Ulysses begins at about 8:00 a.m. on Thursday, June
16, 1904, in Dublin, Ireland, when one of its major
participants, young Stephen Dedalus, awakens and
interacts with his two housemates, the egotistical
medical student, Buck Mulligan, and the overly
reserved English student, Haines. The narrative ends
some twenty-four hours later, when Stephen, having
politely refused lodgings at the home of two other
principal characters, Leopold and Molly Bloom,
discovers he is no longer welcome to stay with
Mulligan and Haines. During the sixteen hours of
narrative time, the characters move through their
day in Dublin, interacting with a stunning variety of
individuals, most of whom are fictional but some of
whom represent actual people.
Ulysses stands as an inventive, multiple-point-of-
view (there are eighteen) vision of daily events,
personal attitudes, cultural and political sentiments,
and observations of the human condition. It is written
in a number of differing literary styles, ranging from
internal monologue to first-person speculation to
question-and-answer from a catechism to newspaper
headlines. The work has eighteen chapters. When
taken in context with James Joyce's grander design
for it (a playful comparison to Homer's epic poem,
The Odyssey), Ulysses gains complexity, irony, and
dramatic intensity. Not only does Stephen Dedalus
become all the more vivid because of his comparison
to Telemachus, the son of Ulysses, King of Ithaca, in
the Homeric epic. The other main character, Leopold
Bloom, may be seen as the wandering Ulysses. In The
Odyssey, Ulysses is seen returning to his wife, that
symbol of womanly and cultural virtue, Penelope; in
the novel, Joyce uses irony to represent Penelope as
Molly Bloom, who that very afternoon had an
adulterous encounter with her lover, Blazes Boylan.
Incidents in the novel have counterparts in the
Homeric epic, sometimes to a broadly farcical effect,
other times to a more punning or humorous effect,
and still others to fit Joyce's own sense of social or
political irony. For instance, Chapter One in Ulysses,
referred to as "Telemachus" by Joyce, establishes the
link to come between Stephen Dedalus and Leopold
Bloom. It shows Stephen getting up and leaving for
work. Those familiar with The Odyssey will be
amused by the parallels between Mulligan and
Haines and the suitors of Penelope. In The Odyssey,
Telemachus, son of Ulysses, King of Ithaca, is
persuaded to venture out in search of his long-absent
father. Chapters Two and Three of The Odyssey show
Telemachus meeting Nestor, an old windbag of a
counselor to his father. In the novel, Stephen is
shown in conversation with Mr. Deasey, headmaster
of the school where he teaches. In addition to being
anti-Semitic, anti-feminist, and wildly pro-British, Mr.
Deasey is a repository of misinformation.
The first three episodes of Ulysses focus on Stephen
Dedalus, a problematically autobiographical
character first introduced in Joyce's published work
through A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man. In
Chapter One, Stephen, Mulligan, and Haines prepare
for the day. In Chapter Two, Stephen is teaching in a
boys' school. While the class recites Milton's Lycidas,
he broods about his life so far, his ambitions to be a
great writer, and his doubts. In Chapter Three,
Stephen walks along the seafront and reflects upon
the things he sees — midwives, cockle-pickers,
boulders, a dog, the body of a dog, "seaspawn and
seawrack."
The next twelve chapters take the reader on Leopold
Bloom's Odyssey (the wanderings of Ulysses). His
and Stephen's paths cross but they have no
meaningful meeting until later on.
In Chapter Four, Leopold Bloom is at his and Molly's
home at 7 Eccles Street in the northwest quadrant of
Dublin. He is preparing breakfast for himself and his
wife (and his cat) before departing for Paddy
Dignam's funeral. The jingling springs of the bed
upstairs show that his wife Molly is awake. He goes
out into the world like Odysseus in The Odyssey.
Bloom's wanderings become the major part of the
novel.
In Chapter Five, Bloom walks through the streets of
Dublin and performs several errands. In Chapter Six,
Bloom and his fellow mourners travel to the
cemetery for the burial of Paddy Dignam, which
evokes from Bloom a wealth of meditations on birth,
death, and human frailty, including his
reminiscences on Rudy, his own dead son, and his
father, a suicide. This theme and anti-Semitism,
tactlessly arise in various conversations, with Bloom
the target.
In Chapter Seven, Stephen and Bloom (father and
son, or Odysseus and Telemachus) meet in the
newspaper office for the first time in the novel,
although each knows who the other is. Bloom
attempts (unsuccessfully) to complete an advertising
contract, and Stephen (successfully) hands over the
letter schoolmaster Deasy entrusted him with. Note
the shift in narrative as newspaper headlines appear
to interrupt straightforward narrative.
