Difference between revisions of "ATD 489-524"
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'''Neville . . . Nigel'''<br> | '''Neville . . . Nigel'''<br> | ||
− | Lew's rescuers after the attempt to blow him up in Colorado, page 185. | + | Lew's rescuers after the attempt to blow him up in Colorado, page 185. These two characters remind one of Looney Tunes Goofy Gophers. |
'''stage left or audience left?'''<br> | '''stage left or audience left?'''<br> | ||
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'''Cyprian Latewood'''<br> | '''Cyprian Latewood'''<br> | ||
− | + | The name connects the character to the Greek demigod Orpheus. | |
+ | |||
+ | '''"Cyprian":'''<br /> | ||
+ | :After Orpheus loses Eurydice forever by turning to see if she's still following him out of the underworld, he never loves another woman, turning instead to young boys. One of Greek god Apollo's beloved boys, [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cyparissus Cyparissus], loves a beautiful tame stag that he accidentally kills with a spear. In his grief, Apollo turns him into a cypress tree. The Cypress was one of the trees Orpheus charmed with song, according to [[Cyprian Latewood|Ovid in his ''Metamorphoses'']]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''"Latewood":'''<br /> | ||
+ | :The "late wood" is the outer portion of the growth ring on a tree, more dense than the "early wood" which appears early in the growing season, appearing later in the season, usually summer. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Growth_ring Wikipedia entry]. The tree connection is strong. It was said that Orpheus could even charm the trees, and Rilke (who figures prominently in [http://gravitys-rainbow.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Gravity's Rainbow'']) in the first of his ''Sonnets to Orpheus'', begins: | ||
+ | |||
+ | ::Tree arising! O pure ascendance! | ||
+ | ::Orpheus Sings! Towering tree within the ear! | ||
+ | ::Everywhere stillness, yet in this abeyance: | ||
+ | ::seeds of change and new beginnings near. | ||
+ | |||
+ | [[Cyprian Latewood|More about this connection...]] | ||
+ | |||
+ | All very interesting, but let's not forget the obvious: | ||
+ | 'the Cyprian' in classical literature is a standard name for Aphrodite/Venus, goddess of love, because she was born in Cyprus, from the waves, as in the famous picture by Botticelli that plays a role in 'V' ('She hangs on the Western Wall').<br> | ||
+ | And so, by association, 'a follower of Aphrodite', and in later usage, according to Webster, a prostitute. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :if we were looking for yet another sexual innuendo, it would be interesting to note that the French word "cyprine" (the pronounciation of which is very similar to "Cyprian") describes the vaginal secretions that occur during the period of sexual arousal. The origin of this word can be traced back to the explanation above (i.e. Aphrodite). As for Late''wood'', well, that's kind of self-explanatory, no? | ||
'''sod'''<br> | '''sod'''<br> | ||
− | + | Common use; short for ''sodomite.'' | |
'''Eastern wog'''<br> | '''Eastern wog'''<br> | ||
Line 34: | Line 53: | ||
:the other's penis seemed larger than one's own? | :the other's penis seemed larger than one's own? | ||
::Annoyance not because of the penises but because they are rivals. Lethargic not because of the penises but because they aren't getting anywhere in their courtship. Finally, "each regarding the other's penis" because even straight men can't deny that that's one of the things they look at in the steamroom. | ::Annoyance not because of the penises but because they are rivals. Lethargic not because of the penises but because they aren't getting anywhere in their courtship. Finally, "each regarding the other's penis" because even straight men can't deny that that's one of the things they look at in the steamroom. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Note that ''annoyance'' is a synonym for ''inconvenience''. | ||
==Page 490== | ==Page 490== | ||
'''gyps'''<br> | '''gyps'''<br> | ||
− | + | A gyp is a college servant, whose office is that of a gentleman's valet, waiting on two or more collegians in the University of Cambridge. He differs from a bed-maker, inasmuch as he does not make beds; but he runs on errands, waits at table, wakes men for morning chapel, brushes their clothes, and so on. His perquisites are innumerable, and he is called a "gyp" (Greek: vulture) because he preys upon his employer like a vulture. At Oxford they are called scouts. [http://www.infoplease.com/dictionary/brewers/gyp.html] | |
− | + | [[image:ByronsPool.jpg|thumb|Byron's Pool|100px|right]]'''Byron's Pool'''<br> | |
− | : | + | A conservation area in Cambridge. The pool is named after the romantic poet Lord Byron, who is believed to have enjoyed swimming there. Byron studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, starting in 1805. |
− | + | ||
− | '''Byron's Pool'''<br> | + | |
− | + | ||
'''"Div!"'''<br> | '''"Div!"'''<br> | ||
− | + | Probably short for "divine!" Of course, if these kids were Vectorists they would be aware of the double ''entendre'' with the '''div''' (divergence) operator. | |
− | + | ||
'''"Whizzo!"'''<br> | '''"Whizzo!"'''<br> | ||
Line 67: | Line 84: | ||
Exactly as in the last paragraph, a poke at the currently colloquial: | Exactly as in the last paragraph, a poke at the currently colloquial: | ||
"That's what I'm talkin' about!" | "That's what I'm talkin' about!" | ||
+ | |||
+ | ::Late to the conversation, I know, but homosexuality is important here -- I believe that TRP was being historically accurate. Our early 21st century notion of homosexuality is different from the early 20th century notion, where people like, for example, Oscar Wilde were both married to women and certainly engaged in homosexual activity with men. The sexuality is more fluid. Therefore I find it completely believable that N&N could sometimes be engaging in homosexual behaviour with each other but also interested in a woman. | ||
'''Cloisters Court'''<br> | '''Cloisters Court'''<br> | ||
Line 76: | Line 95: | ||
'''Queen Anne's Gate'''<br> | '''Queen Anne's Gate'''<br> | ||
Some part of the British Home Office is, or was, located in the London (Westminster) street named Queen Anne's Gate. | Some part of the British Home Office is, or was, located in the London (Westminster) street named Queen Anne's Gate. | ||
+ | : According to Wikipedia the British Home Office resided there from 1978 to 2004, so this is unlikely. Since the 1860's until recently, however, parts of the British secret service had their offices at Queen Anne's Gate - the context suggests that the N's report to that. | ||
'''inconvenience'''<br> | '''inconvenience'''<br> | ||
Not sure what connection Pynchon is making here, but the word inconvenience could not come up accidentally in this novel. | Not sure what connection Pynchon is making here, but the word inconvenience could not come up accidentally in this novel. | ||
+ | |||
+ | True enough. The word seems to keep cropping up, too, but nonchalantly. By this point in the novel, I had already been kicking myself for not circling every prior use of the word. | ||
+ | |||
+ | For what it's worth, one of my Google searches for "inconvenience" yielded this bit of Pynchon-worthy information: | ||
+ | |||
+ | :John Evelyn, one of members of the Invisible College (the group that founded the Royal Society of the United Kingdom), published one of the first books on pre-industrial air pollution in 1661, '''''Fumufugium''': or, The Inconvience of the Aer, and Smoak of London Dissipated''. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :The first two paragraphs of Part I: | ||
+ | |||
+ | :It is not without some considerable ''Analogy'', that sundry of the ''Philosophers'' have named the ''Aer'' the ''Vehicle of the Soul'', as well as that of the Earth, and this frail Vessell of ours which contains it; since we all of us finde the benefit which we derive from it, not onely for the necessity of Respiration and functions of the Organs; but likewise for the use of the ''Spirits'' and ''Primigene Humors'', which doe most neerly approach that Divine particle. But we shall not need to insist, or refine much on this sublime Subject; and, perhaps, it might scandalize scrupulous Persons to pursue to the height it may possibly reach (as ''Diogenes'' and ''Anaximenes'' were wont to ''Deifie'' it) after we are past the ''Aetherial'', which is a certain ''Aer'' of ''Plato's'' denomination, as well as that of the lesse pure, more turbulent and dense, which, for the most part, we live and breath in, and which comes here to be examined as it relates to the design in hand, the City of ''London'', and the environs about it. | ||
+ | |||
+ | :It would doubtlesse be esteemed for a strange and extravagant ''Paradox'', that one should affirme, that the ''Aer'' itself is many times a potent and great disposer to ''Rebellion'' [note JE's book was printed right after Prince Charles' restoration]; and that ''Insulary people'', and indeed, most of the ''Septentrion Tracts'', where this ''Medium'' is grosse and heavy, are extremely versatile and obnoxious to change both in Religious and Secular Affaires: Plant the Foote of your Compasses on the very ''Pole'', and extend the other limb to 50 ''degrees of Latitude'': bring it about 'till it describe the Circle, and then reade the Histories of those Nations inclusively, and make the Calculation. | ||
'''Newnham'''<br> | '''Newnham'''<br> | ||
Line 90: | Line 122: | ||
'''Grace Chisholm and Will Young'''<br> | '''Grace Chisholm and Will Young'''<br> | ||
− | + | Grace Chisholm (1868-1944), an English mathematician. She went to Girton College, Cambridge in 1889 to study mathematics. Since no women were accepted to graduate schools in England, after graduation She went to the University of Göttingen to continue her mathematics education and received her PhD there in 1895. The following year she married William Young (1863-1942), one of her tutors at Girton and also a mathematician. (''romances with one's tutors à la . . .'') Grace Chisholm and Will Young formed a mathematical married partnetship of real significance. Husband and wife played a major role in set theory research. Between them they wrote 214 mathematical articles and several books, including one on geometry and one on set theory. [http://www.agnesscott.edu/LRIDDLE/WOMEN/young.htm Grace Chisholm] and [http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/history/Biographies/Young.html William Young]. | |
'''nautch-girl'''<br> | '''nautch-girl'''<br> | ||
− | + | The nautch girl was an Indian traditional dancer in Hindu temple or court performing ritual and religious dances. Her costume generally was of bright color. Pynchon probably refered to Yahsmeen's beautiful but exotic, extraordinary look and poise. | |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
[[http://www.hitchams.suffolk.sch.uk/india_art/starter/nautch_girls.htm nautch girl]]. | [[http://www.hitchams.suffolk.sch.uk/india_art/starter/nautch_girls.htm nautch girl]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | And then, through the medium of carnivals, she became an exotic dancer. This whole phrase "nautch-girl extravagance of looks and self-possession" refers to the sense of dominance the stripper feels over the yawps in the audience. Which figures in the key scene of the musical ''Gypsy'' (1959, book by Arthur Laurents, music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Stephen Sondheim). | ||
+ | And an [[ATD_119-148#Page_125|annotation to p. 125]] ("red as a cursed ruby") points to a weird ''AtD'' nautch girl connection. | ||
'''socio-acrobatic aggrandizement'''<br> | '''socio-acrobatic aggrandizement'''<br> | ||
Line 110: | Line 141: | ||
Consecrated as a bishop in 1607, he later entered politics, becoming a Secretary of State in 1616. Richelieu soon rose in both the Church and the state, becoming a cardinal in 1622, and King Louis XIII's chief minister in 1624. He remained in office until his death in 1642; | Consecrated as a bishop in 1607, he later entered politics, becoming a Secretary of State in 1616. Richelieu soon rose in both the Church and the state, becoming a cardinal in 1622, and King Louis XIII's chief minister in 1624. He remained in office until his death in 1642; | ||
− | from Wikipedia. | + | from [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/ Wikipedia]. |
:Wrong Richelieu. The duke in question won his big battle at Mahon in 1756. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Fran%C3%A7ois_Armand_du_Plessis%2C_duc_de_Richelieu Here's the Wikipedia link for the right one.] | :Wrong Richelieu. The duke in question won his big battle at Mahon in 1756. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Louis_Fran%C3%A7ois_Armand_du_Plessis%2C_duc_de_Richelieu Here's the Wikipedia link for the right one.] | ||
Line 125: | Line 156: | ||
Dog-eat-dog capitalism? | Dog-eat-dog capitalism? | ||
− | '''Reginald "Ratty" McHugh''' | + | '''Reginald "Ratty" McHugh''', '''fifteen years or so later''' |
− | + | ||
− | ''' | + | |
Reginald nodded appreciatively FIFTEEN YEARS OR SO LATER?...What is going | Reginald nodded appreciatively FIFTEEN YEARS OR SO LATER?...What is going | ||
on here time-wise?<br> | on here time-wise?<br> | ||
Line 134: | Line 163: | ||
'''one more flag'''<br> | '''one more flag'''<br> | ||
IE, his father's wallpaper brand. | IE, his father's wallpaper brand. | ||
+ | |||
+ | I was thinking perhaps his father was trying to bring up the subject of his sodomitical activities, where the "enemy" in this case are "hidden" homosexuals, and this is how he was "dishonoring" the flag. | ||
'''Balkan Sobranies'''<br> | '''Balkan Sobranies'''<br> | ||
Line 140: | Line 171: | ||
'''lilies-and-lassitude humor of the '90s'''<br> | '''lilies-and-lassitude humor of the '90s'''<br> | ||
Cult of Oscar Wilde? | Cult of Oscar Wilde? | ||
− | Aubrey Beardsley and the pre-Raphaelites? | + | Aubrey Beardsley and the pre-Raphaelites?<br> |
+ | More generally, the 'Aesthetes', not the same as the Pre-Raphaelites. People like Wilde. In Gilbert and Sullivan's 'Patience' the Wilde-like character is described as follows: | ||
+ | |||
+ | Though the Philistines may jostle, <br> | ||
+ | you will rank as an apostle <br> | ||
+ | in the high aesthetic band,<br> | ||
+ | If you walk down Piccadilly <br> | ||
+ | with a poppy or a lily <br> | ||
+ | in your medieval hand.<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | And ev'ryone will say,<br> | ||
+ | As you walk your flow'ry way,<br> | ||
+ | "If he's content with a vegetable love <br> | ||
+ | which would certainly not suit me,<br> | ||
+ | Why, what a most particularly pure young man <br> | ||
+ | this pure young man must be!"<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | |||
'''table d'hôte'''<br> | '''table d'hôte'''<br> | ||
Line 158: | Line 206: | ||
'''Capsheaf'''<br> | '''Capsheaf'''<br> | ||
Is this a third speaker, or another name for Ratty? Third speaker. Ratty puts in some words a little bit down the page. | Is this a third speaker, or another name for Ratty? Third speaker. Ratty puts in some words a little bit down the page. | ||
+ | |||
+ | In mathematics, a sheaf is the basic tool for expressing relationships between small regions of a space and large regions. Beginning with a topological space X, a sheaf assigns to every region (technically, open set) U of X some data F(U), such as a set, a group, or a ring. Often these data are a collection of geometric objects defined on that region, such as functions, vector fields, or differential forms. The data can be restricted to smaller regions, and compatible collections of data can be glued to give data over larger regions. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sheaf_%28mathematics%29 wikipedia entry] | ||
'''viva'''<br> | '''viva'''<br> | ||
− | Slangy short form of ''viva voce,'' an oral examination. | + | Slangy short form of ''viva voce,'' an oral examination. At Oxbridge, this would have been one standard method of examination for most degrees, and they are often intimidating, demanding experiences. |
'''Crayke'''<br> | '''Crayke'''<br> | ||
− | |||
Crayke is a village and civil parish in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England, about two miles east of Easingwold. Relevant? | Crayke is a village and civil parish in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England, about two miles east of Easingwold. Relevant? | ||
+ | |||
+ | Also, "crake" designates various species in the family [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Crake Rallidae], which also includes rails, coots, gallinules, and swamphens. Crakes and rails generally are medium-sized, ground-dwelling birds, with adaptations of the foot suited to wetlands. | ||
'''spot of audit'''<br> | '''spot of audit'''<br> | ||
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'''Dymphna'''<br> | '''Dymphna'''<br> | ||
− | After [http://www.catholic-forum.com/SAINTS/saintd01.htm St. Dymphna,] whose intercession is effective against insanity, possession and epilepsy. | + | After [http://www.catholic-forum.com/SAINTS/saintd01.htm St. Dymphna,] whose intercession is effective against insanity, possession and epilepsy. Her shrine at Gheel, Belgium, has since the 11th century been a refuge for persons with mental illness and intellectual disability. The afflicted wealthy went to the shrine to be cured; they were boarded with townspeople, beginning a tradition of adult foster care for persons with mental illness which continues to this day; Gheel is a designated state psychiatric hospital center, at which all the patients live in foster family homes. |
'''decks full of hearts'''<br> | '''decks full of hearts'''<br> | ||
Line 229: | Line 280: | ||
Faun: Faunus, the Roman god of fertility, also responsible for nightmares. Fauns are also the Romans counterparts of the Greek "satyrs", followers of Dionysos. Faunus is playing a flute, another connection to music. | Faun: Faunus, the Roman god of fertility, also responsible for nightmares. Fauns are also the Romans counterparts of the Greek "satyrs", followers of Dionysos. Faunus is playing a flute, another connection to music. | ||
− | Noellyn ?? | + | Noellyn ??<br> |
+ | She is No Ellen?<br> | ||
+ | Echo of Noel? | ||
'''"all blonde, of course"'''<br> | '''"all blonde, of course"'''<br> | ||
− | with all the Germanic mythology around here, possibly a reference to the "blonde/blue-eyed"-cliche of German women. | + | with all the Germanic mythology around here, possibly a reference to the "blonde/blue-eyed"-cliche of German women. Possible play on light-theme? Blonde (light, reflection) opposed to the dark (absence of light, absorption) Yashmeen? |
'''High Albedo'''<br> | '''High Albedo'''<br> | ||
− | Albedo: power of reflecting light. Blondes reflect more light than brunettes. | + | Albedo: power of reflecting light. Blondes reflect more light than brunettes.<br> |
+ | Possibly a citation of ''Gravity's Rainbow'', p. 152 (Viking), "high-albedo stockings". | ||
'''"dark rock...again and again"'''<br> | '''"dark rock...again and again"'''<br> | ||
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''''''sans merci''''''<br> | ''''''sans merci''''''<br> | ||
a reference to Keats's 19th century Romantic ballad 'La Belle Dame Sans Merci'. The lady of the title entraps men by making them fall in love with her and abandoning them. | a reference to Keats's 19th century Romantic ballad 'La Belle Dame Sans Merci'. The lady of the title entraps men by making them fall in love with her and abandoning them. | ||
+ | |||
+ | French for "no mercy" or "no pity", or, more precisely in this case: "without mercy". Alludes to Pinky's cold and unforgiving nature. | ||
==Page 494== | ==Page 494== | ||
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Gnomic = marked by aphorisms; aphoristic...'gnomic verse, a gnomic style". | Gnomic = marked by aphorisms; aphoristic...'gnomic verse, a gnomic style". | ||
American Heritage Dictionary. | American Heritage Dictionary. | ||
+ | |||
+ | : In Greek the gnomic tense is the timeless aorist, i.e. an aorist indicating no special time. In English there is the timeless present tense, e.g. in proverbs. Since the gnomic aorist differs from the usual aorist only in its usage the term "gnomic tenses" seems a little stressed. | ||
