus repeated:
A priest-ridden Godforsaken race!
He pointed to the portrait of his grandfather on the
wall to his right.
Do you see that old chap
up there, John? he said. He was a good Irishman
when there was no money in the job. He was condemned
to death as a whiteboy. But he had a saying about
our clerical friends, that he would never let one
of them put his two feet under his mahogany.
Dante broke in angrily:
If we are a priest-ridden
race we ought to be proud of it! They are the
apple of God’s eye. Touch them
not, says Christ, for they are
the apple of my eye.
And can we not love our
country then? asked Mr Casey. Are we not to follow
the man that was born to lead us?
A traitor to his country!
replied Dante. A traitor, an adulterer!
The priests were right to abandon him. The priests
were always the true friends of Ireland.
Were they, faith? said Mr Casey.
He threw his fist on the table and,
frowning angrily, protruded one finger after another.
Didn’t the bishops
of Ireland betray us in the time of the union when
Bishop Lanigan presented an address of loyalty to the
Marquess Cornwallis? Didn’t the bishops
and priests sell the aspirations of their country
in 1829 in return for catholic emancipation? Didn’t
they denounce the fenian movement from the pulpit
and in the confession box? And didn’t they
dishonour the ashes of Terence Bellew MacManus?
His face was glowing with anger and
Stephen felt the glow rise to his own cheek as the
spoken words thrilled him. Mr Dedalus uttered
a guffaw of coarse scorn.
O, by God, he cried, I
forgot little old Paul Cullen! Another apple
of God’s eye!
Dante bent across the table and cried to Mr Casey:
Right! Right!
They were always right! God and morality and religion
come first.
Mrs Dedalus, seeing her excitement, said to her:
Mrs Riordan, don’t excite yourself
answering them.
God and religion before
everything! Dante cried. God and religion
before the world.
Mr Casey raised his clenched fist
and brought it down on the table with a crash.
Very well then, he shouted
hoarsely, if it comes to that, no God for Ireland!
John! John! cried
Mr Dedalus, seizing his guest by the coat sleeve.
Dante stared across the table, her
cheeks shaking. Mr Casey struggled up from his
chair and bent across the table towards her, scraping
the air from before his eyes with one hand as though
he were tearing aside a cobweb.
No God for Ireland! he
cried. We have had too much God In Ireland.
Away with God!
Blasphemer! Devil!
screamed Dante, starting to her feet and almost spitting
in his face.
Uncle Charles and Mr Dedalus pulled
Mr Casey back into his chair again, talking to him
from both sides reasonably. He stared before him
out of his dark flaming eyes, repeating:
Away with God, I say!
Dante shoved her chair violently aside
and left the table, upsetting her napkin-ring which
rolled slowly along the carpet and came to rest against
the foot of an easy-chair. Mrs Dedalus rose quickly
and followed her towards the door. At the door
Dante turned round violently and shouted down the
room, her cheeks flushed and quivering with rage:
Devil out of hell!
We won! We crushed him to death! Fiend!
The door slammed behind her.
Mr Casey, freeing his arms from his
holders, suddenly bowed his head on his hands with
a sob of pain.
Poor Parnell! he cried loudly. My
dead king!
He sobbed loudly and bitterly.
Stephen, raising his terror-stricken
face, saw that his father’s eyes were full of
tears.
The fellows talked together in little groups.
One fellow said:
They were caught near the Hill of Lyons.
Who caught them?
Mr Gleeson and the minister.
They were on a car. The same fellow added:
A fellow in the higher line told me.
Fleming asked:
But why did they run away, tell us?
I know why, Cecil Thunder
said. Because they had fecked cash out of the
rector’s room.
Who fecked it?
Kickham’s brother. And they
all went shares in it.
But that was stealing. How could
they have done that?
A fat lot you know about
it, Thunder! Wells said. I know why they
scut.
Tell us why.
I was told not to, Wells said.
O, go on, Wells, all said. You might
tell us. We won’t let it out.
Stephen bent forward his head to hear.
Wells looked round to see if anyone was coming.
Then he said secretly:
You know the altar wine they keep in the
press in the sacristy?
Yes.
