Wednesday 13 November 2013

Tuesday, 12 November 2013, Pages 771 - 776, Eumaeus, Episode 16

Today we stopped at: "less than the arc which it subtends."
17.10 (Gabler), p. 776 (Penguin)


Bloom and Stephen have to stop in the road for an old horse which is dragging a sweeper. Bloom feels sorry for it and wishes he had a lump of sugar. Stephen is singing, which prompts Bloom to say that he'd have a lot in common with his wife, who is a lover of music too, and starts imagining plans for having Stephen's voice trained and establishing him as a successful singer. This would have the benefit of bringing in some money and of lifting Dublin's musical life to a more distinctive taste, and Stephen could still devote himself to literature in his spare time. Another piece of advice Bloom gives to Stephen is to cut away from Mulligan, who has no qualms about talking about him behind his back. The horse deposits three steaming turds on the road (a scene described with attempts to lift, on a stylistic level, what is evidently dropping). Stephen carries on singing as he and Bloom walk away into the distance. 

At this point, a shift in perspective occurs and the scene is perceived from the driver of the sweepercar's position, who (though he can't hear what they're saying) watches the two men walking away side by side. Bloom and Stephen walk into the distance (a cinematic scene, in a way), linked in companionship but apart from each other mentally.

We talked about the voice in this chapter, since it seemed to some that it couldn't really be Bloom's, he seems so different from how we know him. Maybe the chapter, particularly its ending, invites us to see the voice as detaching itself from the characters (though it may originate from what they say and do) - like something that lays itself over the events, or something into which the events are transposed but that claims existence in its own right.

One last time, an example of what we have come to enjoy as typically (and funnily) Eumaean, with its deliberately awkward style, the metaphors that don't go well together, then taking over and getting out of hand completely:

Added to which of course would be the pecuniary emolument by no means to be sneezed at, going hand in hand with his tuition fees. Not, he parenthesissed, that for the sake of filthy lucre he need necessarily embrace the lyric platform as a walk in life


In Ithaca (the next chapter, on which we started) it's rather the precision which gets out of hand. It is written in a pattern of question and answer, it strives to be exact (almost mathematically so), as if it were trying to get back the hold that's been missing (viz. the looseness and laxness of the previous chapter). But, again, the effort seems to defeat its purpose.