'''circs'''<br> | '''circs'''<br> | ||
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''''If she's not content with a vegetable love''''<br> | ''''If she's not content with a vegetable love''''<br> | ||
− | a reference to Marvell's seventeenth century poem 'To His Coy Mistress'. "Vegetable love" refers to the slow, slow way he would let his love grow, to become "vaster than empires and more slow" had they "world enough and time", but since they don't, since they are in human time, he is trying to 'convince' her to make love with him now. | + | a reference to Marvell's seventeenth century poem 'To His Coy Mistress'. "Vegetable love" refers to the slow, slow way he would let his love grow, to become "vaster than empires and more slow" had they "world enough and time", but since they don't, since they are in human time, he is trying to 'convince' her to make love with him now. Another interpretation would be female masturbation via vegetables.<br> |
+ | True, but more directly, quoting Gilbert and Sullivan. See comments on p. 491 (lilies-and-lassitude). | ||
+ | |||
'''Rugby blue'''<br> | '''Rugby blue'''<br> | ||
Line 267: | Line 327: | ||
This refers to a bargain sub-Burgundian wine that comes from the Macon region of France. | This refers to a bargain sub-Burgundian wine that comes from the Macon region of France. | ||
− | ' | + | :Bargain? You've obviously never enjoyed a good bottle of Mâcon Villages Cuvée Botrytis Domaine de la Bongran 2000, which, if you decide to treat yourself to a great bottle of white, will set you back at least 180$. It is true, though, that some wine snobs look down on Mâcon Wines because the region doesn't have any Grand Crus or Premier Crus. |
+ | <div id="grosssmith">'''George Grossmith...and that jolly Weedon'''</div> | ||
George and Weedon Grossmith, authors of the sublime, hillarious 'Diary of a Nobody', which gave the world the adjective 'pooterish'. Undoubtedly an influence on Pynchon's depictions of the 'oh dear' side of Englishness. Pooter is a 'nobody' who decides to publish his diaries, even though he is of no interest and nothing of any note occurs. A prototypical blogger, some might suggest. Originally published in Punch magazine (I think), set in late 19th Century. Don't know if the Grossmiths went to Cambridge, will check.... | George and Weedon Grossmith, authors of the sublime, hillarious 'Diary of a Nobody', which gave the world the adjective 'pooterish'. Undoubtedly an influence on Pynchon's depictions of the 'oh dear' side of Englishness. Pooter is a 'nobody' who decides to publish his diaries, even though he is of no interest and nothing of any note occurs. A prototypical blogger, some might suggest. Originally published in Punch magazine (I think), set in late 19th Century. Don't know if the Grossmiths went to Cambridge, will check.... | ||
Line 278: | Line 339: | ||
'''Junior or Senior?'''<br> | '''Junior or Senior?'''<br> | ||
− | expressions used at traditional English (independent) schools to refer to younger and older brothers. Thus Smith Junior or Smith Senior. | + | expressions used at traditional English (independent) schools to refer to younger and older brothers. Thus Smith Junior or Smith Senior.— |
+ | |||
+ | I don't think this is correct - the junior/senior here just refers to the question of whether it's Grossmith the father or Grossmith the son. The traditional expression for younger and older brothers is minor/major. So Smith major would be the elder Smith brother, Smith minor the younger brother.[[User:Geb|Geb]] 19:49, 10 April 2008 (PDT)geb | ||
− | See Grossmith entry on preceding page. | + | See [[#grossmith|Grossmith entry]] on preceding page. |
'''"Small hands, some evidence of early trauma, cp. Wilhelm II file"'''<br> | '''"Small hands, some evidence of early trauma, cp. Wilhelm II file"'''<br> | ||
Wilhelm II suffered an injury at birth and had a withered arm. All his photographs show him with the "small hand" in his pocket. | Wilhelm II suffered an injury at birth and had a withered arm. All his photographs show him with the "small hand" in his pocket. | ||
− | Wikipedia: William II, German Emperor | + | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wilhelm_II_of_Germany From Wikipedia]:<br> |
− | + | William II, German Emperor (1859-1941), Reigned 1888-1918. | |
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | ||
− | + | The role of William II in German history is sometimes a controversial issue in historical scholarship. Initially seen as an important, but embarrassing figure in German history until the late 1950s, for many years after that, the dominant view was that he had little or no influence on German policy leading up to the First World War. This has been challenged since the late 1970s, particularly by Professor John C. G. Röhl who saw William II as the key figure in understanding the recklessness and subsequent downfall of Imperial Germany. | |
− | William II | + | |
− | + | '''"Map of the World"'''<br> | |
+ | Like it says in the text, simply what Renfrew calls all his data. | ||
− | + | Although the name is possibly of some significance! Renfrew's dossiers could act as a way of divining holistic truth from a series of perspectives or projections. Obviously interpreting this data requires the correct viewing individual, or "lens." In this way, Renfrew's "Map" is not unlike the Sfinciuno Itinerary. | |
− | '''" | + | Ah, I think it worth pointing out that Renfrew's dossiers on "everyone' is a paranoid's nightmare. The map is a "map" of what Refrew learns about everyone, not a common meaning of 'map", and reminding this reader of They/Them in ''Gravity's Rainbow'' who have a map of everywhere Slothrop-- |
− | ? | + | and others?--appear to be/have been. At least. [[User:MKOHUT|MKOHUT]] 06:55, 3 October 2007 (PDT) |
+ | |||
+ | Also brings to mind the Wittgenstein line that TRP alludes to in ''The Crying of Lot 49'': "The world is all that is the case". If Renfrew | ||
+ | could map everything everyone does, he would have the whole [human] world | ||
+ | 'mapped'. | ||
'''Newmarket'''<br> | '''Newmarket'''<br> | ||
− | A famous English race-course, hence the following reference to the 'racing season'. | + | A famous English race-course, hence the following reference to the 'racing season'.<br> |
+ | And very close to Cambridge. | ||
'''Morse and Vassilev'''<br> | '''Morse and Vassilev'''<br> | ||
− | + | In 1896-97 the first radio-telegraphic equipment was imported into Bulgaria for the needs of the armed forces and large postal offices. This was the start of Bulgarian National Radio (BNR). At that time, the equipment was used only to transmit Morse code on electro-magnetic waves. Samuel F. B. Morse, an English speaking American, invented Morse code and the telegraph.(On May 24, 1844 he transmitted the first telegraph message: "What hath God wrought!").<br> BNR at one time was headed by Orlin Vassilev, a Bulgarian playwright. BNR at one time also employed former (Bulgarian) environment minister Valentin Vassilev.<br> | |
+ | Charles Morse published a full textbook of Bulgarian grammar in 1860, and compiled the first Bulgarian-English dictionary.#REDIRECT [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bulgarian-American_relations]] | ||
'''East Rumelian'''<br> | '''East Rumelian'''<br> | ||
Line 326: | Line 389: | ||
'''gossamer'''<br> | '''gossamer'''<br> | ||
− | + | Sheer, light, delicate, flimsy, airy, tenuous, like a cobweb. | |
==Page 496== | ==Page 496== | ||
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'''Lent . . . Easter . . . Long Vacation'''<br> | '''Lent . . . Easter . . . Long Vacation'''<br> | ||
''Lent'' is an anual season of fasting and penitence in preparation for ''Easter'', beginning at Ash Wednesday and lasting 40 weekdays to Easter. After ''Lent'', ''Easter'' the school terms would soon glide into the summer recess, the ''Long Vacation.'' | ''Lent'' is an anual season of fasting and penitence in preparation for ''Easter'', beginning at Ash Wednesday and lasting 40 weekdays to Easter. After ''Lent'', ''Easter'' the school terms would soon glide into the summer recess, the ''Long Vacation.'' | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | ::At Cambridge University 'Lent Term' is the second term of the academic year (after Christmas), and 'Easter Term' is the third (between Easter and Summer - or 'Long' - vacations.) So 'Lent and Easter' qualifies 'The Terms' in the previous clause: the sense is 'Lent Term and Easter Term went gliding...' (The first term of the Cambridge year, incidentally, is called 'Michaelmas'.) | ||
'''Colonial Office'''<br> | '''Colonial Office'''<br> | ||
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Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann. A German mathematician who did extensive work in differential geometry. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernhard_Riemann Wikipedia Entry] | Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann. A German mathematician who did extensive work in differential geometry. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernhard_Riemann Wikipedia Entry] | ||
− | [http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Biographies/Riemann.html Bernhard Riemann] (1826-66), a German | + | [http://www-groups.dcs.st-and.ac.uk/~history/Biographies/Riemann.html Bernhard Riemann] (1826-66), a German mathematician. He studied mathematics at the University of Göttingen and later taught that subject there. He did important work in geometry, complex analysis, and mathematical physics. Riemanm's work on Riemann geometry laid the foundation for Einstein's general relativity. He investigated the Riemann zeta function about which he stated the famous (and still not completely proven) Riemann hypothesis (see below). He died of tuberculosis in Selasca, Italy, at the age of 39. |
'''Zeta function . . . conjecture'''<br> | '''Zeta function . . . conjecture'''<br> | ||
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The Riemann hypothesis (''conjecture'') is a conjecture about the distribution of zeros of the Riemann zeta function. The Riemann zeta function is defined for all complex numbers (Cf [[ATD_119-148#Page132|page 132]]) not equal to zero. It has zeros at the negative even integers, (-2, -4, -6 and so on), called trivial zeros. The Riemann hypothesis is concerned with the non-trivial zeros, saying, ''"The real part of any non-trivial zero of the Riemann zeta function is 1/2."'' This conjecture remains unproved. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riemann_hypothesis Riemann conjecture]]. | The Riemann hypothesis (''conjecture'') is a conjecture about the distribution of zeros of the Riemann zeta function. The Riemann zeta function is defined for all complex numbers (Cf [[ATD_119-148#Page132|page 132]]) not equal to zero. It has zeros at the negative even integers, (-2, -4, -6 and so on), called trivial zeros. The Riemann hypothesis is concerned with the non-trivial zeros, saying, ''"The real part of any non-trivial zero of the Riemann zeta function is 1/2."'' This conjecture remains unproved. [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Riemann_hypothesis Riemann conjecture]]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Riemann's zeta function is also used in the Zipf Probability Distribution [http://mathworld.wolfram.com/ZipfDistribution.html], which itself led to the formulation of Zipf's Principle of Least Effort that TRP mined for semantic resonances in GR. [http://gravitys-rainbow.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=Zipf%27s_Principle_of_Least_Effort] | ||
''''joint''''<br> | ''''joint''''<br> | ||
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'''Limehouse'''<br> | '''Limehouse'''<br> | ||
− | An area of East London that borders on the River Thames near the Isle of Dogs. The name may derive from the | + | An area of East London that borders on the River Thames near the Isle of Dogs. The name may derive from the lime kilns, or lime "oasts", that once flourished there. In the late 19th century the area was famous for opium dens [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Limehouse Wikipedia]. |
==Page 497== | ==Page 497== | ||
'''Knightsbridge'''<br> | '''Knightsbridge'''<br> | ||
− | Knightsbridge is a street in Westminster | + | Knightsbridge is a street in Westminster borough, London. Notable for its super rich and famous high profile residents and its exclusive shops. (Recent residents included members of the Saudi royal family, Joan Collins, Gucci, Prince Diana and so on; it's shops included Egyptian Fayed's Harrods, etc . . . ) [[http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Knightsbridge Knightsbridge]]. |
+ | |||
+ | '''Hôtel Alsace'''<br> | ||
+ | The propre name is Hôtel d'Alsace. It was, and still is, located at number 13 rue des Beaux-Arts, in the 6th arrondissement of Paris. Oscar Wilde died there, under an assumed named, on november 30th, in 1900, following a two-day agony. Note some similarity of letters between the names Griswold and Wilde (both "sodomite"…).<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | Also, Wilde's famous last words (well, recounted as last words but really uttered months before his death) was "either that wallpaper goes, or I do." Cyprian's uncle, Griswold, it seems, had the atrocious decorative taste that shoved Wilde into the great beyond. This is post-Wilde; the avant-garde pose has calcified into a tacky schtick, the "lilies-and-lassitude" 90s, like the foreclosed frontier, a dead duck in the sodomite water. | ||
+ | |||
+ | see "Gris"--four associative definitions that interestingly modify/play with, the name Wilde: gray; a pale rose' (as in vin gris)and Juan Gris, Spanish painter. [http://www.google.com/search?q=define:gris&hl=en&oi=definel&defl=all gris] | ||
'''excess'''<br> | '''excess'''<br> | ||
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'''Australian season'''<br> | '''Australian season'''<br> | ||
− | A reference to the Australian cricket season which runs throughout their summer and the | + | A reference to the Australian cricket season which runs throughout their summer and the European winter. |
+ | |||
+ | More likely to refer to the tour of the Australian cricket team to England in the Summer of 1902. Of particular interest is the fact that the Aussies played a match against Cambridge University on June 9-10. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Australian_cricket_team_in_England_in_1902 1902 Ashes Tour] | ||
'''New Court'''<br> | '''New Court'''<br> | ||
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'''Compline hour'''<br> | '''Compline hour'''<br> | ||
− | + | Bedtime. Compline is the last prayers or service of the day. | |
− | + | ||
'''Te Deum'''<br> | '''Te Deum'''<br> | ||
Te Deum = Thou, O God (Latin). | Te Deum = Thou, O God (Latin). | ||
− | Since "the Te Deum" was used in the text, it meant the ancient Latin hymn of praise to God, in the form of a psalm, sung regularly at matins in the Roman Catholic Church and, usually in an English translation, at Morning Prayer in the Anglican Church, as well as on special occasions as a service of thanksgiving or commemoration. First words of the hymn, which begin; ''Te Deum laudāmus'' (we praise thee God). Te Deum also refers to the musical setting or form of this | + | Since "the Te Deum" was used in the text, it meant the ancient Latin hymn of praise to God, in the form of a psalm, sung regularly at matins in the Roman Catholic Church and, usually in an English translation, at Morning Prayer in the Anglican Church, as well as on special occasions as a service of thanksgiving or commemoration. First words of the hymn, which begin; ''Te Deum laudāmus'' (we praise thee God). Te Deum also refers to the musical setting or form of this hymn with a certain structure which Filtham had blotched. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Te_Deum Wikipedia] |
Coincidence? According to the [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14468c.htm Catholic Encyclopedia] there is a discussion among scholars whether the hymn of the Te Deum goes back to a text written by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Cyprian St. Cyprian of Carthage] : "...if the hymn was borrowed from St. Cyprian, why did it not include the "virgines" instead of stopping with "martyrum"?". | Coincidence? According to the [http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/14468c.htm Catholic Encyclopedia] there is a discussion among scholars whether the hymn of the Te Deum goes back to a text written by [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/St._Cyprian St. Cyprian of Carthage] : "...if the hymn was borrowed from St. Cyprian, why did it not include the "virgines" instead of stopping with "martyrum"?". | ||
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Chromaticism refers to the use of the chromatic scale in composing music. Ever since Baroque Period (17th to early 18th century) almost all music were compsoed either in major or minor scale, in which only seven of the twelve tones of the octave were used. Beginning in the late Romanic Period (mid 19th to 20th century) the chromatic scale including all 12 tones of the octave was used. By using the tones that are not "supposed" to be in a certain key, the music thus composed had stronger dissonance and exaggerated tension.<br> | Chromaticism refers to the use of the chromatic scale in composing music. Ever since Baroque Period (17th to early 18th century) almost all music were compsoed either in major or minor scale, in which only seven of the twelve tones of the octave were used. Beginning in the late Romanic Period (mid 19th to 20th century) the chromatic scale including all 12 tones of the octave was used. By using the tones that are not "supposed" to be in a certain key, the music thus composed had stronger dissonance and exaggerated tension.<br> | ||
− | Richard Strauss (1864-1949) was a German composer of the late Romantic era well known for his tone poems and operas. His ''Also sprach Zarathustra'' (1896), a symphonic poem, was made widely popular by Stanley Kubrick's film ''2001: A Space Odyssey'' in 1968 — the music (especially the brass fanfare opening) introduced the memorable ape/man sequence of the film. His many | + | Richard Strauss (1864-1949) was a German composer of the late Romantic era well known for his tone poems and operas. His ''Also sprach Zarathustra'' (1896), a symphonic poem, was made widely popular by Stanley Kubrick's film ''2001: A Space Odyssey'' in 1968 — the music (especially the brass fanfare opening) introduced the memorable ape/man sequence of the film. His many operas include ''Salome, Der Rosenkavalier, Capriccio'' and others. Chromaticism was not that new to Richard Strauss, but "relentless chromaticism" just might be too "modern" for him. |
'''Staindrop'''<br> | '''Staindrop'''<br> | ||
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'''"Filtham's Tedium"'''<br> | '''"Filtham's Tedium"'''<br> | ||
(Talk about overlabored puns...) | (Talk about overlabored puns...) | ||
+ | :"Tedium" is a common humorous way to refer to somebody-or-other's "Te Deum." | ||
'''dress regulations'''<br> | '''dress regulations'''<br> | ||
Line 450: | Line 526: | ||
'''Gauss'''<br> | '''Gauss'''<br> | ||
− | Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855), a German mathematician and scientist, and one of the all-time greats. He worked in a wide variety of fields in both mathematics and physics including number theory, analysis, differential geometry, geodesy, magnetism, astronomy and optics. His work has had an immense influence in many areas. Riemann was a | + | Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855), a German mathematician and scientist, and one of the all-time greats. He worked in a wide variety of fields in both mathematics and physics including number theory, analysis, differential geometry, geodesy, magnetism, astronomy and optics. His work has had an immense influence in many areas. Riemann was a student of his at Göttingen. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Carl_Friedrich_Gauss Wikipedia]. |
'''Ramanujan'''<br> | '''Ramanujan'''<br> | ||
− | Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887-1920), one of India's greatest mathematical geniuses. Long before he came to Cambridge and though without any formal university education, Ramanujan made substantial contributions to the anlytical theory of numbers and worked on elliptic functions, continued fractions and infinite series. He, a poor savant from India, was invited in 1914 to Cambridge by G.H. Hardy after he wrote him a letter asking abstruse mathematical questions. In his letter, Ramanujan enclosed a long list of then unproved theorems which he had solved. After his arriving at Cambridge | + | Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887-1920), one of India's greatest mathematical geniuses. Long before he came to Cambridge and though without any formal university education, Ramanujan made substantial contributions to the anlytical theory of numbers and worked on elliptic functions, continued fractions and infinite series. He, a poor savant from India, was invited in 1914 to Cambridge by G.H. Hardy after he wrote him a letter asking abstruse mathematical questions. In his letter, Ramanujan enclosed a long list of then unproved theorems which he had solved. After his arriving at Cambridge Ramanujan collaborated with G.H. Hardy resulting in important results. He was allowed to enroll in 1914 in Cambridge despite not having the proper qualifications and received a PhD degree in 1916. Plagued by health problems all his life, his health deteriorated rapidly from 1917, and he returned to India in 1919 and died there the following year. Two years before his death, however, he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London. [[http://www-history.mcs.st-andrews.ac.uk/Biographies/Ramanujan.html Ramanujan]]. Therefore, |
". . . Ramanujan here at Trinity . . ." could have happened only between 1914 - 1919. | ". . . Ramanujan here at Trinity . . ." could have happened only between 1914 - 1919. | ||
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:Kovalevskaia's private math tutor was Weierstrass at Berlin (see below). | :Kovalevskaia's private math tutor was Weierstrass at Berlin (see below). | ||
− | ''Karl Weierstrass'' (1815-97), a German mathermatician. He attended the University of Bonn studying law, finance and economics instead of mathermatics, the subject he was really interested in and studied out of | + | ''Karl Weierstrass'' (1815-97), a German mathermatician. He attended the University of Bonn studying law, finance and economics instead of mathermatics, the subject he was really interested in and studied out of school. He left the Univeristy of Bonn without a degree and went to the University of Münster for mathematics. Later he became a teacher in the city of Münster. Around 1850 he took a chair at the Technical University of Berlin. For four years (1870-1874) he gave private mathematics lessons to Sofia Kovalevskaia while she was denied the university entrance in Berlin. His investigations were mainly on the topic of "Special Functions": Weierstrass Elliptic Function, Weierstrass Zeta Function, Weierstrass Product Theroem, etc. |
''Sofia Kovalevskaia'' (1850-91) Russian mathematician and novelist. She was born in Moscow and showed an interest in mathematics from an early age. When 11 she studied differential and integral analysis from her father's calculus lecture notes that were used as wallpaper in the family house. She was given a special tutor of higher mathematics. At age 18 she entered a "false" marriage (it became genuine later) in order to be able to attend college abroad. In 1869 she enrolled as a provisional student at Heidelberg University. In 1870 she moved to Berlin attempting to study under ''Weierstrass'' and enroll at Berlin University. But the university refused to accept her because of her gender. However, Weierstrass was so impressed by her talent that he gave her private mathematics lessons twice a week for four years. By the spring of 1874, Kovalevskaia had completed three papers. Weierstrass deemed each of these worthy of a doctorate. And with his help, in Kovaleskaia's absence, University of Göttingen granted her a PhD in Mathematics (a historical first) and Master (''summa cum laude'') in Fine Art. In the same year she returned to Russia but failed to get an academic job. She did not practice mathematics for six years but pursued literary work instead. In 1880 she returned to mathematics and applied to teach at universities in Russia but was denied again. Finaly she found employment at Sweden's Stockholm University in 1883. She died of pneumonia in Stockholm in 1891.<br> | ''Sofia Kovalevskaia'' (1850-91) Russian mathematician and novelist. She was born in Moscow and showed an interest in mathematics from an early age. When 11 she studied differential and integral analysis from her father's calculus lecture notes that were used as wallpaper in the family house. She was given a special tutor of higher mathematics. At age 18 she entered a "false" marriage (it became genuine later) in order to be able to attend college abroad. In 1869 she enrolled as a provisional student at Heidelberg University. In 1870 she moved to Berlin attempting to study under ''Weierstrass'' and enroll at Berlin University. But the university refused to accept her because of her gender. However, Weierstrass was so impressed by her talent that he gave her private mathematics lessons twice a week for four years. By the spring of 1874, Kovalevskaia had completed three papers. Weierstrass deemed each of these worthy of a doctorate. And with his help, in Kovaleskaia's absence, University of Göttingen granted her a PhD in Mathematics (a historical first) and Master (''summa cum laude'') in Fine Art. In the same year she returned to Russia but failed to get an academic job. She did not practice mathematics for six years but pursued literary work instead. In 1880 she returned to mathematics and applied to teach at universities in Russia but was denied again. Finaly she found employment at Sweden's Stockholm University in 1883. She died of pneumonia in Stockholm in 1891.<br> | ||
− | In her short life Kovalevskaia had won a historic place in mathermatics. She was the first woman to receive a doctorate in mathermatics, the first woman to obtain a permanent position on a university faculty in mathematics, the first woman having a place on the editorial staff of a mathematical journal, the first female member of St. Petersburg Academy of Science, and the first woman to win the most prestigeous mathematical contest of her day, an honor equivalent to the winning of a Nobel Prize. Her literary achievements was quite substantial. Her ''Russian Childhood'' won wide acclaim and was translated into many languages (the English edition still | + | In her short life Kovalevskaia had won a historic place in mathermatics. She was the first woman to receive a doctorate in mathermatics, the first woman to obtain a permanent position on a university faculty in mathematics, the first woman having a place on the editorial staff of a mathematical journal, the first female member of St. Petersburg Academy of Science, and the first woman to win the most prestigeous mathematical contest of her day, an honor equivalent to the winning of a Nobel Prize. Her literary achievements was quite substantial. Her ''Russian Childhood'' won wide acclaim and was translated into many languages (the English edition still available). She had a couple of novels (''Nihilist Girl'' etc.) published as well. She dabbled in playwriting and produced a steady stream of both fiction and nonfiction publications for Russian journals. |
'''Pythagorean doctrine'''<br> | '''Pythagorean doctrine'''<br> | ||
− | From the text it refers to Pythagorean doctrine of transmigration of souls. | + | From the text it refers to Pythagorean doctrine of transmigration of souls. Pythagoras and his disciples believed in reincarnation (or metempsychosis), according to which human souls are immortal and are reborn into other animals after death. ("reborn as a vegetable" may be questionable.)<br> |
+ | Perhaps not so questionable. There is, after all, the Pythagorean prohibition against eating beans, wind being 'pneuma' = spirit. | ||
+ | |||
[http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/pythagora Pythagoras], one of the most famous and controversial ancient Greek philosophers, lived from ca. 570 to ca. 490 BC. He spent his early years on the island of Samos, off the coast of modern Turkey. At the age of 40, he moved to Crotona in southern Italy and most of his philosophical activity occurred there. His philosophical thinking exercised an important influence on the work of Plato. "Pythagoras was famous (1) as an expert on the fate of the soul after death . . .; (2) as an expert on religious ritual; (3) as a wonder-worker who had a thigh of gold and who could be two places at the same time; (4) as the founder of a strict way of life that emphasized dietary restrictions, . . . and rigorous self discipline." (on-line Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy).<br> | [http://plato.stanford.edu/entries/pythagora Pythagoras], one of the most famous and controversial ancient Greek philosophers, lived from ca. 570 to ca. 490 BC. He spent his early years on the island of Samos, off the coast of modern Turkey. At the age of 40, he moved to Crotona in southern Italy and most of his philosophical activity occurred there. His philosophical thinking exercised an important influence on the work of Plato. "Pythagoras was famous (1) as an expert on the fate of the soul after death . . .; (2) as an expert on religious ritual; (3) as a wonder-worker who had a thigh of gold and who could be two places at the same time; (4) as the founder of a strict way of life that emphasized dietary restrictions, . . . and rigorous self discipline." (on-line Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy).<br> | ||
− | Pythagoras was also a famous mathematician best known for the Pythagorean Theorem | + | Pythagoras was also a famous mathematician best known for the Pythagorean Theorem and the Music of the Spheres. Known as the father of numbers, his philosophy encompassed harmonics in mathematics, music, cosmology, geometry and had a lasting impact on hermeticism, gnosticism and alchemy. |
'''sounds like maths'''<br> | '''sounds like maths'''<br> | ||
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'''four-color chromolithograph'''<br> | '''four-color chromolithograph'''<br> | ||
Chromo--in Chemistry, chromium | Chromo--in Chemistry, chromium | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | :Nothing to do with chromium. Chromolithography means 'The art of printing in colours from stone' (OED), an early technique for printing in more than one colour. The chromo- prefix is a shortened form of chromato-, a Greek-derived prefix denoting 'to do with colour'. | ||
'''Snazzbury'''<br> | '''Snazzbury'''<br> | ||
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'''modern lettering'''<br> | '''modern lettering'''<br> | ||
Refers to Art Nouveau lettering popular at the turn of the 20th century and still commonly used on entrance signs for Paris metro stations. | Refers to Art Nouveau lettering popular at the turn of the 20th century and still commonly used on entrance signs for Paris metro stations. | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''L'ARIMEAUX ET QUEURLIS'''<br> | ||
+ | Larry, Moe, and Curly's | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Mademoiselles'''<br> | ||
+ | Should be ''Mesdemoiselles''. The plural form ''mademoiselles'' does exist in French, but only as a substantive, not as a title (it cannot be used to address people). | ||
'''"a kind of helical ramp"'''<br> | '''"a kind of helical ramp"'''<br> | ||
Possibly a reference to the Riemann Sphere, which is built in large part upon complex numbers and which look something like a helix.<br> | Possibly a reference to the Riemann Sphere, which is built in large part upon complex numbers and which look something like a helix.<br> | ||
[[Image:Riemann Sphere.jpg]] | [[Image:Riemann Sphere.jpg]] | ||
− | |||
− | |||
− | |||
'''twilling'''<br> | '''twilling'''<br> | ||
Line 552: | Line 635: | ||
'''Earl's Court Wheel'''<br> | '''Earl's Court Wheel'''<br> | ||
− | Earl's Court is an area of London. A Ferris Wheel there. | + | The apostrophe is an error. |
+ | Go to "List All Pages" and enter "Great Wheel of Earl's Court" for an excellent write-up elucidating much of this page. | ||
+ | |||
+ | Earl's Court is an area of London. A Ferris Wheel there. See "The Great Wheel of Earls Court" page. | ||
Another "paramorphic" parallel to our time: The London Eye, a huge Ferris Wheel built for the Millenium Exposition of 2000. The trip around is not, as Yasmeen notes, thermodynamically reversible, since one would be "changed forever" in the course of the journey around the wheel (in the Heraclitean sense that "No man steps in the same river twice"--the river changes.)<br> | Another "paramorphic" parallel to our time: The London Eye, a huge Ferris Wheel built for the Millenium Exposition of 2000. The trip around is not, as Yasmeen notes, thermodynamically reversible, since one would be "changed forever" in the course of the journey around the wheel (in the Heraclitean sense that "No man steps in the same river twice"--the river changes.)<br> | ||
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'''whelks'''<br> | '''whelks'''<br> | ||
− | A whelk is a large marine gastropod (snail) found in temperate waters. | + | A whelk is a large marine gastropod (snail) found in temperate waters.<br> |
+ | Popular in the early 20th C as fast food sold from stalls in the street. You extracted the somewhat bogey-like creature with a pin and ate it. | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''five pound note, like in the song'''<br> | ||
+ | Music hall song "I've Got the Five-Pound Note" based on 1896 stranding of passengers for 4-10 hours [accounts vary]. | ||
'''Chinese Turkestan railway shares'''<br> | '''Chinese Turkestan railway shares'''<br> | ||
Line 567: | Line 657: | ||
'''West Ham, the Park, Upton Lane, lads all in claret and blue'''<br> | '''West Ham, the Park, Upton Lane, lads all in claret and blue'''<br> | ||
− | The "lads in claret and blue" are kicking a football around, as they are players of current Premiership side West Ham United. Founded in 1895, the "Hammers" are playing their home games at Boleyn Ground aka "Upton Park". Yep, soccer. | + | The "lads in claret and blue" are kicking a football around, as they are players of current Premiership side West Ham United. Founded in 1895, the "Hammers" are playing their home games at Boleyn Ground aka "Upton Park". Yep, soccer. |
+ | |||
+ | West Ham United started playing at the Boelyn Ground in 1904. However, it's highly dubious that Upton Park could be seen from Earl's Court, even at 300 feet. Much easier to see Fulham or Queen's Park Rangers grounds, both much closer to Earl's Court. Chelsea's ground, Stamford Bridge is even nearer, but they weren't founded until 1905. | ||
'''lupine liminality'''<br> | '''lupine liminality'''<br> | ||
Line 609: | Line 701: | ||
'''Euclid'''<br> | '''Euclid'''<br> | ||
Avenue of classy mansions in Cleveland | Avenue of classy mansions in Cleveland | ||
+ | |||
+ | Euclid (300 BC) is also the father of geometry. [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Euclid wikipedia entry] check out the section on optics and the theory of mirrors. | ||
'''elms in Cleveland'''<br> | '''elms in Cleveland'''<br> | ||
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'''Krakatoa'''<br> | '''Krakatoa'''<br> | ||
The correct name is Krakatau. It is a volcanic, uninhabited Indonesia's island lies between Java and Sumatra. A series of cataclysmic explosions of August 26 - 27, 1883, the largest volcanic eruption in recorded history, collapsed the northern two-thirds of the island beneath the sea, generating an immense tsunamis that ravaged adjeacent coastlines and killed over 36,000 perople. Tephra (volcanic rock and glass fragments) from the eruption fell as far as 1,500 miles downwind in the days following the explosion. The finest fragments were propelled high into the stratosphere, spreading outward as a broad cloud acroos the entire equatorial belt in only two weeks. These particles would remain suspended in the atmosphere for a long time. For years, the earth experienced exotic colors in the sky, halos around the sun and moon, and a spectacular array of anomalous sunsets and sunrises. In the year following the equption, average global temperatures fell by as much as 1.2° Celsius. Weather patterns continued to be chaotic for years and temperature did not return to normal until 1888.<br> For more about 1883 eruption, map, pictures, current volcanic activities etc see [http://www.geology.sdsu.edu/how_volcanoes_work/Krakatau.html Krakatau 1] and<br> [http://volcano.und.edu/vwdocs/current_volcs/krakatau/krakatau.html Krakatau 2]. | The correct name is Krakatau. It is a volcanic, uninhabited Indonesia's island lies between Java and Sumatra. A series of cataclysmic explosions of August 26 - 27, 1883, the largest volcanic eruption in recorded history, collapsed the northern two-thirds of the island beneath the sea, generating an immense tsunamis that ravaged adjeacent coastlines and killed over 36,000 perople. Tephra (volcanic rock and glass fragments) from the eruption fell as far as 1,500 miles downwind in the days following the explosion. The finest fragments were propelled high into the stratosphere, spreading outward as a broad cloud acroos the entire equatorial belt in only two weeks. These particles would remain suspended in the atmosphere for a long time. For years, the earth experienced exotic colors in the sky, halos around the sun and moon, and a spectacular array of anomalous sunsets and sunrises. In the year following the equption, average global temperatures fell by as much as 1.2° Celsius. Weather patterns continued to be chaotic for years and temperature did not return to normal until 1888.<br> For more about 1883 eruption, map, pictures, current volcanic activities etc see [http://www.geology.sdsu.edu/how_volcanoes_work/Krakatau.html Krakatau 1] and<br> [http://volcano.und.edu/vwdocs/current_volcs/krakatau/krakatau.html Krakatau 2]. | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Krakatoa...child's story''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | ''The 21 Balloons''? which could have been a Chums of Chance adventure! | ||
'''Shorty'''<br> | '''Shorty'''<br> | ||
Line 623: | Line 721: | ||
==Page 507== | ==Page 507== | ||
+ | '''I thought sunsets were just supposed to look like that... | ||
+ | |||
+ | Suggestive of the sentiments in Wordsworth's ''Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood'' [http://www.bartleby.com/145/ww331.html] | ||
+ | |||
+ | Also brought to mind The Orb's ''Little Fluffy Clouds'' (1990) in which Rickie Lee Jones answers the question..... | ||
+ | |||
+ | What were the skies like when you were young? [by saying] | ||
+ | |||
+ | ''They went on forever | ||
+ | And ''they -- when I | ||
+ | We lived in Arizona | ||
+ | And the skies always had little fluffy clouds | ||
+ | And they were long and clear | ||
+ | And there were lots of stars, at night | ||
+ | And when it rained it would all turn | ||
+ | It -- they were beautiful | ||
+ | The most beautiful skies as a matter of fact | ||
+ | The sunsets were purple and red | ||
+ | And yellow and on fire | ||
+ | And the clouds would catch the colors everywhere | ||
+ | That's -- it's neat | ||
+ | Because I used to look at them all the time | ||
+ | When I was little | ||
+ | You don't see that'''' | ||
+ | |||
+ | Circling the rabbit hole....In this song, The Orb uses a harmonica sample from the song ''The Man With The Harmonica'' from the film '''Once Upon a Time in the West''' [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Little_Fluffy_Clouds]. The film in turn seems to have strong Pynchon/AtD overtones, (pre-tones??) -- | ||
+ | Frank vs. Harmonica, the railroads destroying the Old West...etc. Pynchon showing a strong preference for harmonicas, old movies and songs and protagonists named Frank. | ||
'''how little I cared'''<br> | '''how little I cared'''<br> | ||
Line 632: | Line 757: | ||
'''Prospect Avenue'''<br> | '''Prospect Avenue'''<br> | ||
− | + | Once fashionable street in Cleveland, Ohio. | |