Well, they drank that and it was found
out who did it by the smell.
And that’s why they ran away, if you want to
know.
And the fellow who had spoken first said:
Yes, that’s what I heard too from
the fellow in the higher line.
The fellows all were silent.
Stephen stood among them, afraid to speak, listening.
A faint sickness of awe made him feel weak. How
could they have done that? He thought of the
dark silent sacristy. There were dark wooden
presses there where the crimped surplices lay quietly
folded. It was not the chapel but still you had
to speak under your breath. It was a holy place.
He remembered the summer evening he had been there
to be dressed as boatbearer, the evening of the Procession
to the little altar in the wood. A strange and
holy place. The boy that held the censer had
swung it lifted by the middle chain to keep the coals
lighting. That was called charcoal: and it
had burned quietly as the fellow had swung it gently
and had given off a weak sour smell. And then
when all were vested he had stood holding out the boat
to the rector and the rector had put a spoonful of
incense in it 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 had knocked him down the
day before, a fellow out of second of grammar.
He had been thrown by the fellow’s machine lightly
on the cinder path and his spectacles had been broken
in three pieces and some of the grit of the cinders
had gone into his mouth.
That was why the fellows seemed to
him smaller and farther away and the goalposts so
thin and far and the soft grey sky so high up.
But there was no play on the football grounds for
cricket was coming: and some said that Barnes
would be prof and some said it would be Flowers.
And all over the playgrounds they were playing rounders
and bowling twisters and lobs. And from
here and from there came the sounds of the cricket
bats through the soft grey air. They said:
pick, pack, pock, puck: little drops of water
in a fountain slowly falling in the brimming bowl.
Athy, who had been silent, said quietly:
You are all wrong.
All turned towards him eagerly.
Why?
Do you know?
Who told you?
Tell us, Athy.
Athy pointed across the playground
to where Simon Moonan was walking by himself kicking
a stone before him.
Ask him, he said.
The fellows looked there and then said:
Why him?
Is he in it?
Athy lowered his voice and said:
Do you know why those
fellows scut? I will tell you but you must not
let on you know.
Tell us, Athy. Go on. You might
if you know.
He paused for a moment and then said mysteriously:
They were caught with
Simon Moonan and Tusker Boyle in the square one night.
The fellows looked at him and asked:
Caught?
What doing?
Athy said:
Smugging.
All the fellows were silent: and Athy said:
And that’s why.
Stephen looked at the faces of the
fellows but they were all looking across the playground.
He wanted to ask somebody about it. What did
that mean about the smugging in the square? Why
did the five fellows out of the higher line run away
for that? It was a joke, he thought. Simon
Moonan had nice clothes and one night he had shown
him a ball of creamy sweets that the fellows of the
football fifteen had rolled down to him along the
carpet in the middle of the refectory when he was at
the door. It was the night of the match against
the Bective Rangers; and the ball was made just like
a red and green apple only it opened and it was full
of the creamy sweets. And one day Boyle had said
that an elephant had two tuskers instead of two tusks
and that was why he was called Tusker Boyle but some
fellows called him Lady Boyle because he was always
at his nails, paring them.
Eileen had long thin cool white hands
too because she was a girl. They were like ivory;
only soft. That was the meaning of tower
of ivory but protestants could not understand
it and made fun of it. One day he had stood beside
her looking into the hotel grounds. A waiter was
running up a trail of bunting on the flagstaff and
a fox terrier was scampering to and fro on the sunny
lawn. She had put her hand into his pocket where
his hand was and he had felt how cool and thin and
soft her hand was. She had said that pockets
were funny things to have: and then all of a
sudden she had broken away and had run laughing down
the sloping curve of the path. Her fair hair
had streamed out behind her like gold in the sun.
Tower of ivory. House of
gold. By thinking of things you could understand
them.
But why in the square? You went
there when you wanted to do something. It was
all thick slabs of slate and water trickled all day
out of tiny pinholes and there was a queer smell of
stale water there. And behind the door of one
of the closets there was a drawing in red pencil of
a bearded man in a Roman dress with a brick in each
hand and underneath was the name of the drawing:
Balbus was building a wall.