'''leaf-spring suspension'''<br> | '''leaf-spring suspension'''<br> | ||
Line 657: | Line 782: | ||
'''descending minor triad'''<br> | '''descending minor triad'''<br> | ||
− | in music, an interval of three half tones. | + | in music, an interval of three half tones. <br> |
+ | No, the triad is a chord, so it's three notes moving downwards (soh-mi-doh) forming a minor chord. | ||
'''Svengali'''<br> | '''Svengali'''<br> | ||
Line 685: | Line 811: | ||
'''preferring'''<br> | '''preferring'''<br> | ||
− | Cf Rose in | + | Cf Rose in James Cameron's ''Titanic''. |
'''Root Tubsmith'''<br> | '''Root Tubsmith'''<br> | ||
− | + | Most likely a fictional character. | |
'''Fuchs'''<br> | '''Fuchs'''<br> | ||
Line 700: | Line 826: | ||
'''Professor Manning'''<br> | '''Professor Manning'''<br> | ||
− | ? | + | Henry Parker Manning (1859-1956) In 1889 he entered Johns Hopkins University to study mathematics, astronomy and physics. When he received his Ph.D. degree in 1891, his first printed paper had already appeared in the ''American Journal of Mathematics''. He was appointed instructor in mathematics at Brown that same year, and “with his advent,” Professor Raymond C. Archibald would later write, “a new era in the development of mathematics at Brown was ushered in.” From 1893 to 1908 Manning offered courses in higher mathematics never previously available at Brown, courses with names like “Theory of functions: algebraic functions, Riemann surfaces, and Abelian functions,” “Substitutions and transformation groups,” and “Quaternions, non-Euclidean geometry, and hyperspace.” After 1908 there were others in the department able to teach higher mathematics. His publications included ''Non-Euclidean Geometry'' in 1901, the first English language text in this subject, ''Irrational Numbers and their Representation by Sequences and Series'' in 1906, and ''Geometry of Four Dimensions'' in 1914. [http://www.brown.edu/Administration/News_Bureau/Databases/Encyclopedia/search.php?serial=M0090] |
'''language difference'''<br> | '''language difference'''<br> | ||
Line 713: | Line 839: | ||
'''dreamed it'''<br> | '''dreamed it'''<br> | ||
(Page?) | (Page?) | ||
+ | |||
+ | Page 349, at R.W. Vibe's "Italianate town house." Dally confirms this on page five hundred and twelve. | ||
'''Cigar Deck'''<br> | '''Cigar Deck'''<br> | ||
Line 733: | Line 861: | ||
==Page 513== | ==Page 513== | ||
− | '''She | + | '''She smelled falsely'''<br /> |
Error in first edition. Should be "She smiled falsely." | Error in first edition. Should be "She smiled falsely." | ||
'''Reuben'''<br /> | '''Reuben'''<br /> | ||
A hick, as in the carnie's cry, "Hey, Rube". | A hick, as in the carnie's cry, "Hey, Rube". | ||
+ | <br> | ||
+ | :Maybe, but given that Kit's ''age'' is at issue, may refer to the fact that Reuben was the eldest of the twelve sons of Jacob/Israel (Genesis 29.32). | ||
'''sailing along on Moonlight Bay'''<br /> | '''sailing along on Moonlight Bay'''<br /> | ||
Line 775: | Line 905: | ||
'''Schultz-Thorneycroft'''<br> | '''Schultz-Thorneycroft'''<br> | ||
− | + | Apparently a maker of steamships' boilers. | |
'''Parsons turbines'''<br> | '''Parsons turbines'''<br> | ||
Line 795: | Line 925: | ||
'''twelve-inch barrels'''<br> | '''twelve-inch barrels'''<br> | ||
− | + | The typical main armament for dreadnoughts in this period (1904) was 12 inch guns - the guns having barrels. By WWI, newer dreadnoughts had 14-16" armament. | |
'''shelter deck'''<br> | '''shelter deck'''<br> | ||
Line 810: | Line 940: | ||
'''"Dazzle" camouflage'''<br /> | '''"Dazzle" camouflage'''<br /> | ||
− | Patterns as described in the text, meant to confuse enemy eyes. [http:// | + | Patterns as described in the text, meant to confuse enemy eyes. [http://www.bobolinkbooks.com/Camoupedia/DazzleCamouflage.html] Camouflage techniques used in World War I were developed in part by magician Jasper Maskelyne, a descendant of the Astronomer Royal in ''Mason & Dixon.'' |
'''dihedrals'''<br> | '''dihedrals'''<br> | ||
Line 824: | Line 954: | ||
'''Trieste'''<br> | '''Trieste'''<br> | ||
− | Trieste is a city and port in northeastern Italy right on the border with Slovenia. It is located at the head of the Gulf of Trieste on the Adriatic Sea, about 70 miles east of Venice across the Gulf of Venice. The city had been occupied, administrated, annexed by various countries in the past. As late as early 19th century Napoleon took it for France, and in 1813 Austrian empire annexed it and kept it until the end of World War I. In 1920 it was transfered to Italy. During World War II German occupied the city until 1945 when Yugoslav partisans under Tito briefly occupied the city. Between 1947 to 1954 Trieste was governed by British and American. Finally, in 1954 the city of Trieste went to Italy and the southern suburb went to | + | Trieste is a city and port in northeastern Italy right on the border with Slovenia. It is located at the head of the Gulf of Trieste on the Adriatic Sea, about 70 miles east of Venice across the Gulf of Venice. The city had been occupied, administrated, annexed by various countries in the past. As late as early 19th century Napoleon took it for France, and in 1813 Austrian empire annexed it and kept it until the end of World War I. In 1920 it was transfered to Italy. During World War II German occupied the city until 1945 when Yugoslav partisans under Tito briefly occupied the city. Between 1947 to 1954 Trieste was governed by British and American. Finally, in 1954 the city of Trieste went to Italy and the southern suburb went to Yugoslavia (now Slovenia). |
'''Lloyd Arsenale'''<br> | '''Lloyd Arsenale'''<br> | ||
Line 837: | Line 967: | ||
'''''merged'''''<br> | '''''merged'''''<br> | ||
Pynchon writes about bilocation in a peculiar sense: not necessarily one person being in two places, but one ''place'' being two (or one language being two, Dutch/Flemish, Serbian/Croatian). | Pynchon writes about bilocation in a peculiar sense: not necessarily one person being in two places, but one ''place'' being two (or one language being two, Dutch/Flemish, Serbian/Croatian). | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Different witnesses.....no longer in either, simply appearing unforseen...'''<br> | ||
+ | Sounds a lot like the quantum mechanical measurement process. An electron can't be located until a measurement. May be easiest unerstood via the "Schroedinger's cat" picture. | ||
+ | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schr%C3%B6dinger%27s_cat] | ||
'''Promontorio'''<br> | '''Promontorio'''<br> | ||
Line 842: | Line 976: | ||
'''O.I.C. Bodine'''<br> | '''O.I.C. Bodine'''<br> | ||
− | + | Gotta be Pig Bodine from ''V.'' and ''GR'' and descendant of Fender-Belly Bodine in [http://masondixon.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/ ''Mason & Dixon'']. | |
+ | :Naw, three different Bodines. (1) Fender-Belly is the patriarch (flourished in the 1760s); (2) the stoker O.I.C. is in his prime in the decade around 1910; (3) Pig serves in WW2 and is still around to go roistering with Benny in the 1960s. The strangest thing about the Bodines—a family with saltwater in their DNA—is that they dropped anchor in Minnesota . . . or ever even visited such an inland spot as [http://www.city.albertlea.org/home.html Albert Lea.] | ||
− | O.I.C: | + | "O.I.C." is an initialism for Ohio Improved Chester, which is a breed of hog. Jack London actually [http://www.jacklondons.net/palace.html raised them on his ranch]. As has been pointed out, "O.I.C." standing for "Officer in Charge" in the Bodine context is a non-starter, as Bodine is neither an officer nor in charge of anything. He's a stoker, one of the lowest class of laborers aboard. Also, "oic" does have a piggish ring to it ("oink" without the "n"). And of course it also works as Internet slang: "Oh, I see," although this sounds a bit too cutesy for Pynchon, IMHO, and besides, as pointed out above, O.I.C. Bodine ain't the Bodine seen in other Pynchon novels, but most likely the father or uncle of Pig of ''V.'' and ''Gravity's Rainbow''. |
− | + | In ''V.'', Pig's first appearance in a Pynchon novel (he also appears in "Lowlands," a Pynchon short story — Flange's "big gaping [[Idiots and Idiocy in Against the Day|idiot]] buddy"), he brags of his Harley motorcycle (called Hogs, in the vernacular): "Ain't an SP car made that can take my Harley." (p.15) Perhaps this Bodine was given the nickname "O.I.C." by his Navy buddies as a joke, ''because'' the initialism stands for a breed of hog ''and'' "Officer in Charge" (which he's far from) ''and'' sounds like a pig's utterance (We know his putative son's or nephew's laugh sounds like a pig ("Hyeugh, hyeugh ... it was, as Pig intended, horribly obscene" ''V.'', p.14 — so maybe it's inherited). And perhaps Pynchon gave him the last name of Bodine to connect him visually and/or temperamentally with the character Jethro Bodine of [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Beverly_Hillbillies ''The Beverly Hillbillies''] (1962-1971), also a big, not-too-smart goofball. | |
'''fermented potato mash'''<br> | '''fermented potato mash'''<br> | ||
− | Cf Veikko's vodka | + | Cf Veikko's vodka, [[ATD 81-96#Page 82|page 82]]. |
'''four shafts'''<br> | '''four shafts'''<br> | ||
Line 871: | Line 1,006: | ||
'''''"Dampf mehr!"'''''<br> | '''''"Dampf mehr!"'''''<br> | ||
German for "more steam!" (Should be: ''Mehr Dampf!'') | German for "more steam!" (Should be: ''Mehr Dampf!'') | ||
+ | :If this is an error, as it appears to be (and as it's marked by [http://www.glanzundelend.de/glanzneu/pynchonpalm.htm German native speakers]), it may stem from a common phrase such as ''Wir haben keinen Dampf mehr,'' we have no more steam. Is there any remote possibility that ''Dampf mehr!'' was a form used in shipboard orders (spoken or telegraphed) at the time of the action? | ||
+ | :Following up this nagging question, I have found some photos of engine room telegraphs with German on the dials: [http://de.wikipedia.org/wiki/Schiffstelegraf here] and [http://www.digitalstock.de/detail.php?bildnummer=178966&seite=5&abilder=20&uid=&kategorie= here]. Neither refers to ''Dampf'' at all (instead ''volle Kraft'' = full power, ''volle Fahrt'' = full speed). These finds seem to eliminate the possibility that ''Dampf mehr'' is a phrase Pynchon collected in this context. | ||
'''singlet'''<br> | '''singlet'''<br> | ||
Undershirt. | Undershirt. | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''syntonic wireless'''<br> | ||
+ | |||
+ | See [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=ATD_397-428#Page_397 p.397] and [http://against-the-day.pynchonwiki.com/wiki/index.php?title=ATD_219-242#Page_229 p. 229]. The comparison of wireless communications with messages from the spirit world echoes Kipling's short story [http://www.benlo.com/ham/wireless.html Wireless], Scribner's Magazine, August 1902. There are many Kipling echoes in AtD. | ||
==Page 518== | ==Page 518== | ||
Line 912: | Line 1,053: | ||
'''Chinese'''<br> | '''Chinese'''<br> | ||
??? | ??? | ||
+ | |||
+ | Maybe the allusion refers to Chinese boxes, one box containing another box, containing another, etc? In the last box, at the "deeper level" dualities are resolved... don't know... | ||
'''''nicht wahr'''''<br> | '''''nicht wahr'''''<br> | ||
Line 917: | Line 1,060: | ||
'''Graz'''<br> | '''Graz'''<br> | ||
− | + | [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Graz Graz] is the capital of the Austrian province of Styria. It is the second largest city, after Vienna, in Austria. Graz's old town is one of the best-preserved city centers in Central Europe and is on the UNESCO list of World Cultural Heritage Sites. | |
'''bilge-crab'''<br> | '''bilge-crab'''<br> | ||
− | + | Most likely an insult meaning "below-decks crew". | |
==Page 520== | ==Page 520== | ||
Line 943: | Line 1,086: | ||
Typo in First Edition. | Typo in First Edition. | ||
??? | ??? | ||
+ | |||
+ | No. Here "plantation" means "The settling of people, usually in a conquered or dominated country; esp. the planting or establishing of a colony; colonization."(OED) | ||
'''Sus... Susi'''<br> | '''Sus... Susi'''<br> | ||
Line 1,021: | Line 1,166: | ||
'''Two Fishes, two Jonahs, two Agadirs?'''<br> | '''Two Fishes, two Jonahs, two Agadirs?'''<br> | ||
− | The Jewish Encyclopedia 1901-1906 mentions rabbinic literature regarding two fishes - one male, one female - having swallowed Jonah: check out the "fish" paragraph [http://72.14.221.104/search?q=cache:8_12F1Yp1YoJ:www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp%3Fartid%3D388%26letter%3DJ+jonah+encyclopedia&hl=de&gl=at&ct=clnk&cd=1 here]. Both Tarshish (Cadiz), the "Agadir" in southwestern Spain, and Agadir in Morocco likely were founded by the Phoenicians: "Cadiz bears a Phoenician name, a deformation of Gaddir (wall), which we find in the Berber city of Agadir in Morroco." [http://faculty.uml.edu/jgarreau/50.315/Europ1.htm source] | + | The Jewish Encyclopedia 1901-1906 mentions rabbinic literature regarding two fishes - one male, one female - having swallowed Jonah: check out the "fish" paragraph [http://72.14.221.104/search?q=cache:8_12F1Yp1YoJ:www.jewishencyclopedia.com/view.jsp%3Fartid%3D388%26letter%3DJ+jonah+encyclopedia&hl=de&gl=at&ct=clnk&cd=1 here]. Both Tarshish (Cadiz), the "Agadir" in southwestern Spain, and Agadir in Morocco likely were founded by the Phoenicians: "Cadiz bears a Phoenician name, a deformation of Gaddir (wall), which we find in the Berber city of Agadir in Morroco." [http://faculty.uml.edu/jgarreau/50.315/Europ1.htm source] |
+ | |||
+ | Pynchon is riffing on Ch. 9 of Moby Dick where Father Mapple reads the biblical story of Jonah and talks about Tarshish being Cadiz and how that shows that he was trying to escape his fate for some unnammed "disobedience". Melville bilocates "god" and "man", insisting that the two forces are at odds. Melville also implicitly draws a parallel between Jonah and Ahab who rails against his being peglegged by Moby Dick and seeks revenge against the whale who ultimately consumes him, and Ishmael who humbly accepts his punishment and so survives to tell his tale. In AtD, the Moby Dick resonances ring most clearly in the Traverse bros/sis seeking revenge against sociocultural pieties for inflicting loss & grief & pain on the undeserving; the correspondence b/w the anarchist preacher Moss Gatlin and the ex-harpooner minister Mapple; Lew's mysterious penance and Webb's divided loyalties and now the story of Jonah and his fugitive flight, not unlike Kit's running from his troubles. Also, the name Fom al-Haut comes from scientific Arabic فم الحوت fam al-ħūt (al-janūbī) "the mouth of the (southern) fish/whale" | ||
+ | |||
'''kashbah'''<br> | '''kashbah'''<br> | ||
Line 1,058: | Line 1,206: | ||
'''lateen-riggers'''<br> | '''lateen-riggers'''<br> | ||
Boats or larger craft with triangular sails rigged fore-and-aft (picture: [http://www.carfilhiot.co.uk/media/1/20050607-rig.jpg]common in the Mediterannean [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateen] after introduction by the Romans in the 3rd century. | Boats or larger craft with triangular sails rigged fore-and-aft (picture: [http://www.carfilhiot.co.uk/media/1/20050607-rig.jpg]common in the Mediterannean [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Lateen] after introduction by the Romans in the 3rd century. | ||
+ | |||
+ | '''Dally had expected Bria would be the first...'''<br> | ||
+ | Editorial error? If one substitutes "Dally" with "Erlys" this sentence makes much more sense. | ||
+ | |||
+ | I hesitate to assign such sloppiness to the notoriously meticulous Pynchon and his editorial team. Note that the previous sentence conflates Dally and Erlys's uncertainty about the romantic setback. And note earlier (p 512) Dally was scandalized (facetiously) over Bria's shameless and un-chaperon-like interest in Root. | ||
==Page 524== | ==Page 524== | ||
Line 1,071: | Line 1,224: | ||
'''Antonio Smareglia'''<br> | '''Antonio Smareglia'''<br> | ||
− | Italian opera composer (1854-1929). | + | Italian opera composer (1854-1929). His most famous work Nozze istriane premiered in Triste in 1895, and he was from the same contested territory as Triste. |
==Annotation Index== | ==Annotation Index== | ||
{{ATD PbP}} | {{ATD PbP}} |
Latest revision as of 18:21, 8 June 2021
- Please keep these annotations SPOILER-FREE by not revealing information from later pages in the novel.
Contents
- 1 Page 489
- 2 Page 490
- 3 Page 491
- 4 Page 492
- 5 Page 493
- 6 Page 494
- 7 Page 495
- 8 Page 496
- 9 Page 497
- 10 Page 498
- 11 Page 499
- 12 Page 500
- 13 Page 501
- 14 Page 502
- 15 Page 503
- 16 Page 504
- 17 Page 505
- 18 Page 506
- 19 Page 507
- 20 Page 508
- 21 Page 509
- 22 Page 510
- 23 Page 511
- 24 Page 512
- 25 Page 513
- 26 Page 515
- 27 Page 516
- 28 Page 517
- 29 Page 518
- 30 Page 519
- 31 Page 520
- 32 Page 521
- 33 Page 522
- 34 Page 523
- 35 Page 524
- 36 Annotation Index
Page 489
Neville . . . Nigel
Lew's rescuers after the attempt to blow him up in Colorado, page 185. These two characters remind one of Looney Tunes Goofy Gophers.
stage left or audience left?
A theater has two directions called left. "Stage left" is to the left of the performers as they face the audience. "House left" or "audience left" is to the left of an audience member facing the stage.
desolate sighs
(They're not gay?)
embryo Apostlet
The Cambridge Apostles, also known as the Cambridge Conversazione Society, is an elite intellectual secret society at Cambridge University, founded in 1820 by George Tomlinson, a Cambridge student who went on to become the Bishop of Gibraltar. Undergraduates being considered for membership are called "embryos" and are invited to "embryo parties," where members judge whether the student should be invited to join. "-let" is a common suffix that denotes smallness or youth, like droplet (small drop) or piglet or eyelet &c &c..., thus, a young Apostle. More on the Cambridge Apostles and the Cambridge spy ring...
Cyprian Latewood
The name connects the character to the Greek demigod Orpheus.
"Cyprian":
- After Orpheus loses Eurydice forever by turning to see if she's still following him out of the underworld, he never loves another woman, turning instead to young boys. One of Greek god Apollo's beloved boys, Cyparissus, loves a beautiful tame stag that he accidentally kills with a spear. In his grief, Apollo turns him into a cypress tree. The Cypress was one of the trees Orpheus charmed with song, according to Ovid in his Metamorphoses.
"Latewood":
- The "late wood" is the outer portion of the growth ring on a tree, more dense than the "early wood" which appears early in the growing season, appearing later in the season, usually summer. Wikipedia entry. The tree connection is strong. It was said that Orpheus could even charm the trees, and Rilke (who figures prominently in Gravity's Rainbow) in the first of his Sonnets to Orpheus, begins:
- Tree arising! O pure ascendance!
- Orpheus Sings! Towering tree within the ear!
- Everywhere stillness, yet in this abeyance:
- seeds of change and new beginnings near.
All very interesting, but let's not forget the obvious:
'the Cyprian' in classical literature is a standard name for Aphrodite/Venus, goddess of love, because she was born in Cyprus, from the waves, as in the famous picture by Botticelli that plays a role in 'V' ('She hangs on the Western Wall').
And so, by association, 'a follower of Aphrodite', and in later usage, according to Webster, a prostitute.
- if we were looking for yet another sexual innuendo, it would be interesting to note that the French word "cyprine" (the pronounciation of which is very similar to "Cyprian") describes the vaginal secretions that occur during the period of sexual arousal. The origin of this word can be traced back to the explanation above (i.e. Aphrodite). As for Latewood, well, that's kind of self-explanatory, no?
sod
Common use; short for sodomite.
Eastern wog
Cf p222.
The German Sea
A public house; the name occurs again with a different meaning at the end of this chapter.
sub-Clerkenwell
Clerkenwell is a neighborhood in London that has a reputation for producing the highest quality of watches, clocks and jewellery. A sub-Clerkenwell trinket would be a poorly made trinket
annoyance
(Why?)
- the other's penis seemed larger than one's own?