Some fellow had drawn it there for
a cod. It had a funny face but it was very like
a man with a beard. And on the wall of another
closet there was written in backhand in beautiful
writing:
Julius Caesar wrote The Calico Belly.
Perhaps that was why they were there
because it was a place where some fellows wrote things
for cod. But all the same it was queer what Athy
said and the way he said it. It was not a cod
because they had run away. He looked with the
others across the playground and began to feel afraid.
At last Fleming said:
And we are all to be punished for what
other fellows did?
I won’t come back,
see if I do, Cecil Thunder 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 is going to be done to them?
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 answered. He’s going
to be flogged by Mr Gleeson.
I know why, Cecil Thunder
said. He is right and the other fellows are wrong
because a flogging wears off after a bit but a fellow
that has been expelled from college is known all his
life on account of it. Besides Gleeson won’t
flog him hard.
It’s best of his play not to, Fleming
said.
I wouldn’t like
to be Simon Moonan and Tusker Cecil Thunder said.
But I don’t believe they will be flogged.
Perhaps they will be sent up for twice nine.
No, no, said Athy.
They’ll both get it on the vital spot. Wells
rubbed himself and said in a crying voice:
Please, sir, let me off!
Athy grinned and turned up the sleeves of his jacket,
saying:
It can’t be helped;
It must be done.
So down with your breeches
And out with your bum.
The fellows laughed; but he felt that
they were a little afraid. In the silence of
the soft grey air he heard the cricket bats from here
and from there: pock. That was 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 it was 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.
O how could they laugh about it that way?
He looked at Athy’s rolled-up
sleeves and knuckly inky hands. He had rolled
up his sleeves to show how Mr 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 in! All in!
During the writing lesson 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 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. 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 it had been
found out who had done it by the smell. Perhaps
they had stolen a monstrance to run away with and
sell it somewhere. That must have been a terrible
sin, to go in there quietly at night, to open the dark
press and steal the flashing gold thing into which
God was put on the altar in the middle of flowers
and candles at benediction while the incense went
up in clouds at both sides as the fellow swung the
censer and Dominic Kelly sang the first part by himself
in the choir. But God was not in it of course
when they stole it. But still it was a strange
and a great sin even to touch it. He thought
of it with deep awe; a terrible and strange sin:
it thrilled him to think of it in the silence when
the pens scraped lightly. But to drink the altar
wine out of the press and be found out by the smell
was a sin too: but it was not terrible and strange.
It only made you feel a little sickish on account
of the smell of the wine. Because on the day when
he had made his first holy communion in the chapel
he had shut his eyes and opened his mouth and put
out his tongue a little: and when the rector had
stooped down to give him the holy communion he had
smelt a faint winy smell off the rector’s breath
after the wine of the mass. The word was beautiful:
wine. It made you think of dark purple because
the grapes were dark purple that grew in Greece outside
houses like white temples. But the faint smell
of the rector’s breath had made him feel a sick
feeling on the morning of his first communion.
The day of your first communion was the happiest day
of your life. And once a lot of generals had asked
Napoleon what was the happiest day of his life.
They thought he would say the day he won some great
battle or the day he was made an emperor. But
he said:
Gentlemen, the happiest
day of my life was the day on which I made my first
holy communion.
Father Arnall came in and the Latin
lesson began and he remained still, leaning on the
desk with his arms folded. Father Arnall gave
out the theme-books and he said that they were scandalous
and that they were all to be written out again with
the corrections at once. But the worst of all
was Fleming’s theme because the pages were stuck
together by a blot: and Father Arnall held it
up by a corner and said it was an insult to any master
to send him up such a theme. Then he asked Jack
Lawton to decline the noun mare and Jack Lawton
stopped at the ablative singular and could not go
on with the plural.
You should be ashamed
of yourself, said Father Arnall sternly. You,
the leader of the class!
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 the 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 between the two last benches. The other
boys bent over their theme-books and began to write.
A silence filled the classroom and Stephen, glancing
timidly at Father Arnall’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 letting on to be in a wax? It was
because he was allowed, because a priest would know
what a sin was and would not do it. But if he
did it one time by mistake what would he do to go to
confession? Perhaps he would go to confession
to the minister. And if the minister did it he
would go to the rector: and the rector to the
provincial: and the provincial to the general
of the 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 not become jesuits.
And he wondered what Father Arnall and Paddy Barrett
would have become and what Mr McGlade and Mr Gleeson
would have become if they had not become jesuits.
It was hard to think what because you would have to
think of them in a different way with different coloured
coats and trousers and with beards and moustaches
and different kinds of hats.
The door opened quietly and closed.
A quick whisper ran through the class: the prefect
of studies. There was an instant of dead silence
and then the loud crack of a pandybat on the last
desk. Stephen’s heart leapt up in fear.
Any boys want flogging
here, Father Arnall? cried the prefect of studies.
Any lazy idle loafers that want flogging in this class?
He came to the middle of the class
and saw Fleming on his knees.
Hoho! he cried. Who
is this boy? Why is he on his knees? What
is your name, boy?
Fleming, sir.
Hoho, Fleming! An
idler of course. I can see it in your eye.
Why is he on his knees, Father Arnall?
He wrote a bad Latin theme,
Father Arnall said, and he missed all the questions
in grammar.
Of course he did! cried
the prefect of studies, of course he did! A born
idler! I can see it in the corner of his eye.
He banged his pandybat down on the desk and cried:
Up, Fleming! Up, my boy!
Fleming stood up slowly.
Hold out! cried the prefect of studies.
Fleming held out his hand. The
pandybat came down on it with a loud smacking sound:
one, two, three, four, five, six.
Other hand!
The pandybat came down again in six loud quick smacks.
Kneel down! cried the prefect of studies.
Fleming knelt down, squeezing his
hands under his armpits, his face contorted with pain;
but Stephen knew how hard his hands were because Fleming
was always rubbing rosin into them. But perhaps
he was in great pain for the noise of the pandybat
was terrible. Stephen’s heart was beating
and fluttering.
At your work, all of you!
shouted the prefect of studies. We want no lazy
idle loafers here, lazy idle little schemers.
At your work, I tell you. Father Dolan will be
in to see you every day. Father Dolan will be
in tomorrow.
He poked one of the boys in the side with his pandybat,
saying:
You, boy! When will Father Dolan
be in again?
Tomorrow, sir, said Tom Furlong’s
voice.
Tomorrow and tomorrow
and tomorrow, said the prefect of studies. Make
up your minds for that. Every day Father Dolan.
Write away. You, boy, who are you?
Stephen’s heart jumped suddenly.
Dedalus, sir.
Why are you not writing like the others?
I...my...
He could not speak with fright.
Why is he not writing, Father Arnall?
He broke his glasses,
said Father Arnall, and I exempted him from work.
Broke? What is this
I hear? What is this your name is! said the prefect
of studies.
Dedalus, sir.
Out here, Dedalus. Lazy little schemer.
I see schemer in your face.
Where did you break your glasses?
Stephen stumbled into the middle of the class, blinded
by fear and haste.
Where did you break your glasses? repeated
the prefect of studies.
The cinder-path, sir.
Hoho! The cinder-path! cried the
prefect of studies. I know that trick.
Stephen lifted his eyes in wonder
and saw for a moment Father Dolan’s white-grey
not young face, his baldy white-grey head with fluff
at the sides of it, the steel rims of his spectacles
and his no-coloured eyes looking 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. A hot 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 scalding tears were
driven into his eyes. His whole body was shaking
with fright, his arm was shaking and his crumpled burning
livid hand shook like a loose leaf in the air.
A cry sprang to his lips, a prayer to be let off.
But though the tears scalded his eyes and his limbs
quivered with pain and fright he held back the hot
tears and the cry that scalded his throat.
Other hand! shouted the prefect of studies.
Stephen drew back his maimed and quivering
right arm and held out his left hand. The soutane
sleeve swished again as the pandybat was lifted and
a loud crashing sound and a fierce maddening tingling
burning pain made his hand shrink together with the
palms and fingers in a livid quivering mass.