- Annoyance not because of the penises but because they are rivals. Lethargic not because of the penises but because they aren't getting anywhere in their courtship. Finally, "each regarding the other's penis" because even straight men can't deny that that's one of the things they look at in the steamroom.
Note that annoyance is a synonym for inconvenience.
Page 490
gyps
A gyp is a college servant, whose office is that of a gentleman's valet, waiting on two or more collegians in the University of Cambridge. He differs from a bed-maker, inasmuch as he does not make beds; but he runs on errands, waits at table, wakes men for morning chapel, brushes their clothes, and so on. His perquisites are innumerable, and he is called a "gyp" (Greek: vulture) because he preys upon his employer like a vulture. At Oxford they are called scouts. [1]
A conservation area in Cambridge. The pool is named after the romantic poet Lord Byron, who is believed to have enjoyed swimming there. Byron studied at Trinity College, Cambridge, starting in 1805.
"Div!"
Probably short for "divine!" Of course, if these kids were Vectorists they would be aware of the double entendre with the div (divergence) operator.
"Whizzo!"
An early-twentieth century English slang expression of delight. Uttered earlier, by Neville or Nigel, on introducing Lew to the Tarot deck, page 186.
"That is that of which I speak!"
prob. homosexuality. cf. "I am the Love that dare not speak its name." -- Lord Alfred Douglas's poem 'Two Loves' in Chameleon ca. 1896.
Made more famous as an utterance by Oscar Wilde during his trial for sodomy. His response: '"The Love that dare not speak its name" in this century is such a great affection of an elder for a younger man as there was between David and Jonathan, such as Plato made the very basis of his philosophy, and such as you find in the sonnets of Michelangelo and Shakespeare.[...]. It is intellectual, and it repeatedly exists between an elder and a younger man, when the elder man has intellect, and the younger man has all the joy, hope and glamour of life before him."
- This seems wrong, given the typical Pynchon scene of males ogling/desiring women. There is no homosexuality invloved with these guys
but a "'range' [again] of remarks" and 'all-night rhapsodizing' over the beauty of naked women. This line "That, etc." seems more likely a comic spin on a famous line which we know Pynchon has alluded to before [V.]: Wittgenstein's "whereof I can not speak, thereof I must remain silent" from the Tractatus. He could NOT not speak of their nakedness.
This whole scene is reminiscent, perhaps, of the biblically famous Susannah and the Elders, where she, too, is watched appreciatively bathing. Wallace Stevens, among others, has a famous poem about it.
- All this about homosexuality is useful knowledge, but (a) the men here are motivated by lust directed at women and (b) this is among the "catchphrases of [a] day" when Oscar Wilde's love could not yet even speak its name. "That is that of which I speak!" is a Pynchon trick, taking a 20th-21st century expression and paramorphically projecting it back in time. At the university it was upper-class and refined; today it has become a vulgarism, "That's what I'm talkin' about!" Other examples: "high susceptibility to primordial variables," page 801 (today "extreme sensitivity to initial conditions"); "as cheerful as a finch," page 21 ("as happy as a lark").
Exactly as in the last paragraph, a poke at the currently colloquial: "That's what I'm talkin' about!"
- Late to the conversation, I know, but homosexuality is important here -- I believe that TRP was being historically accurate. Our early 21st century notion of homosexuality is different from the early 20th century notion, where people like, for example, Oscar Wilde were both married to women and certainly engaged in homosexual activity with men. The sexuality is more fluid. Therefore I find it completely believable that N&N could sometimes be engaging in homosexual behaviour with each other but also interested in a woman.
Cloisters Court
Cloisters Court, part of Girton College, Cambridge University.
King's
King's College, Cambridge University.
Queen Anne's Gate
Some part of the British Home Office is, or was, located in the London (Westminster) street named Queen Anne's Gate.
- According to Wikipedia the British Home Office resided there from 1978 to 2004, so this is unlikely. Since the 1860's until recently, however, parts of the British secret service had their offices at Queen Anne's Gate - the context suggests that the N's report to that.
inconvenience
Not sure what connection Pynchon is making here, but the word inconvenience could not come up accidentally in this novel.
True enough. The word seems to keep cropping up, too, but nonchalantly. By this point in the novel, I had already been kicking myself for not circling every prior use of the word.
For what it's worth, one of my Google searches for "inconvenience" yielded this bit of Pynchon-worthy information:
- John Evelyn, one of members of the Invisible College (the group that founded the Royal Society of the United Kingdom), published one of the first books on pre-industrial air pollution in 1661, Fumufugium: or, The Inconvience of the Aer, and Smoak of London Dissipated.
- The first two paragraphs of Part I:
- It is not without some considerable Analogy, that sundry of the Philosophers have named the Aer the Vehicle of the Soul, as well as that of the Earth, and this frail Vessell of ours which contains it; since we all of us finde the benefit which we derive from it, not onely for the necessity of Respiration and functions of the Organs; but likewise for the use of the Spirits and Primigene Humors, which doe most neerly approach that Divine particle. But we shall not need to insist, or refine much on this sublime Subject; and, perhaps, it might scandalize scrupulous Persons to pursue to the height it may possibly reach (as Diogenes and Anaximenes were wont to Deifie it) after we are past the Aetherial, which is a certain Aer of Plato's denomination, as well as that of the lesse pure, more turbulent and dense, which, for the most part, we live and breath in, and which comes here to be examined as it relates to the design in hand, the City of London, and the environs about it.
- It would doubtlesse be esteemed for a strange and extravagant Paradox, that one should affirme, that the Aer itself is many times a potent and great disposer to Rebellion [note JE's book was printed right after Prince Charles' restoration]; and that Insulary people, and indeed, most of the Septentrion Tracts, where this Medium is grosse and heavy, are extremely versatile and obnoxious to change both in Religious and Secular Affaires: Plant the Foote of your Compasses on the very Pole, and extend the other limb to 50 degrees of Latitude: bring it about 'till it describe the Circle, and then reade the Histories of those Nations inclusively, and make the Calculation.
Newnham
An all-women's college at Cambridge, founded in 1871.
Wrangleresses
Made-up: top female Math Scholars at Cambridge. Top students were called Wranglers, all male at this time. "Cambridge University and within it of the Mathematics Tripos, the competitive graduation examination process that ranked candidates in order of “Wrangler”" ...
Phillippa Fawcett
Typo, should be Philippa Fawcett (1868-1948). She was educated at Newnham College, Cambridge. In 1890, she was the first woman to score the highest mark at Mathematics Tripos at Cambridge. She served as a College Lecturer in mathematics at Newnham College for 10 years. [2]
Grace Chisholm and Will Young
Grace Chisholm (1868-1944), an English mathematician. She went to Girton College, Cambridge in 1889 to study mathematics. Since no women were accepted to graduate schools in England, after graduation She went to the University of Göttingen to continue her mathematics education and received her PhD there in 1895. The following year she married William Young (1863-1942), one of her tutors at Girton and also a mathematician. (romances with one's tutors à la . . .) Grace Chisholm and Will Young formed a mathematical married partnetship of real significance. Husband and wife played a major role in set theory research. Between them they wrote 214 mathematical articles and several books, including one on geometry and one on set theory. Grace Chisholm and William Young.
nautch-girl
The nautch girl was an Indian traditional dancer in Hindu temple or court performing ritual and religious dances. Her costume generally was of bright color. Pynchon probably refered to Yahsmeen's beautiful but exotic, extraordinary look and poise.
[nautch girl].
And then, through the medium of carnivals, she became an exotic dancer. This whole phrase "nautch-girl extravagance of looks and self-possession" refers to the sense of dominance the stripper feels over the yawps in the audience. Which figures in the key scene of the musical Gypsy (1959, book by Arthur Laurents, music by Jule Styne, lyrics by Stephen Sondheim). And an annotation to p. 125 ("red as a cursed ruby") points to a weird AtD nautch girl connection.
socio-acrobatic aggrandizement
'social climbing'
opium beer
laudanum?, if not literally.
duc de Richelieu
Armand Jean du Plessis de Richelieu, Cardinal-Duc de Richelieu (September 9, 1585 – December 4, 1642), was a French clergyman, noble, and statesman.
Consecrated as a bishop in 1607, he later entered politics, becoming a Secretary of State in 1616. Richelieu soon rose in both the Church and the state, becoming a cardinal in 1622, and King Louis XIII's chief minister in 1624. He remained in office until his death in 1642; from Wikipedia.
- Wrong Richelieu. The duke in question won his big battle at Mahon in 1756. Here's the Wikipedia link for the right one.
Line and staff
Cyprian's father sees his work in the City as analogous to the profession of arms. Officers in the British and most other armies of the time were classified as "line," those commanding troops, and "staff," those performing administrative and planning functions.
Page 491
the City
Major banks and other big-money institutions are located in the City of London, a fairly small subset of Metropolitan London.
can't ever tell
Dog-eat-dog capitalism?
Reginald "Ratty" McHugh, fifteen years or so later
Reginald nodded appreciatively FIFTEEN YEARS OR SO LATER?...What is going
on here time-wise?
All the conversation before this line, between Cyprian and his father, is "recalled", having taken place some "fifteen years or so" earlier.
one more flag
IE, his father's wallpaper brand.
I was thinking perhaps his father was trying to bring up the subject of his sodomitical activities, where the "enemy" in this case are "hidden" homosexuals, and this is how he was "dishonoring" the flag.
Balkan Sobranies
An upscale brand of cigarette.
lilies-and-lassitude humor of the '90s
Cult of Oscar Wilde?
Aubrey Beardsley and the pre-Raphaelites?
More generally, the 'Aesthetes', not the same as the Pre-Raphaelites. People like Wilde. In Gilbert and Sullivan's 'Patience' the Wilde-like character is described as follows:
Though the Philistines may jostle,
you will rank as an apostle
in the high aesthetic band,
If you walk down Piccadilly
with a poppy or a lily
in your medieval hand.
And ev'ryone will say,
As you walk your flow'ry way,
"If he's content with a vegetable love
which would certainly not suit me,
Why, what a most particularly pure young man
this pure young man must be!"
table d'hôte
French: host's table. In a restaurant, a meal chosen by the management, no substitutions please. If the appetizer is shrimp and you don't like shrimp, then don't eat the appetizer.
Very well, I contradict myself.
Walt Whitman allusion. See Leaves of Grass. Next line in ADT affirms this.
Page 492
divine . . . prosaic
(Walt Whitman was of course prosaic himself before he became divine.)
xanthocroid
Prefix xantho- is from Greek and means yellow. Does the whole word mean "yellow-haired"? Yes, i.e. blondes.
Capsheaf
Is this a third speaker, or another name for Ratty? Third speaker. Ratty puts in some words a little bit down the page.
In mathematics, a sheaf is the basic tool for expressing relationships between small regions of a space and large regions. Beginning with a topological space X, a sheaf assigns to every region (technically, open set) U of X some data F(U), such as a set, a group, or a ring. Often these data are a collection of geometric objects defined on that region, such as functions, vector fields, or differential forms. The data can be restricted to smaller regions, and compatible collections of data can be glued to give data over larger regions. wikipedia entry
viva
Slangy short form of viva voce, an oral examination. At Oxbridge, this would have been one standard method of examination for most degrees, and they are often intimidating, demanding experiences.
Crayke
Crayke is a village and civil parish in the Hambleton district of North Yorkshire, England, about two miles east of Easingwold. Relevant?
Also, "crake" designates various species in the family Rallidae, which also includes rails, coots, gallinules, and swamphens. Crakes and rails generally are medium-sized, ground-dwelling birds, with adaptations of the foot suited to wetlands.
spot of audit
Audit ale, a strong ale served on a few special days. Some colleges at British universities brew their own or contract it out.
Shetland
Shetland Islands, an island group northeast of the Orkney Islands, comprising a county of Scotland.
Shetland ponies
one of a breed of small but sturdy, rough-coated ponies raised originally in the Shetland Islands.
D'accord
French: right, OK.
reputation for viciousness
The Shetland pony breed has a repuation for viciousness, even if this reputation isn't entirely accurate.
Arab
Arabian hourse. One of a breed of horses, raised originally in Arabia and adjacent countries, noted for their intellegence, grace, and speed.
Thoroughbred
One of a breed of horses, to which all race horse belong, originally developed in England by crossing Arbian stallions with European mares.
croft
Farm.
Mainland
The name of one of the 29 inhabited islands in the Shetland Islands, Scotland, UK. It is the largest island in Shetland Islands, the third largest in Great Britian.
Mavis Grind
A narrow isthmus joining the Northmavine peninsula to the rest of Mainland in the Shetland Islands, UK. The name means "gate of the narrow isthmus" in the local dialect. Mavis Grind is said to be the only place in the UK where you can toss a stone across land from the North Sea to the Atlantic Ocean.
orthopædic journals
Both prof and pony have to do some twisting in order to get the act done. Their skeletal disorders will, erhhm, spur the interest of orthopædists. Especially if she kicks.
Dymphna
After St. Dymphna, whose intercession is effective against insanity, possession and epilepsy. Her shrine at Gheel, Belgium, has since the 11th century been a refuge for persons with mental illness and intellectual disability. The afflicted wealthy went to the shrine to be cured; they were boarded with townspeople, beginning a tradition of adult foster care for persons with mental illness which continues to this day; Gheel is a designated state psychiatric hospital center, at which all the patients live in foster family homes.
decks full of hearts
(52 or 13 per deck?)
Page 493
Thucydides... remind me
Thucydides' book is an account of the Peloponnesian war, organized in a rather difficult method in which all the actions of one season are described before proceeding to the next. Here are some erotic possibilities in it, however:
-Pericles, in his famous funeral oration, says the citizen ought to have an eros for the city.
-At one point some Athenians are lured out of a garrison by way of a gymnastic (that is male, nude) demonstration.
-On the eve of the fateful Sicilian expedition, all the oversized phalloi of the hermes are mysteriously knocked off. One of the generals on the expedition, Alcibiades, is accused of the offense and is eventually called called back. In Plato's Symposium Alcibiades drunkenly crashes the party and confesses that Socrates has consistently spurned his sexual advances.
In this context, Thucydides is proposed specifically for its non-erotic qualities. In writing his histories, Thucydides attempted to produce a clinical account of the Peloponnesian war without the passion and inaccuracies of previous histories, such as those of Herodotus. Indeed it is hard to imagine a less erotic work. It is suggested for Cyprian Latewood to help him get over his infatuation with Yashmeen.
McHugh
Talking to self?
Peeng-kyeah
Pinky, name given to Yashmeen by the blonde girls, Lorelei, Noellyn an Faun.
alfresceehwh
An alfresco, an outdoor gathering. -eehwh is a rendering of the accent for comic effect.
Lorelei, Noellyn, and Faun
Lorelei, more frequently "Loreley": In a famous German myth, a mermaid sitting on a rock by the river Rhine. The rock itself is also named Loreley. With her song, she bewitches the captains of passing ships, who then steer into the rock. The syllable "Ley" derives from a Celtic word for "stone".
Faun: Faunus, the Roman god of fertility, also responsible for nightmares. Fauns are also the Romans counterparts of the Greek "satyrs", followers of Dionysos. Faunus is playing a flute, another connection to music.
Noellyn ??
She is No Ellen?
Echo of Noel?
"all blonde, of course"
with all the Germanic mythology around here, possibly a reference to the "blonde/blue-eyed"-cliche of German women. Possible play on light-theme? Blonde (light, reflection) opposed to the dark (absence of light, absorption) Yashmeen?
High Albedo
Albedo: power of reflecting light. Blondes reflect more light than brunettes.
Possibly a citation of Gravity's Rainbow, p. 152 (Viking), "high-albedo stockings".
"dark rock...again and again"
cf "Lorelei"
Pinky
Nicknames opposite of truth?
'sans merci'
a reference to Keats's 19th century Romantic ballad 'La Belle Dame Sans Merci'. The lady of the title entraps men by making them fall in love with her and abandoning them.
French for "no mercy" or "no pity", or, more precisely in this case: "without mercy". Alludes to Pinky's cold and unforgiving nature.
Page 494
wrong altar
She, a lesbian, tells him that he 'worships' a woman who is wrong for him.
gnomic tenses
Gnomic = marked by aphorisms; aphoristic...'gnomic verse, a gnomic style".
American Heritage Dictionary.
- In Greek the gnomic tense is the timeless aorist, i.e. an aorist indicating no special time. In English there is the timeless present tense, e.g. in proverbs. Since the gnomic aorist differs from the usual aorist only in its usage the term "gnomic tenses" seems a little stressed.
circs
Short form (typically British): circumstances.
'If she's not content with a vegetable love'
a reference to Marvell's seventeenth century poem 'To His Coy Mistress'. "Vegetable love" refers to the slow, slow way he would let his love grow, to become "vaster than empires and more slow" had they "world enough and time", but since they don't, since they are in human time, he is trying to 'convince' her to make love with him now. Another interpretation would be female masturbation via vegetables.
True, but more directly, quoting Gilbert and Sullivan. See comments on p. 491 (lilies-and-lassitude).
Rugby blue
To be a 'Rugby blue' means to have represented Oxford (colour: dark blue) or Cambridge (light blue) at Rugby, which is a major European sport, invented, supposedly, at Rugby school in England in the nineteenth century.
Mâconnais
This refers to a bargain sub-Burgundian wine that comes from the Macon region of France.
- Bargain? You've obviously never enjoyed a good bottle of Mâcon Villages Cuvée Botrytis Domaine de la Bongran 2000, which, if you decide to treat yourself to a great bottle of white, will set you back at least 180$. It is true, though, that some wine snobs look down on Mâcon Wines because the region doesn't have any Grand Crus or Premier Crus.
George and Weedon Grossmith, authors of the sublime, hillarious 'Diary of a Nobody', which gave the world the adjective 'pooterish'. Undoubtedly an influence on Pynchon's depictions of the 'oh dear' side of Englishness. Pooter is a 'nobody' who decides to publish his diaries, even though he is of no interest and nothing of any note occurs. A prototypical blogger, some might suggest. Originally published in Punch magazine (I think), set in late 19th Century. Don't know if the Grossmiths went to Cambridge, will check....
The elder George Grossmith performed in Gilbert and Sullivan works. He was not university-educated. The younger G.G. was also a noted performer and collaborated with P.G. Wodehouse.
[plenty of info here: http://ehlt.flinders.edu.au/english/DON/Diary_Home.htm]
Page 495
Junior or Senior?
expressions used at traditional English (independent) schools to refer to younger and older brothers. Thus Smith Junior or Smith Senior.—
I don't think this is correct - the junior/senior here just refers to the question of whether it's Grossmith the father or Grossmith the son. The traditional expression for younger and older brothers is minor/major. So Smith major would be the elder Smith brother, Smith minor the younger brother.Geb 19:49, 10 April 2008 (PDT)geb
See Grossmith entry on preceding page.
"Small hands, some evidence of early trauma, cp. Wilhelm II file"
Wilhelm II suffered an injury at birth and had a withered arm. All his photographs show him with the "small hand" in his pocket.