The scalding water burst forth from his eyes and,
burning with shame and agony and fear, he drew back
his shaking arm in terror and burst out into a whine
of pain. His body shook with a palsy of fright
and in shame and rage he felt the scalding cry come
from his throat and the scalding tears falling out
of his eyes and down his flaming cheeks.
Kneel down, cried the prefect of studies.
Stephen knelt down quickly pressing
his beaten hands to his sides. To think of them
beaten and swollen with pain all in a moment made him
feel so sorry for them as if they were not his own
but someone else’s that he felt sorry for.
And as he knelt, calming the last sobs in his throat
and feeling the burning tingling pain pressed into
his sides, he thought of the hands which he had held
out in the air with the palms up and of the firm touch
of the prefect of studies when he had steadied the
shaking fingers and of the beaten swollen reddened
mass of palm and fingers that shook helplessly in
the air.
Get at your work, all
of you, cried the prefect of studies from the door.
Father Dolan will be in every day to see if any boy,
any lazy idle little loafer wants flogging. Every
day. Every day.
The door closed behind him.
The hushed class continued to copy
out the themes. Father Arnall rose from his seat
and went among them, helping the boys with gentle words
and telling them the mistakes they had made. His
voice was very gentle and soft. Then he returned
to his seat and said to Fleming and Stephen:
You may return to your places, you two.
Fleming and Stephen rose and, walking
to their seats, sat down. Stephen, scarlet with
shame, opened a book quickly with one weak hand and
bent down upon it, his face close to the page.
It was unfair and cruel because the
doctor had told him not to read without glasses and
he had written home to his father that morning to
send him a new pair. And Father Arnall had said
that he need not study till the new glasses came.
Then to be called a schemer before the class and to
be pandied when he always got the card for first or
second and was the leader of the Yorkists! How
could the prefect of studies know that it was a trick?
He felt the touch of the prefect’s fingers as
they had steadied his hand and at first he had thought
he was going to shake hands with him because the fingers
were soft and firm: but then in an instant he
had heard the swish of the soutane sleeve and the crash.
It was cruel and unfair to make him kneel in the middle
of the class then: and Father Arnall had told
them both that they might return to their places without
making any difference between them. He listened
to Father Arnall’s low and gentle voice as he
corrected the themes. Perhaps he was sorry now
and wanted to be decent. But it was unfair and
cruel. The prefect of studies was a priest but
that was cruel and unfair. And his white-grey
face and the no-coloured eyes behind the steel-rimmed
spectacles were cruel looking because he had steadied
the hand first with his firm soft fingers and that
was to hit it better and louder.
It’s a stinking
mean thing, that’s what it is, said Fleming in
the corridor as the classes were passing out in file
to the refectory, to pandy a fellow for what is not
his fault.
You really broke your
glasses by accident, didn’t you? Nasty Roche
asked.
Stephen felt his heart filled by Fleming’s
words and did not answer.
Of course he did! said
Fleming. I wouldn’t stand it. I’d
go up and tell the rector on him.
Yes, said Cecil Thunder
eagerly, and I saw him lift the pandy-bat over his
shoulder and he’s not allowed to do that.
Did they hurt you much? Nasty Roche
asked.
Very much, Stephen said.
I wouldn’t stand
it, Fleming repeated, from Baldyhead or any other
Baldyhead. It’s a stinking mean low trick,
that’s what it is. I’d go straight
up to the rector and tell him about it after dinner.
Yes, do. Yes, do, said Cecil Thunder.
Yes, do. Yes, go up and tell the
rector on him, Dedalus, said Nasty
Roche, because he said that he’d come in tomorrow
again and pandy you.
Yes, yes. Tell the rector, all said.
And there were some fellows out of
second of grammar listening and one of them said:
The senate and the Roman
people declared that Dedalus had been wrongly punished.
It was wrong; it was unfair and cruel;
and, as he sat in the refectory, he suffered time
after time in memory the same humiliation until he
began to wonder whether it might not really be that
there was something in his face which made him look
like a schemer and he wished he had a little mirror
to see. But there could not be; and it was unjust
and cruel and unfair.
He could not eat the blackish fish
fritters they got on Wednesdays in lent and one of
his potatoes had the mark of the spade in it.
Yes, he would do what the fellows had told him.
He would go up and tell the rector that he had been
wrongly punished. A thing like that had been
done before by somebody in history, by some great person
whose head was in the books of history. And the
rector would declare that he had been wrongly punished
because the senate and the Roman people always declared
that the men who did that had been wrongly punished.
Those were the great men whose names were in Richmal
Magnall’s Questions. History was all about
those men and what they did and that was what Peter
Parley’s Tales about Greece and Rome were all
about. Peter Parley himself was on the first
page in a picture. There was a road over a heath
with grass at the side and little bushes: and
Peter Parley had a broad hat like a protestant minister
and a big stick and he was walking fast along the
road to Greece and Rome.
It was easy what he had to do.
All he had to do was when the dinner was over and
he came out in his turn to go on walking but not out
to the corridor but up the staircase on the right
that led to the castle. He had nothing to do
but that: to turn to the right and walk fast up
the staircase and in half a minute he would be in
the low dark narrow corridor that led through the
castle to the rector’s room. And every
fellow had said that it was unfair, even the fellow
out of second of grammar who had said that about the
senate and the Roman people.
What would happen?
He heard the fellows of the higher
line stand up at the top of the refectory and heard
their steps as they came down the matting: Paddy
Rath and Jimmy Magee and the Spaniard and the Portuguese
and the fifth was big Corrigan who was going to be
flogged by Mr Gleeson. That was why the prefect
of studies had called him a schemer and pandied him
for nothing: and, straining his weak eyes, tired
with the tears, he watched big Corrigan’s broad
shoulders and big hanging black head passing in the
file. But he had done something and besides Mr
Gleeson would not flog him hard: and he remembered
how big Corrigan looked in the bath. He had skin
the same colour as the turf-coloured bogwater in the
shallow end of the bath and when he walked along the
side his feet slapped loudly on the wet tiles and
at every step his thighs shook a little because he
was fat.
The refectory was half empty and the
fellows were still passing out in file. He could
go up the staircase because there was never a priest
or a prefect outside the refectory door. But
he could not go. The rector would side with the
prefect of studies and think it was a schoolboy trick
and then the prefect of studies would come in every
day the same, only it would be worse because he would
be dreadfully waxy at any fellow going up to the rector
about him. The fellows had told him to go but
they would not go themselves. They had forgotten
all about it. No, it was best to forget all about
it and perhaps the prefect of studies had only said
he would come in. No, it was best to hide out
of the way because when you were small and young you
could often escape that way.
The fellows at his table stood up.
He stood up and passed out among them in the file.
He had to decide. He was coming near the door.
If he went on with the fellows he could never go up
to the rector because he could not leave the playground
for that. And if he went and was pandied all
the same all the fellows would make fun and talk about
young Dedalus going up to the rector to tell on the
prefect of studies.
He was walking down along the matting
and he saw the door before him. It was impossible:
he could not. He thought of the baldy head of
the prefect of studies with the cruel no-coloured
eyes looking at him and he heard the voice of the
prefect of studies asking him twice what his name
was. Why could he not remember the name when he
was told the first time? Was he not listening
the first time or was it to make fun out of the name?
The great men in the history had names like that and
nobody made fun of them. It was his own name
that he should have made fun of if he wanted to make
fun. Dolan: it was like the name of a woman
who 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 community. He peered in front of him and
right and left through the gloom and thought that those
must be portraits. It was dark and silent and
his eyes were weak and tired with tears so that he
could not see. But he thought they were the portraits
of the saints and great men of the order who were looking
down on him silently as he passed: saint Ignatius
Loyola holding an open book and pointing to the words
ad MAJOREM dei GLORIAM in it; saint Francis
Xavier pointing to his chest; Lorenzo Ricci with his
berretta on his head like one of the prefects of the
lines, the three patrons of holy youth saint
Stanislaus Kostka, saint Aloysius Gonzago, and Blessed
John Berchmans, all with young faces because they died
when they were young, and Father Peter Kenny sitting
in a chair wrapped in a big cloak.