From Wikipedia:
William II, German Emperor (1859-1941), Reigned 1888-1918.
The role of William II in German history is sometimes a controversial issue in historical scholarship. Initially seen as an important, but embarrassing figure in German history until the late 1950s, for many years after that, the dominant view was that he had little or no influence on German policy leading up to the First World War. This has been challenged since the late 1970s, particularly by Professor John C. G. Röhl who saw William II as the key figure in understanding the recklessness and subsequent downfall of Imperial Germany.
"Map of the World"
Like it says in the text, simply what Renfrew calls all his data.
Although the name is possibly of some significance! Renfrew's dossiers could act as a way of divining holistic truth from a series of perspectives or projections. Obviously interpreting this data requires the correct viewing individual, or "lens." In this way, Renfrew's "Map" is not unlike the Sfinciuno Itinerary.
Ah, I think it worth pointing out that Renfrew's dossiers on "everyone' is a paranoid's nightmare. The map is a "map" of what Refrew learns about everyone, not a common meaning of 'map", and reminding this reader of They/Them in Gravity's Rainbow who have a map of everywhere Slothrop-- and others?--appear to be/have been. At least. MKOHUT 06:55, 3 October 2007 (PDT)
Also brings to mind the Wittgenstein line that TRP alludes to in The Crying of Lot 49: "The world is all that is the case". If Renfrew could map everything everyone does, he would have the whole [human] world 'mapped'.
Newmarket
A famous English race-course, hence the following reference to the 'racing season'.
And very close to Cambridge.
Morse and Vassilev
In 1896-97 the first radio-telegraphic equipment was imported into Bulgaria for the needs of the armed forces and large postal offices. This was the start of Bulgarian National Radio (BNR). At that time, the equipment was used only to transmit Morse code on electro-magnetic waves. Samuel F. B. Morse, an English speaking American, invented Morse code and the telegraph.(On May 24, 1844 he transmitted the first telegraph message: "What hath God wrought!").
BNR at one time was headed by Orlin Vassilev, a Bulgarian playwright. BNR at one time also employed former (Bulgarian) environment minister Valentin Vassilev.
Charles Morse published a full textbook of Bulgarian grammar in 1860, and compiled the first Bulgarian-English dictionary.#REDIRECT [[3]]
East Rumelian
Cf page 356: East Rumelia. Rumelia was a Turkish province in the Balkan Peninsula. East Rumelia lay mostly in what is now Bulgaria.
the Treaty of Berlin
In the Russo-Turkish War of 1877-1878 Russia crushed Turkey and forced it to accept the Treaty of San Stefano. This created a greatly expanded Bulgaria under Russian protection. Britain feared that Russia might spread its control to Constantinople (now Istanbul) and to the Suez Canal, and therefore, with Austria, demanded a revised treaty. Weakened by war, Russia consented. The Treaty of San Stefano was replaced thus by the Treaty of Berlin (1878), the final act of the Congress of Berlin of the Great Britain, Austria-Hungary, France, Germany, Italy, Russia and the Ottoman Empire. The new treaty recognized the complete independence of Romania, Serbia and Montenegro. The autonomy of Bulgaria was also recognized but it remained under formal Ottoman overlordship and divied between the Principality of Bulgaria and the autonomous province of East Rumelia. And the Ottoman province of Bosnia was placed uner Austro-Hungarian administration.
zadruga
Bulgarian: labor cooperative.
tchifliks
Bulgarian: farms.
gradinarski druzhini
Bulgarian: gardening (or farming?) associations.
gossamer
Sheer, light, delicate, flimsy, airy, tenuous, like a cobweb.
Page 496
sod . . . pouffe
Derogatory terms for homosexual ("sod" from "sodomite").
failed canards
Discredited rumors.
Lent . . . Easter . . . Long Vacation
Lent is an anual season of fasting and penitence in preparation for Easter, beginning at Ash Wednesday and lasting 40 weekdays to Easter. After Lent, Easter the school terms would soon glide into the summer recess, the Long Vacation.
- At Cambridge University 'Lent Term' is the second term of the academic year (after Christmas), and 'Easter Term' is the third (between Easter and Summer - or 'Long' - vacations.) So 'Lent and Easter' qualifies 'The Terms' in the previous clause: the sense is 'Lent Term and Easter Term went gliding...' (The first term of the Cambridge year, incidentally, is called 'Michaelmas'.)
Colonial Office
Defunct British Ministry, later Foreign & Colonial Office, now Foreign & Commonwealth Office.
Okhrana
a secret police force of the Russian Empire and part of the Ministry of Internal Affairs Wikipedia Entry
Ballhausplatz
Location of the Austrian State Chancellery and Foreign Ministry Wikipedia Entry
Wilhelmstrasse
Administrative Center of the Kingdom of Prussia Wikipedia Entry
G.F.B. Riemann
Georg Friedrich Bernhard Riemann. A German mathematician who did extensive work in differential geometry. Wikipedia Entry
Bernhard Riemann (1826-66), a German mathematician. He studied mathematics at the University of Göttingen and later taught that subject there. He did important work in geometry, complex analysis, and mathematical physics. Riemanm's work on Riemann geometry laid the foundation for Einstein's general relativity. He investigated the Riemann zeta function about which he stated the famous (and still not completely proven) Riemann hypothesis (see below). He died of tuberculosis in Selasca, Italy, at the age of 39.
Zeta function . . . conjecture
The Riemann zeta function. Wikipedia Entry
The Riemann zeta function is an extremely important special function of mathematics and physics that arises in definite integration and is intimately related with very deep results surrounding the prime number theorem. While many of the properties of this function have been investigated, there remain important fundamental conjectures (most notably the Riemann hypothesis) that remain unproved to this day. See [Zeta function].
The Riemann hypothesis (conjecture) is a conjecture about the distribution of zeros of the Riemann zeta function. The Riemann zeta function is defined for all complex numbers (Cf page 132) not equal to zero. It has zeros at the negative even integers, (-2, -4, -6 and so on), called trivial zeros. The Riemann hypothesis is concerned with the non-trivial zeros, saying, "The real part of any non-trivial zero of the Riemann zeta function is 1/2." This conjecture remains unproved. [Riemann conjecture].
Riemann's zeta function is also used in the Zipf Probability Distribution [4], which itself led to the formulation of Zipf's Principle of Least Effort that TRP mined for semantic resonances in GR. [5]
'joint'
Opium den.
Bob's your uncle
An English and Commonwealth expression referring to the ease with which something can be done. Still used, though probably more common in the time in which Against the Day is set. Possible derivations.
Limehouse
An area of East London that borders on the River Thames near the Isle of Dogs. The name may derive from the lime kilns, or lime "oasts", that once flourished there. In the late 19th century the area was famous for opium dens Wikipedia.
Page 497
Knightsbridge
Knightsbridge is a street in Westminster borough, London. Notable for its super rich and famous high profile residents and its exclusive shops. (Recent residents included members of the Saudi royal family, Joan Collins, Gucci, Prince Diana and so on; it's shops included Egyptian Fayed's Harrods, etc . . . ) [Knightsbridge].
Hôtel Alsace
The propre name is Hôtel d'Alsace. It was, and still is, located at number 13 rue des Beaux-Arts, in the 6th arrondissement of Paris. Oscar Wilde died there, under an assumed named, on november 30th, in 1900, following a two-day agony. Note some similarity of letters between the names Griswold and Wilde (both "sodomite"…).
Also, Wilde's famous last words (well, recounted as last words but really uttered months before his death) was "either that wallpaper goes, or I do." Cyprian's uncle, Griswold, it seems, had the atrocious decorative taste that shoved Wilde into the great beyond. This is post-Wilde; the avant-garde pose has calcified into a tacky schtick, the "lilies-and-lassitude" 90s, like the foreclosed frontier, a dead duck in the sodomite water.
see "Gris"--four associative definitions that interestingly modify/play with, the name Wilde: gray; a pale rose' (as in vin gris)and Juan Gris, Spanish painter. gris
excess
(So not wholly gossamer?)
Coronation Red
The Peer‘s traditional robes at Coronation Day are made of crimson red velvet Wikipedia website. Edward VII and Queen Alexandra were crowned at Westminster Abbey on 9 August 1902 Wikipedia
Ranji and C.B. Fry
Two notable cricketers who would have been in their prime when the novel is set. Both played for England. 'Ranji' is short for Ranjitsinhji and is how he was familiarly known. C.B. Fry Ranji
Australian season
A reference to the Australian cricket season which runs throughout their summer and the European winter.
More likely to refer to the tour of the Australian cricket team to England in the Summer of 1902. Of particular interest is the fact that the Aussies played a match against Cambridge University on June 9-10. 1902 Ashes Tour
New Court
A major building in St John's College (founded 1511), University of Cambridge. It was completed in 1831. It's style is Gothic, a romantic version of a mediaeval building; its basic plan is classical. For pictures and more info New Court.
Tavernier-Gravet slide rules
French-made, some with special scales (slope conversions, etc.). Photograph.
High Church
Anglican
Mags and Nuncs and Matins responsories
A responsory is a form of (Christian) chant (call and response, perhaps), which is here qualified by Latin designations for specific prayers.
Mags: possibly for Magnificat, the hymn beginning "My soul doth magnify the Lord"?
Nunc = Now. For Nunc dimittis, the prayer beginning "Let thy servant now depart."
Matin = Morning.
Trinity
Trinity College, was founded by Henry VIII in 1546 as part of the Univeristy of Cambridge. Most of its major buildings date from the 16th and 17th centuries. "Princes, spies, poets and prime-ministers have all been taught here." (Trinity's own website Trinity)
King's
King's College, Cambridge University, was found by Henry VI in 1441. From the first, the College's buildings were intened to be a magnificent display of the power of royal patronage. King's College Chapel, wanted by the King to be without equal in size and beauty and took nearly a century to complete, is one of the greatest examples of gothic architecture. It is also home to the world famous Choir, envisaged by Henry VI for daily singing of services in the chapel. [King's].
not Zion
The context indicated that the original meaning Mount Zion, a hill near Jerusalem, was used; i.e. "not Mount Zion".
Compline hour
Bedtime. Compline is the last prayers or service of the day.
Te Deum
Te Deum = Thou, O God (Latin).
Since "the Te Deum" was used in the text, it meant the ancient Latin hymn of praise to God, in the form of a psalm, sung regularly at matins in the Roman Catholic Church and, usually in an English translation, at Morning Prayer in the Anglican Church, as well as on special occasions as a service of thanksgiving or commemoration. First words of the hymn, which begin; Te Deum laudāmus (we praise thee God). Te Deum also refers to the musical setting or form of this hymn with a certain structure which Filtham had blotched. Wikipedia
Coincidence? According to the Catholic Encyclopedia there is a discussion among scholars whether the hymn of the Te Deum goes back to a text written by St. Cyprian of Carthage : "...if the hymn was borrowed from St. Cyprian, why did it not include the "virgines" instead of stopping with "martyrum"?".
Khaki Election
A term in British political history. It refered to the British general election of 1900. The reason for this name was that the issues of the election were overshadowed totally by the issue of the (2nd) Boer War (South African War, 1899-1902 [Boer War]), as khaki was the color of the new army uniform. A Khaki Election is now applied to any British national election which is heavily influenced by wartime or postwar sentiment. 1918 general election (end of World War I) and 1945 election (end of Wordl War II) were both described as Khaki Elections.
Filtham
???
Page 498
violation of . . . child-labor statutes
If such laws applied to children in the choirs of Cambridge colleges, the great length of the composition would keep them at work too many hours.
chromaticism . . . Richard Strauss
Chromaticism refers to the use of the chromatic scale in composing music. Ever since Baroque Period (17th to early 18th century) almost all music were compsoed either in major or minor scale, in which only seven of the twelve tones of the octave were used. Beginning in the late Romanic Period (mid 19th to 20th century) the chromatic scale including all 12 tones of the octave was used. By using the tones that are not "supposed" to be in a certain key, the music thus composed had stronger dissonance and exaggerated tension.
Richard Strauss (1864-1949) was a German composer of the late Romantic era well known for his tone poems and operas. His Also sprach Zarathustra (1896), a symphonic poem, was made widely popular by Stanley Kubrick's film 2001: A Space Odyssey in 1968 — the music (especially the brass fanfare opening) introduced the memorable ape/man sequence of the film. His many operas include Salome, Der Rosenkavalier, Capriccio and others. Chromaticism was not that new to Richard Strauss, but "relentless chromaticism" just might be too "modern" for him.
Staindrop
Home of Jeremiah Dixon.
"Filtham's Tedium"
(Talk about overlabored puns...)
- "Tedium" is a common humorous way to refer to somebody-or-other's "Te Deum."
dress regulations
???
Gauss
Carl Friedrich Gauss (1777-1855), a German mathematician and scientist, and one of the all-time greats. He worked in a wide variety of fields in both mathematics and physics including number theory, analysis, differential geometry, geodesy, magnetism, astronomy and optics. His work has had an immense influence in many areas. Riemann was a student of his at Göttingen. Wikipedia.
Ramanujan
Srinivasa Ramanujan (1887-1920), one of India's greatest mathematical geniuses. Long before he came to Cambridge and though without any formal university education, Ramanujan made substantial contributions to the anlytical theory of numbers and worked on elliptic functions, continued fractions and infinite series. He, a poor savant from India, was invited in 1914 to Cambridge by G.H. Hardy after he wrote him a letter asking abstruse mathematical questions. In his letter, Ramanujan enclosed a long list of then unproved theorems which he had solved. After his arriving at Cambridge Ramanujan collaborated with G.H. Hardy resulting in important results. He was allowed to enroll in 1914 in Cambridge despite not having the proper qualifications and received a PhD degree in 1916. Plagued by health problems all his life, his health deteriorated rapidly from 1917, and he returned to India in 1919 and died there the following year. Two years before his death, however, he was elected a fellow of the Royal Society of London. [Ramanujan]. Therefore,
". . . Ramanujan here at Trinity . . ." could have happened only between 1914 - 1919.
revisited, in some way 'relighted' the scene
Light, mental light.
display of hurt feelings
Cf p30.
Page 499
light up
Dark world vs spark of value.
ζ-function
Another reference to the Riemann zeta function.
Hilbert thinks of nothing else
The Riemann hypothesis is one of the 20 problems put forth by Hilbert in 1900.
Wikipedia Entry
desire... of rather a specialized sort
???
Great Eastern
Railway linking Cambridge and London.
Page 500
Weierstrass and Sofia Kovalevskaia
Sofia Kovalevskaia was the first woman to apply for a mathematics degree at the University of Goettingen in Germany. She was not accepted at the university, but was allowed to tutor under one of the university's math professors. She wrote a paper there that became an important part of the theory of differential equations.
- Kovalevskaia's private math tutor was Weierstrass at Berlin (see below).
Karl Weierstrass (1815-97), a German mathermatician. He attended the University of Bonn studying law, finance and economics instead of mathermatics, the subject he was really interested in and studied out of school. He left the Univeristy of Bonn without a degree and went to the University of Münster for mathematics. Later he became a teacher in the city of Münster. Around 1850 he took a chair at the Technical University of Berlin. For four years (1870-1874) he gave private mathematics lessons to Sofia Kovalevskaia while she was denied the university entrance in Berlin. His investigations were mainly on the topic of "Special Functions": Weierstrass Elliptic Function, Weierstrass Zeta Function, Weierstrass Product Theroem, etc.
Sofia Kovalevskaia (1850-91) Russian mathematician and novelist. She was born in Moscow and showed an interest in mathematics from an early age. When 11 she studied differential and integral analysis from her father's calculus lecture notes that were used as wallpaper in the family house. She was given a special tutor of higher mathematics. At age 18 she entered a "false" marriage (it became genuine later) in order to be able to attend college abroad. In 1869 she enrolled as a provisional student at Heidelberg University. In 1870 she moved to Berlin attempting to study under Weierstrass and enroll at Berlin University. But the university refused to accept her because of her gender. However, Weierstrass was so impressed by her talent that he gave her private mathematics lessons twice a week for four years. By the spring of 1874, Kovalevskaia had completed three papers. Weierstrass deemed each of these worthy of a doctorate. And with his help, in Kovaleskaia's absence, University of Göttingen granted her a PhD in Mathematics (a historical first) and Master (summa cum laude) in Fine Art. In the same year she returned to Russia but failed to get an academic job. She did not practice mathematics for six years but pursued literary work instead. In 1880 she returned to mathematics and applied to teach at universities in Russia but was denied again. Finaly she found employment at Sweden's Stockholm University in 1883. She died of pneumonia in Stockholm in 1891.
In her short life Kovalevskaia had won a historic place in mathermatics. She was the first woman to receive a doctorate in mathermatics, the first woman to obtain a permanent position on a university faculty in mathematics, the first woman having a place on the editorial staff of a mathematical journal, the first female member of St. Petersburg Academy of Science, and the first woman to win the most prestigeous mathematical contest of her day, an honor equivalent to the winning of a Nobel Prize. Her literary achievements was quite substantial. Her Russian Childhood won wide acclaim and was translated into many languages (the English edition still available). She had a couple of novels (Nihilist Girl etc.) published as well. She dabbled in playwriting and produced a steady stream of both fiction and nonfiction publications for Russian journals.
Pythagorean doctrine
From the text it refers to Pythagorean doctrine of transmigration of souls. Pythagoras and his disciples believed in reincarnation (or metempsychosis), according to which human souls are immortal and are reborn into other animals after death. ("reborn as a vegetable" may be questionable.)
Perhaps not so questionable. There is, after all, the Pythagorean prohibition against eating beans, wind being 'pneuma' = spirit.
Pythagoras, one of the most famous and controversial ancient Greek philosophers, lived from ca. 570 to ca. 490 BC. He spent his early years on the island of Samos, off the coast of modern Turkey. At the age of 40, he moved to Crotona in southern Italy and most of his philosophical activity occurred there. His philosophical thinking exercised an important influence on the work of Plato. "Pythagoras was famous (1) as an expert on the fate of the soul after death . . .; (2) as an expert on religious ritual; (3) as a wonder-worker who had a thigh of gold and who could be two places at the same time; (4) as the founder of a strict way of life that emphasized dietary restrictions, . . . and rigorous self discipline." (on-line Stanford Encyclopedia of Philosophy).
Pythagoras was also a famous mathematician best known for the Pythagorean Theorem and the Music of the Spheres. Known as the father of numbers, his philosophy encompassed harmonics in mathematics, music, cosmology, geometry and had a lasting impact on hermeticism, gnosticism and alchemy.
sounds like maths
Yashmeen seems to see 'maths' as otherwordly.
folio
an edition of a book in pages that fold in half to make the leaves of a codex.
four-color chromolithograph
Chromo--in Chemistry, chromium
- Nothing to do with chromium. Chromolithography means 'The art of printing in colours from stone' (OED), an early technique for printing in more than one colour. The chromo- prefix is a shortened form of chromato-, a Greek-derived prefix denoting 'to do with colour'.
Snazzbury
???
Silent Frock
Cf noise-canceling headphones.
toilette
No longer in use in modern english, the term 'toilette' indicated a dressing table covered to the floor with cloth (toile) and lace, on which stood a dressing glass, which might also be draped in lace. Wikipedia
It's still used, and in addition to the dressing table meaning, it refers to how somebody is "got up"--dress, makeup and all.
Page 501
green, white, and mauve stripes
Colors associated with the Suffragette Movement of the time.Diane Atkinson, one of the leading contemporary scholars on the suffrage movement, edited a book, Suffragettes in the Purple, White, and Green London 1906-1914, which served as a catalog at an exhibition of suffrage memorabilia at the Museum of London and which discusses the symbolism. Atkinson notes that the color scheme was devised by Mrs. Pethick-Lawrence, treasurer and co-editor of the weekly newspaper Votes for Women. In the spring 1908 issue of that paper, Pethick-Lawrence explained the symbolism of the colors:
"Purple as everyone knows is the royal colour. It stands for the royal blood that flows in the veins of every suffragette, the instinct of freedom and dignity...white stands for purity in private and public life...green is the colour of hope and the emblem of spring."
black crepon
The shell is made of black rayon crepon and fully lined to within 2" of bottom hem. From a description of a black [nursing] dress online.
Italian-cloth
The Champagne fairs were a circuit of six cloth fairs in the towns of Champagne and Brie, changing location every two months and spanning the year from January to October. At their height, in the 13th century, the Champagne fairs linked the cloth-producing cities of the Low Countries with the Italian dyeing and exporting centers. The fairs, which were already well-organized at the start of the century, were one of the earliest manifestations of a linked European economy, a characteristic of the High Middle Ages.
The towns provided huge warehouses, still to be seen at Provins. From the north came woolens and linen cloth. Wikipedia.
Page 502
modern lettering
Refers to Art Nouveau lettering popular at the turn of the 20th century and still commonly used on entrance signs for Paris metro stations.
L'ARIMEAUX ET QUEURLIS
Larry, Moe, and Curly's
Mademoiselles
Should be Mesdemoiselles. The plural form mademoiselles does exist in French, but only as a substantive, not as a title (it cannot be used to address people).
"a kind of helical ramp"
Possibly a reference to the Riemann Sphere, which is built in large part upon complex numbers and which look something like a helix.
twilling
Twill = A fabric with diagonal parallel ribs. 2. The weave used to produce such a fabric.
TRANSITIVE VERB: Inflected forms: twilled, twill·ing, twills
To weave (cloth) so as to produce a pattern of diagonal parallel ribs. From The American Heritage Dictionary
Page 503
Earl's Court Wheel
The apostrophe is an error.
Go to "List All Pages" and enter "Great Wheel of Earl's Court" for an excellent write-up elucidating much of this page.
Earl's Court is an area of London. A Ferris Wheel there. See "The Great Wheel of Earls Court" page.
Another "paramorphic" parallel to our time: The London Eye, a huge Ferris Wheel built for the Millenium Exposition of 2000. The trip around is not, as Yasmeen notes, thermodynamically reversible, since one would be "changed forever" in the course of the journey around the wheel (in the Heraclitean sense that "No man steps in the same river twice"--the river changes.)
This is the connection between entropy in thermodynamics and entropy in information theory, embodied in Maxwell's Demon [6], at the center of Pynchon's Crying of Lot 49, now back as a problem in non-Euclidean geometries and multiple dimensions.
whelks
A whelk is a large marine gastropod (snail) found in temperate waters.
Popular in the early 20th C as fast food sold from stalls in the street. You extracted the somewhat bogey-like creature with a pin and ate it.
five pound note, like in the song
Music hall song "I've Got the Five-Pound Note" based on 1896 stranding of passengers for 4-10 hours [accounts vary].
Chinese Turkestan railway shares
Chinese Turkestan is where the Chums of Chance are currently, in the sub-desertine vehicle.
jellied eel
An East End of London delicacy Wikipedia
West Ham, the Park, Upton Lane, lads all in claret and blue
The "lads in claret and blue" are kicking a football around, as they are players of current Premiership side West Ham United. Founded in 1895, the "Hammers" are playing their home games at Boleyn Ground aka "Upton Park". Yep, soccer.
West Ham United started playing at the Boelyn Ground in 1904. However, it's highly dubious that Upton Park could be seen from Earl's Court, even at 300 feet. Much easier to see Fulham or Queen's Park Rangers grounds, both much closer to Earl's Court. Chelsea's ground, Stamford Bridge is even nearer, but they weren't founded until 1905.
lupine liminality
Latin: lupus = wolf, limen = threshold. Allusion to the proverbial wolf at the door.
Lupine = any of a genus (Lupinus) of leguminous herbs including some poisonous forms and others cultivated for their long showy racemes of usually blue, purple, white, or yellow flowers or for green manure, fodder, or their edible seeds; also : an edible lupine seed.
The liminal state is characterized by ambiguity, openness, and indeterminacy. One's sense of identity dissolves to some extent, bringing about disorientation. Liminality is a period of transition, during which your normal limits to thought, self-understanding, and behavior are relaxed, opening the way to something new.
hydrangeas
a kind of flower. Wikipedia
Hardy,
Cf. page 239:McTaggart . . . Hardy. G.H. (Godfrey Harold) Hardy (1877-1947),famous Cambridge mathematician Wikipedia. He wrote "A Mathematician's Apology" Wikipedia Full Text. Knew all the most famous intellectuals and was himself very influential.
Page 504
Harwich... German Sea
Harwich is a town in Essex, England, located on the coast with the North Sea to the east.The North Sea historically also known as the German Ocean. By the late nineteenth century, German Sea was a rare, scholarly usage ...
"The German Sea" is also a public house (p. 489).
Hook of Holland
Hoek van Holland in the Netherlands. It is not a hook but the southwest corner of South-Holland province (Dutch hoek = corner).
Hook of Holland is also the name of the ferry port, an entry point into Holland and Europe. It is served by ferry sailings from Harwich and is the main entry port when travelling from the UK. It is less than 15 miles southwest of The Hague. [Port of Hook of Holland].
madhouse at Osnabrück
OSNABRUCK, a town and episcopal see of Germany, in the Prussian province of Hanover, situated on the Hase, 70 m. W. of the city of Hanover, 31 m. by rail N.E. of Munster, and at the junction of the lines Hamburg-Cologne and BerlinAmsterdam. Pop. (1905) 59,5 80. The lunatic asylum occupies a former nunnery.
Page 505
plug hats
a plug hat may be a top hat or a bowler hat.
Cobh
the historic port town of Cobh Ireland. Many ocean liners sailed from there, including the Titanic... the port of Queenstown (now known as Cobh)
Page 506
Euclid
Avenue of classy mansions in Cleveland
Euclid (300 BC) is also the father of geometry. wikipedia entry check out the section on optics and the theory of mirrors.
elms in Cleveland
(Before Dutch elm disease?)
went on for years
the Krakatoa eruption put dust and ashes aloft for years.
Krakatoa
The correct name is Krakatau. It is a volcanic, uninhabited Indonesia's island lies between Java and Sumatra. A series of cataclysmic explosions of August 26 - 27, 1883, the largest volcanic eruption in recorded history, collapsed the northern two-thirds of the island beneath the sea, generating an immense tsunamis that ravaged adjeacent coastlines and killed over 36,000 perople. Tephra (volcanic rock and glass fragments) from the eruption fell as far as 1,500 miles downwind in the days following the explosion. The finest fragments were propelled high into the stratosphere, spreading outward as a broad cloud acroos the entire equatorial belt in only two weeks. These particles would remain suspended in the atmosphere for a long time. For years, the earth experienced exotic colors in the sky, halos around the sun and moon, and a spectacular array of anomalous sunsets and sunrises. In the year following the equption, average global temperatures fell by as much as 1.2° Celsius. Weather patterns continued to be chaotic for years and temperature did not return to normal until 1888.
For more about 1883 eruption, map, pictures, current volcanic activities etc see Krakatau 1 and
Krakatau 2.
Krakatoa...child's story
The 21 Balloons? which could have been a Chums of Chance adventure!
Shorty
the 'short-order' cook?
Page 507
I thought sunsets were just supposed to look like that...
Suggestive of the sentiments in Wordsworth's Intimations of Immortality from Recollections of Early Childhood [7]
Also brought to mind The Orb's Little Fluffy Clouds (1990) in which Rickie Lee Jones answers the question.....
What were the skies like when you were young? [by saying]
They went on forever And they -- when I We lived in Arizona And the skies always had little fluffy clouds And they were long and clear And there were lots of stars, at night And when it rained it would all turn It -- they were beautiful The most beautiful skies as a matter of fact The sunsets were purple and red And yellow and on fire And the clouds would catch the colors everywhere That's -- it's neat Because I used to look at them all the time When I was little You don't see that'
Circling the rabbit hole....In this song, The Orb uses a harmonica sample from the song The Man With The Harmonica from the film Once Upon a Time in the West [8]. The film in turn seems to have strong Pynchon/AtD overtones, (pre-tones??) -- Frank vs. Harmonica, the railroads destroying the Old West...etc. Pynchon showing a strong preference for harmonicas, old movies and songs and protagonists named Frank.
how little I cared
(Blaming Krakatoa???)Seems to me she is saying that her feelings for Bert faded, as everything was, maybe, supposed to, as had the fantastic sunsets
caused by Krakatoa when they got back to ordinary.
palm upward
One of many "old wives' tales" described in this web page.
Prospect Avenue
Once fashionable street in Cleveland, Ohio.
leaf-spring suspension
A form of suspension for wheeled vehicles. Still very occasionally used in automobiles, but more likely nowadays to be seen on a perambulator. A "leaf" here is a long thin strip of tempered steel (they may also be stacked for greater strength).
overrun
the excess kerosene when made.
Flats
lands around the Cuyahoga River.
Page 508
Cuyahoga
Major river in Ohio that goes around Cleveland. Famous in the 60's for literally catching on fire from the combustible pollutants in it. Here, Pynchon shows that industrial pollution and its effect on the river. "It's like looking down into the sky".
your exact face
(How common?)
allowing Erlys do the work
Error in first edition. Should be "allowing Erlys to do the work..."
Page 509
descending minor triad
in music, an interval of three half tones.
No, the triad is a chord, so it's three notes moving downwards (soh-mi-doh) forming a minor chord.
Svengali
In George Du Maurier's novel Trilby (1894), the hypnotist who makes the title character a great singer but keeps her under rigorous control.
tea roses
Yellow-orange roses.
cosmos
any composite plant of the genus Cosmos, of tropical America, some species of which are cultivated for their showy flowers.
Page 510
first momentous glance
Page 349 only?
Elis
Yale University students, called so after founder Eli Yale.
snooting
the act of snubbing, treating scornfully or with disdain (OED)
tuned to a 440 A
the elusive 440 A. ... Today's A above middle C has been set at 440 cycles per second or 440 Hertz. ...
Page 511
preferring
Cf Rose in James Cameron's Titanic.
Root Tubsmith
Most likely a fictional character.
Fuchs
Lazarus Fuchs (1833-1902), a German mathematician. He worked on differential equations and the theory of functions, ordinary differential equations with complex functions as coefficients, elliptic integrals, etc. Fuchs.
Schwarz
Herman Schwarz (1843-1921), a German mathematician, known for his work in complex analysis. He worked in Halle, Göttingen and then Berlin, dealing with the subjects of function theory, differential geometry and the calculus of variation. Schwarz.
Frobenius
Ferdinand Frobenius (1849-1917), a German mathematician. [9], possibly important here for his contributions to Group Theory and to topology [10]. He received his doctorate from the Univeristy of Berlin supervised by Weierstrass. Later, he taught mathematics there as well. He combined results from the theory of algebraic equations, geometry and number theory, which led him to the representation theory and the character theory of groups. Frobenius.
Professor Manning
Henry Parker Manning (1859-1956) In 1889 he entered Johns Hopkins University to study mathematics, astronomy and physics. When he received his Ph.D. degree in 1891, his first printed paper had already appeared in the American Journal of Mathematics. He was appointed instructor in mathematics at Brown that same year, and “with his advent,” Professor Raymond C. Archibald would later write, “a new era in the development of mathematics at Brown was ushered in.” From 1893 to 1908 Manning offered courses in higher mathematics never previously available at Brown, courses with names like “Theory of functions: algebraic functions, Riemann surfaces, and Abelian functions,” “Substitutions and transformation groups,” and “Quaternions, non-Euclidean geometry, and hyperspace.” After 1908 there were others in the department able to teach higher mathematics. His publications included Non-Euclidean Geometry in 1901, the first English language text in this subject, Irrational Numbers and their Representation by Sequences and Series in 1906, and Geometry of Four Dimensions in 1914. [11]
language difference
Kit and Root both speak English, but in different mathematical dialects.
Marseilles
Second largest city of France; Mediterannean port, legendarily corrupt.
species of tarantella
Tarantella is a fast dance or dance tune in 6/8 time. Probably named for Taranto, not tarantula.
dreamed it
(Page?)
Page 349, at R.W. Vibe's "Italianate town house." Dally confirms this on page five hundred and twelve.
Cigar Deck
A deck on a luxury yacht, hotel or residence where 'gentlemen' went to smoke cigars.... "venue has everything - including a full bar, cigar deck, and dance floor. ..."
Page 512
how to stop looking
Cf p27.
lobelias
Plant or flower of the genus Lobelia. At least one member of the genus is blue (Blue Lobelia.
Victor Herbert
Irish-born American composer (1859-1924) of songs, operettas, light classics.
Wolf-Ferrari
Ermanno Wolf-Ferrari (1876-1948), born in Venice, composer of many extremely popular operas.
Page 513
She smelled falsely
Error in first edition. Should be "She smiled falsely."
Reuben
A hick, as in the carnie's cry, "Hey, Rube".
- Maybe, but given that Kit's age is at issue, may refer to the fact that Reuben was the eldest of the twelve sons of Jacob/Israel (Genesis 29.32).
sailing along on Moonlight Bay
Apparently someone overheard Kit's dialog. This phrase would become part of the song "On Moonlight Bay," Madden (lyrics) and Weinrich (music), 1912.
Page 515
high-hatting
Snubbing, cutting.
memories of desert plateau, mountian peaks...some unexpected river
Instantly recognizable to anyone familiar with the back-country Rocky Mountains.
Cf also the description of the landscape Frank's riding through on page 394/395.
twenty-knot push
The ship is making twenty knots (20 nautical miles per hour), hence generating a twenty knot wind toward the stern.
uncreated
Featureless? ongoing present becoming the future as compared to his memories.
The watery void of Genesis, before creation of the land and life.
after 1914
Still 10 years away.
S.M.S. Emperor Maximilian
S.M.S.: Seiner Majestäts Schiff, His Majesty's Ship (German or, as in this case, Austrian). One Habsburg Emperor Maximilian was set up in Mexico, then deposed and killed.
25,000-ton
The ship's displacement (measure of its size).
dreadnoughts
HMS Dreadnought gave her name to a new philosophy that governed the design of capital ships beginning in the 1890s and continuing past the 1920s: high speed, heavy armor, heavy investment in the "main battery" and de-emphasis of secondary battery, main battery comprising the largest practicable guns mounted in turrets on the ship's centerline.
Slavonian
Perhaps a deceptive name for the company; Slavonia was an inland province of the Austro-Hungarian Empire, northwest of Croatia; Trieste would have been in Slovenia.
Schultz-Thorneycroft
Apparently a maker of steamships' boilers.
Parsons turbines
Cf. The Steam Turbine, by Sir Charles A. Parsons ---The Rede Lecture, 1911.
Was manufactured and named for Parsons--this lecture was after its extensive use.
British men-o'-war
Warships.
Page 516
shell-rooms-to-be and giant powder magazines
Stupendica contains spaces that will belong to Maximilian on her transformation. (Indeed, she must contain the shells and powder too.)
circular cabins
A battleship turret extends several decks below the gunhouse. No doubt there were stacks of these circular cabins.
twelve-inch barrels
The typical main armament for dreadnoughts in this period (1904) was 12 inch guns - the guns having barrels. By WWI, newer dreadnoughts had 14-16" armament.
shelter deck
???
to fold upward
Transformer fashion.
casemates
Turrets.
freeboard
The amount of the ship above the water. You need a certain amount of freeboard to maintain balance, but battleships try to limit it as much as possible (so as to present a smaller target).
"Dazzle" camouflage
Patterns as described in the text, meant to confuse enemy eyes. [12] Camouflage techniques used in World War I were developed in part by magician Jasper Maskelyne, a descendant of the Astronomer Royal in Mason & Dixon.
dihedrals
A dihedral is the figure formed by two planes intersecting in a line. The bow of a ship is pretty close.
Fangsley
???
less horizontally disposed
less level
Passenger liner has as many decks as possible above waterline. Warship has as many as possible below waterline, hence it's "taller."
Trieste
Trieste is a city and port in northeastern Italy right on the border with Slovenia. It is located at the head of the Gulf of Trieste on the Adriatic Sea, about 70 miles east of Venice across the Gulf of Venice. The city had been occupied, administrated, annexed by various countries in the past. As late as early 19th century Napoleon took it for France, and in 1813 Austrian empire annexed it and kept it until the end of World War I. In 1920 it was transfered to Italy. During World War II German occupied the city until 1945 when Yugoslav partisans under Tito briefly occupied the city. Between 1947 to 1954 Trieste was governed by British and American. Finally, in 1954 the city of Trieste went to Italy and the southern suburb went to Yugoslavia (now Slovenia).
Lloyd Arsenale
Lloyd Shipyard, Austria's commercial counterpart of Stabilimento Tecnico. In 1833 a company with the name Lloyd Austriaco was founded as a maritime insurance organization. Three years later a new section, the Shipping Section was established and running company's own vessels. In 1853 Lloyd Austriaco started buidling its own shipyard, called Arsenale, both for building new ships and maintenance of the fleet. The shipyard was completed and fully operative in 1861. In 1919 Lloyd Austriaco changed its name to Lloyd Triestino, currently still operating in Trieste. [Lloyd Arsenale].
Stabilimento Tecnico
Technical Plant, a shipyard. Stabilimento Tecnico was an Austro-Hungarian shipbuilding company based in Trieste. It served the Austro-Hungarian Navy on a large scale and was the largest shipyard of that country. [Stabilimento]. Four Tegetthoff class dreadnoughts were built by Stabilimento Tecnico for the Austro-Hungarian Navy: SMS Viribus Unitis, SMS Tegetthoff, SMS Prinz Eugen and SMS Szent Istvan. They were of about 21,000 ton displacement and a speed of 20 kt with twelve 12-inch guns. Tegetthoff was a 19th century Austrian admiral.[Tegetthoff battleships].
Stabilimento Tecnico and Lloyd Triestino are both currently active. In fact these two establishments are the largest industrial organizations in Trieste.