He came out on the landing above the
entrance hall and looked about him. That was
where Hamilton Rowan had passed and the marks of the
soldiers’ slugs were there. And it was there
that the old servants had seen the ghost in the white
cloak of a marshal.
An old servant was sweeping at the
end of the landing. He asked him where was the
rector’s room and the old servant pointed to
the door at the far end and looked after him as he
went on to it and knocked.
There was no answer. He knocked
again more loudly and his heart jumped when he heard
a muffled voice say:
Come in!
He turned the handle and opened the
door and fumbled for the handle of the green baize
door inside. He found it and pushed it open and
went in.
He saw the rector sitting at a desk
writing. There was a skull on the desk and a
strange solemn smell in the room like the old leather
of chairs.
His heart was beating fast on account
of the solemn place he was in and the silence of the
room: and he looked at the skull and at the rector’s
kind-looking face.
Well, my little man, said the rector,
what is it?
Stephen swallowed down the thing in his throat and
said:
I broke my glasses, sir.
The rector opened his mouth and said:
O!
Then he smiled and said:
Well, if we broke our glasses we must
write home for a new pair.
I wrote home, sir, said
Stephen, and Father Arnall said I am not to study
till they come.
Quite right! said the rector.
Stephen swallowed down the thing again
and tried to keep his legs and his voice from shaking.
But, sir
Yes?
Father Dolan came in today
and pandied me because 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:
Your name is Dedalus, isn’t it?
Yes, sir...
And where did you break your glasses?
On the cinder-path, sir.
A fellow was coming out of the bicycle house and I
fell and they got broken. I don’t know the
fellow’s name.
The rector looked at him again in silence. Then
he smiled and said:
O, well, it was a mistake; I am sure Father
Dolan did not know.
But I told him I broke them, sir, and
he pandied me.
Did you tell him that
you had written home for a new pair? the rector asked.
No, sir.
O well then, said the
rector, Father Dolan did not 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:
Yes, sir, but Father Dolan
said he will come in tomorrow to pandy me again for
it.
Very well, the rector said, it is a mistake
and I shall speak to
Father Dolan myself. Will that do now?
Stephen felt the tears wetting his eyes and murmured:
O yes sir, thanks.
The rector held his hand across the
side of the desk where the skull was and Stephen,
placing his hand in it for a moment, felt a cool moist
palm.
Good day now, said the rector, withdrawing
his hand and bowing.
Good day, sir, said Stephen.
He bowed and walked quietly out of
the room, closing the doors carefully and slowly.
But when he had passed the old servant
on the landing and was again in the low narrow dark
corridor he began to walk faster and faster. Faster
and faster he hurried on through the gloom excitedly.
He bumped his elbow against the door at the end and,
hurrying down the staircase, walked quickly through
the two corridors and out into the air.
He could hear the cries of the fellows
on the playgrounds. He broke into a run and,
running quicker and quicker, ran across the cinderpath
and reached the third line playground, panting.
The fellows had seen him running.
They closed round him in a ring, pushing one against
another to hear.
Tell us! Tell us!
What did he say?
Did you go in?
What did he say?
Tell us! Tell us!
He told them what he had said and
what the rector had said and, when he had told them,
all the fellows flung their caps spinning up into the
air and cried:
Hurroo!
They caught their caps and sent them
up again spinning sky-high and cried again:
Hurroo! Hurroo!
They made a cradle of their locked
hands and hoisted him up among them and carried him
along till he struggled to get free. And when
he had escaped from them they broke away in all directions,
flinging their caps again into the air and whistling
as they went spinning up and crying:
Hurroo!
And they gave three groans for Baldyhead
Dolan and three cheers for Conmee and they said he
was the decentest rector that was ever in Clongowes.
The cheers died away in the soft grey
air. He was alone. He was happy and free;
but he would not be anyway proud with Father Dolan.
He would be very quiet and obedient: and he wished
that he could do something 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.
The fellows were practising long shies
and bowling lobs and slow twisters.
In the soft grey silence he could hear the bump of
the balls: and from here and from there through
the quiet air the sound of the cricket bats:
pick, pack, pock, puck: like drops of water in
a fountain falling softly in the brimming bowl.