Page 517
merged
Pynchon writes about bilocation in a peculiar sense: not necessarily one person being in two places, but one place being two (or one language being two, Dutch/Flemish, Serbian/Croatian).
Different witnesses.....no longer in either, simply appearing unforseen...
Sounds a lot like the quantum mechanical measurement process. An electron can't be located until a measurement. May be easiest unerstood via the "Schroedinger's cat" picture.
[13]
Promontorio
In Italian promontorio is headland, a small stripe of mountain-like terrain surrounded on all but one side by see.
O.I.C. Bodine
Gotta be Pig Bodine from V. and GR and descendant of Fender-Belly Bodine in Mason & Dixon.
- Naw, three different Bodines. (1) Fender-Belly is the patriarch (flourished in the 1760s); (2) the stoker O.I.C. is in his prime in the decade around 1910; (3) Pig serves in WW2 and is still around to go roistering with Benny in the 1960s. The strangest thing about the Bodines—a family with saltwater in their DNA—is that they dropped anchor in Minnesota . . . or ever even visited such an inland spot as Albert Lea.
"O.I.C." is an initialism for Ohio Improved Chester, which is a breed of hog. Jack London actually raised them on his ranch. As has been pointed out, "O.I.C." standing for "Officer in Charge" in the Bodine context is a non-starter, as Bodine is neither an officer nor in charge of anything. He's a stoker, one of the lowest class of laborers aboard. Also, "oic" does have a piggish ring to it ("oink" without the "n"). And of course it also works as Internet slang: "Oh, I see," although this sounds a bit too cutesy for Pynchon, IMHO, and besides, as pointed out above, O.I.C. Bodine ain't the Bodine seen in other Pynchon novels, but most likely the father or uncle of Pig of V. and Gravity's Rainbow.
In V., Pig's first appearance in a Pynchon novel (he also appears in "Lowlands," a Pynchon short story Flange's "big gaping idiot buddy"), he brags of his Harley motorcycle (called Hogs, in the vernacular): "Ain't an SP car made that can take my Harley." (p.15) Perhaps this Bodine was given the nickname "O.I.C." by his Navy buddies as a joke, because the initialism stands for a breed of hog and "Officer in Charge" (which he's far from) and sounds like a pig's utterance (We know his putative son's or nephew's laugh sounds like a pig ("Hyeugh, hyeugh ... it was, as Pig intended, horribly obscene" V., p.14 so maybe it's inherited). And perhaps Pynchon gave him the last name of Bodine to connect him visually and/or temperamentally with the character Jethro Bodine of The Beverly Hillbillies (1962-1971), also a big, not-too-smart goofball.
fermented potato mash
Cf Veikko's vodka, page 82.
four shafts
Four propellers.
Mauretania
HMS Mauretania, launched 1907, sister ship of the ill-fated Lusitania (the sinking of the latter propelled the US into WW I). Served as Cunard liner, troopship, hospital ship in WW I.
Zu befehl, Herr Hauptheitzer
German: Ready for orders, Chief Stoker. (Should be Zu Befehl, Herr Hauptheizer.)
Black Gang
The stoking crew, turned black by coal dust.
Oberhauptheitzer
German: Master Chief Stoker. (Should be: Oberhauptheizer.)
Mannlicher
German military pistol.
"Dampf mehr!"
German for "more steam!" (Should be: Mehr Dampf!)
- If this is an error, as it appears to be (and as it's marked by German native speakers), it may stem from a common phrase such as Wir haben keinen Dampf mehr, we have no more steam. Is there any remote possibility that Dampf mehr! was a form used in shipboard orders (spoken or telegraphed) at the time of the action?
- Following up this nagging question, I have found some photos of engine room telegraphs with German on the dials: here and here. Neither refers to Dampf at all (instead volle Kraft = full power, volle Fahrt = full speed). These finds seem to eliminate the possibility that Dampf mehr is a phrase Pynchon collected in this context.
singlet
Undershirt.
syntonic wireless
See p.397 and p. 229. The comparison of wireless communications with messages from the spirit world echoes Kipling's short story Wireless, Scribner's Magazine, August 1902. There are many Kipling echoes in AtD.
Page 518
ignorant off
Error in first edition. Should be "ignorant of".
Marconi room
Radio shack.
British and German battle groups were engaged off the Moroccan coast
This could be a reference to the First Moroccan Crisis (a.k.a. Tangier Crisis) taking place between March 1905 and May 1906. This would be in keeping with the timeline of the novel, however, there seems to have been no engagement of troops between British and German forces. On the other hand, this could also be a reference to the Agadir Crisis (a.k.a. The Second Moroccan Crisis) of 1911 where the German gunboat, Panther, was deployed to the Moroccan port of Agadir, threatening British naval supremacy. Although the later altercation seems unlikely given the timeline of the story, Pynchon notes that the S.S. Stupendica received its message "from somewhere else not quite in the world, more like from a continuum lateral to it."
design maximum of nine degrees
Maximilian will right herself from a nine-degree heel but may be in trouble if she leans over farther.
nymphs
Stage in the life cycle of many insects, including the cockroach.
"Porca miseria"
Italian: good grief, for heaven's sake, dammit.
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tight circle
Military as inane as circus clowns.
southeast by east
The compass rose has 32 points, each 11 and a quarter degrees from the next. Southeast by east is one point to the east of southeast, i.e., 123 and three-quarters degrees clockwise from north.
deeper levels
(Eg particle vs wave?)
A "deeper level" where dualities are resolved
Engine room is far below the main deck, therefore a deeper level. The Stupendica/Maximilian duality is resolved there because it's a shared space.
Chinese
???
Maybe the allusion refers to Chinese boxes, one box containing another box, containing another, etc? In the last box, at the "deeper level" dualities are resolved... don't know...
nicht wahr
German: aint it true?
Graz
Graz is the capital of the Austrian province of Styria. It is the second largest city, after Vienna, in Austria. Graz's old town is one of the best-preserved city centers in Central Europe and is on the UNESCO list of World Cultural Heritage Sites.
bilge-crab
Most likely an insult meaning "below-decks crew".
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a Teutonic
Ethnically a German.
Tangier
a seaport in Northern Morocco on the west end of the Strait of Gibralta, about 500 miles northeast from Agadir, another Atlantic seaport. (Casablanca is midway between them.)
Mulai Ahmed er-Raisuli
Infamous Morrocan outlaw/warlord. From this website: "Several decades before Saddam Hussein, Osama bin Laden, and Islamic insurgents, an international crisis ignited between the United States and the Middle East. In May 1904 Moroccan warlord Mulai Ahmed er Raisuli kidnapped Ion Perdicaris, a wealthy Greek-American resident of Tangier, in an attempt to extort money from the Sultan of Morocco. President Theodore Roosevelt responded with his "big stick" approach to diplomacy by dispatching a squadron of seven battleships to the Moroccan coast with the order: "Perdicaris alive or Raisuli dead." The nine-week standoff, with US troops and ships in Tangier Bay and Raisuli holding fort in the mountains, exposed the impotence of emerging American power and a critical misunderstanding about Moroccan politics. When it was discovered that Perdicaris was not an American citizen after all, the US government kept the embarrassing episode a secret until 1933. Profiting royally from the conflict, Raisuli built his palace, which he called the "House of Tears"." another source
Agadir, Queen of the Iron Coast
Agadir is a city in southwest Morocco, capital of the Souss-Massa-Dra region. Wikipedia From the Encyclopedia Britannica: "Sixty miles farther south lies Mogador, beyond which the coast becomes more and more inaccessible and dangerous in winter, being known to navigators as the " Iron Coast." From Cape Sim (Ras Tagriwalt), to m. south of Mogador, the direction is due south to Cape Ghir (Ighir Ufrani), the termination of Jebel Ida u Taman, a spur of the Atlas. Beyond this headland lies Agadir (Agadir Ighir), the Santa Cruz Mayor or Santa Cruz de Berberia
of the Spaniards, formerly known as the Gate of the Sudan.' It is a little town with white battlements three-quarters of a mile in circumference, on a steep eminence 600 ft. high." old postcards from Agadir
colonists...justify German interests...shadow-colonists
In July 1911, the german gunboat "Panther" approached the harbour of Agadir under the pretext to protect german citizens from Sus-tribesmen, resulting in the "Agadir-Crisis" and nearly triggering WW I three years early. As there were no german citizens to protect in Agadir, so one had to be dispatched from Mogador. See Morocco Crisis of 1911. and source
...destined for plantation...
Typo in First Edition.
???
No. Here "plantation" means "The settling of people, usually in a conquered or dominated country; esp. the planting or establishing of a colony; colonization."(OED)
Sus... Susi
The Sous Basin Wikipedia and it‘s inhabitants, probably.
Abdel Aziz
Sultan of Morocco 1894-1908 (aged 10-24yrs.) Wikipedia
Canaries
Canary Islands, about 80 miles off Morocco‘s Atlantic coast Wikipedia
Many would go crazy and set out in small boats...
Another paramorpic mirror image of our century. The Canaries, a Spanish possession, are the goal of untold thousands of would-be African entrants to the EU, i.e. a route of illegal immigration.
Lübeck
Lübeck is the second-largest city in Schleswig-Holstein (northern Germany). Wikipedia
Berbers
The Berbers (also called Amazigh people or Imazighen, "free men") are an ethnic group indigenous to Northwest Africa, speaking the Berber languages of the Afroasiatic family. In actuality, Berber is a generic name given to numerous heterogeneous ethnic groups that share similar cultural, political, and economic practices. It is not a term originated by the group itself. Wikipedia. Berbers of southwestern Morocco usually belong to the ones known as Chleuhs pics
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tree-climbing goats
Can be seen often, esp. in Morocco Pic
argan trees
The Argan (Argania spinosa, syn. A. sideroxylon Roem. & Schult.) is a species of tree endemic to the calcareous semi-desert Sous valley of southwestern
Morocco. It is the sole species in the genus Argania. Wikipedia
Gnaoua
The Gnawa or Gnaoua refers at once to a style of Moroccan music with sub-Saharan Africa origins or influence, an ethnic group and religious order at least in part descended from former slaves from Sub-Saharan Africa or black Africans migrated in caravans with the Trans-Saharan trade, or a combination of both Wikipedia more on Gnaoua Gnaoua music sample mp3 nicely made site on Gnawa
mlouk gnaoui
Mlouk is the plural of melk, a supernatural entity envoked in the Gnawa rituals. Various types are known and they are distinguished by colors. The following is a google translation of the relevant paragraph from this site: "The mlouk are of male or female sex, Moslems or Jews. Their color corresponds to their origins. Thus one distinguishes the mlouks from the sea (bahriyin) to which one allots the light blue; the celestial ones (samaouiyin), have as a color dark blue; the mlouk of the forest (rijal el ghaba), originating in Africa, have as a color the black just like the mlouk pertaining to the troop of Sidi Mimoun, finally the red mlouk (Al homar), related to blood and which haunt the slaughter-houses, have as a color the red. The white and the green, colors symbols of Islam sunnite, are reserved to the called upon saints, in particular Moulay Abdelkader Jilali and Chorfa. To the female mlouk three colors are allotted: the yellow for the coquettery of Lala Reflected, the red for Lala Rkia for its capacity to cure the menorrhagia and the black for Lala Aïcha Kendisha because of its Sudanese origin. The Jewish mlouks which are sometimes called upon after the troop of the female mlouk have the black color. Incense fumigations of various perfumes accompany the invocations by these mlouks, with a preference however for the benzoin or jaoui."
Seigneurs Noirs
French: Black Lords. According to the above translation, those most probably are jewish mlouks.
Bardo State
Tibetan Bhuddist belief in a state between two mortal incarnations, during which one has direct perception of reality--for better or worse, Karmically speaking. [14]
Habsburg navy
Austrian Navy
Mogador road
Mogador" is a city and tourist resort in Morocco, near Marrakech on the Atlantic coast. (31°30′47″N)
Mogador is another name for Essaouira Wkipedia about 70 miles north of Agadir. old postcards Mogador
Tawil Balak
In the Liner Notes for the Album "Love Songs of Lebanon" downloadable from this site the song Tawil Balak Ya Habboub translates as "Patience, My Love" - Tawil Balak being the Patience part. (Thats one nice soundtrack, btw!)
"Tawil", according to web-searches, is arabic for "allegorical explanation/interpretation/exegese" (of the Qu‘ran and Sunna texts). "Balak" might refer to the according Tora reading (Parsah) Wikipedia. cf. Balaam‘s Ass p. 432. Do the cosmopolitan regulars at the bar like Moises spend their time interpreting holy texts?
Rahman
???
Ostend
a seaport in northwest Belgium. Ostende in German and French. It is the largest city at the Belgian North Sea coast. (It is about 1,700 miles from Agadir, Morocco.)
Fomalhaut
The Maritime Digital Encyclopedia lists a "Dutch Vessel" named "Formalhaut" pic.
According to several websites 1 2 3 Wikipedia etc. Fomalhaut is the 17th or 18th brightest star as seen from our planet and is located in the constellation called Pisces Austrinus (Southern Fish). The name derives from the Arabic Fum (or Fam) al-Hut, meaning "Mouth of the Fish" or according to a few web-resources the contributor has just visited, "Mouth of the Whale". The latter would mean its a strong connotation with the Biblical Legend of Jonah and the Whale (see annotations for this page below (not a spoiler, i hope).
Among most readers of Science-Fiction "Fomalhaut" is a location as common as "Aldebaran" or "Cassiopeia".
As per today (07 01 10) the Wikipedia-Entry on Demon Fomalhaut is just a stub. According to most sites the contributor just visited, claiming credibility in the Book of Enoch Wikipedia and due to some more non-canonical catergorizations, Fomalhaut seems to be a member of the infamous gang of Fallen Angels, a daredevil companero to Lucifer that is. This sub-summation in a hierarchy of angels might refer to some astrological/-nomical constellations of the star Fomalhaut as is.
As usual, with TP, we dont know for sure if theres some outlandish pun intended/-cluded in the name of a person or thing. What, to give variety to it, about a german compositive noun? Ger. "formal" = formal (like in formal behavior) + "haut" = skin; "Formal Skin".
Moïsés
???
Jonah... Massa
Jonah Wikipedia Entry "Jonah on the Web" From the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica website: "Some 60 m. farther south (from Agadir), at the mouth of a river known by the same name, is the roadstead of Massa, with a mosque popularly reputed the scene of Jonah's restoration to terra firma."
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Two Fishes, two Jonahs, two Agadirs?
The Jewish Encyclopedia 1901-1906 mentions rabbinic literature regarding two fishes - one male, one female - having swallowed Jonah: check out the "fish" paragraph here. Both Tarshish (Cadiz), the "Agadir" in southwestern Spain, and Agadir in Morocco likely were founded by the Phoenicians: "Cadiz bears a Phoenician name, a deformation of Gaddir (wall), which we find in the Berber city of Agadir in Morroco." source
Pynchon is riffing on Ch. 9 of Moby Dick where Father Mapple reads the biblical story of Jonah and talks about Tarshish being Cadiz and how that shows that he was trying to escape his fate for some unnammed "disobedience". Melville bilocates "god" and "man", insisting that the two forces are at odds. Melville also implicitly draws a parallel between Jonah and Ahab who rails against his being peglegged by Moby Dick and seeks revenge against the whale who ultimately consumes him, and Ishmael who humbly accepts his punishment and so survives to tell his tale. In AtD, the Moby Dick resonances ring most clearly in the Traverse bros/sis seeking revenge against sociocultural pieties for inflicting loss & grief & pain on the undeserving; the correspondence b/w the anarchist preacher Moss Gatlin and the ex-harpooner minister Mapple; Lew's mysterious penance and Webb's divided loyalties and now the story of Jonah and his fugitive flight, not unlike Kit's running from his troubles. Also, the name Fom al-Haut comes from scientific Arabic فم الحوت fam al-ħūt (al-janūbī) "the mouth of the (southern) fish/whale"
kashbah
Wikipedia entries on Kasbah and Casbah The Casbah of Agadir as seen from above
Ighir Ufrani
a.k.a Cape Ghir, a cape north of Agadir.
Mogador herring...alimzah...tasargelt
From the 1911 Encyclopedia Britannica Morocco Entry: "Occasionally a small shoal (of mackarel) may be found as far south as Mogador. Soles, turbot, bream, bass, conger eel and mullet are common along the coast, and southern Morocco is visited occasionally by shoals of a large fish called the azlimzah (sciaena aquila), rough scaled and resembling a cod, and the tasargelt (Temnodon saltator), the "blue fish" of North America. Crayfish, prawns, oysters and mussels swarm in the rocky places, but the natives have no proper method of catching them, and edible crabs seem unknown. The tunny, pilchard and sardine, and a kind of shad known as the "Mogador herring," all prove at times of practical importance."
azlimzah (sciaena aquila) pic (the lower one).
tasargelt (Temnodon saltator) pic (not sure if this is the real thing!)
scruff
???
Staketsel
According to the Dutch Wikipedia and its link to the english site this means "pier". pic
lazarettes
Below-decks storage space in the stern of a vessel. [15].
mon chou
"My cabbage." A french term of affection.
Page 523
moon deck
???
lower orlop
Lowest deck of a multi-decked vessel (OED).
lateen-riggers
Boats or larger craft with triangular sails rigged fore-and-aft (picture: [16]common in the Mediterannean [17] after introduction by the Romans in the 3rd century.
Dally had expected Bria would be the first...
Editorial error? If one substitutes "Dally" with "Erlys" this sentence makes much more sense.
I hesitate to assign such sloppiness to the notoriously meticulous Pynchon and his editorial team. Note that the previous sentence conflates Dally and Erlys's uncertainty about the romantic setback. And note earlier (p 512) Dally was scandalized (facetiously) over Bria's shameless and un-chaperon-like interest in Root.
Page 524
exhilirated
Second occurrence of this misspelling of exhilarated. (Cf. page 236, line 38: "exhiliration".)
Piazza Grande
The central square in many Italian cities.
Denza
Cf page 353. Luigi Denza (1846-1922), Italian composer, most famous for his "Funiculi, funicula".
Antonio Smareglia
Italian opera composer (1854-1929). His most famous work Nozze istriane premiered in Triste in 1895, and he was from the same contested territory as Triste.
Annotation Index
Part One: The Light Over the Ranges |
|
---|---|
Part Two: Iceland Spar |
119-148, 149-170, 171-198, 199-218, 219-242, 243-272, 273-295, 296-317, 318-335, 336-357, 358-373, 374-396, 397-428 |
Part Three: Bilocations |
429-459, 460-488, 489-524, 525-556, 557-587, 588-614, 615-643, 644-677, 678-694 |
Part Four: Against the Day |
695-723, 724-747, 748-767, 768-791, 792-820, 821-848, 849-863, 864-891, 892-918, 919-945, 946-975, 976-999, 1000-1017, 1018-1039, 1040-1062 |
Part Five: Rue du Départ |