In Chapter Eight, Bloom gets hungry and decides to
lunch at Davey Byrnes's pub. The dominant motifs
are related to food and eating. Bloom continues to
wander, thinking about birth and family life, Molly,
her previous lovers, and his own past. He is handed a
religious pamphlet, sees Stephen's sister Dilly in the
street, feeds some seagulls with cakes he has
purchased, then starts noticing and thinking about
advertising. Bloom meets Mrs. Breen, sort of an old
flame, and sympathizes with her because of her
"cracked" husband. (He had earlier sympathized with
women's lot in general when thinking about families
— "Life with hard labor.") He learns that a mutual
acquaintance, Mrs. Purefoy, is in the maternity
hospital.
In Chapter Nine, at the National Library, in the office
of the director, Stephen, A.E. (the pseudonym of
noted Irish man of letters, George Russell), John
Eglinton, and Lyster the librarian discuss
Shakespeare. The others mock Stephen for his
youthful enthusiasm for complex theories of literary
creation. A.E. is a Platonist (an idealist), and mocks
all readings of Shakespeare that suppose that
Hamlet is a real person. After some banter about the
Dublin literati, A.E. leaves and Stephen begins to
expound his theory (it is a theory that must chart a
course between the idealism of A.E. and the simple-
minded, literal approach of Mulligan in order to
define the ways in which art [the ideal] and life [the
material] interact).
Chapter Ten takes place at about 3:00 p.m. on the
streets of Dublin. It's made up of eighteen small
episodes, which makes it a sort of doubling of the
book itself (which has eighteen chapters). In these
mini-episodes, we meet Father Conmee, the Dedalus
sisters, and Stephen (who, at the sight of one of his
sisters, is wracked with guilt because she is so
obviously in poor financial straits and he is doing
nothing to help her), a one-legged sailor, and an arm
that throws a coin and belongs to Molly Bloom. We
also meet Blazes Boylan, and a host of other
characters.
In Chapter Eleven, it is about 4:00 in the afternoon,
nearly time for Boylan's assignation with Molly. We
are at The Concert Room Saloon in the posh Ormond
Hotel. The barmaids at the Ormond Hotel see Bloom
pass by. Simon Dedalus, Stephen's father, is there,
and he turns his attention to the piano, which has
just been tuned by the blind stripling. Bloom is
elsewhere, buying paper. Boylan enters. Bloom spots
his car outside and also enters with a friend, Ritchie
Goulding. Boylan leaves, on his way to meet Molly.
Simon sings, and Bloom thinks of Molly.
In Chapter Twelve, it is nearly 5:00 and the locale
shifts to Barney Kiernan's pub, where Bloom is going
to meet Martin Cunningham and discuss the affairs
of the Dignam family. The unnamed narrator (a debt
collector) chats with Joe Hynes, and they meet the
Citizen, a fierce nationalist with a dog called
Garryowen, who does not take kindly to Bloom.
Several characters enter the pub, including Bloom,
behind whose back the Citizen starts throwing
insults.
Chapter Thirteen takes place at 8:00 p.m. Cissy
Caffrey, her twin brothers, and her friends Edy
Boardman and Gerty MacDowell (who sits a little
apart), are on the Sandymount Strand. Gerty is
impatient with the boys and their noise and mess, as
well as her friends, who are a little common, and she
daydreams at length about herself, her romantic
aspirations, and her spiritual strivings. The twins kick
their ball to Bloom, who is also on the beach, and
Gerty weaves him into her thoughts (she notices that
he is in mourning and constructs a tragic but
romantic tale around him). Cissy cockily goes to ask
Bloom the time, but his watch has stopped. A
fireworks display begins. Her friends run along the
beach, but Gerty stays near Bloom and leans back to
watch the fireworks (she knows that men can be
excited by immodest women, and she is allowing
Bloom to see up her skirt). When she leaves, Bloom
notices that she has a limp, and we learn that he has
masturbated.
In Chapter Fourteen, at 10:00, Bloom enters The
National Maternity Hospital to check on the condition
of Mina Purefoy, who went into labor in Chapter
Eight. To reinforce the theme of childbearing, Joyce
delivers a running analogy between the development
of the English language and the gestation of an
infant. While at the hospital, Bloom sees Stephen
carousing with other young men and worries that
doing so will spill and waste the seed of his talent.
In Chapter Fifteen, it is midnight at Bella Cohen's
brothel on Tyrone Street. This chapter is a series of
fantastic events, partially the result of drunkenness
on Steven's part, partially due to hallucinations
induced by guilt and remorse on Bloom's part.
Stephen and Lynch stagger in drunk and are mocked
by the hangers-on and patrons of the place. Bloom
follows, events and characters (Gerty, Molly, his
father, and his mother) stimulating his mind and
sense of guilt in a hallucinatory fashion. Bloom is
arrested for committing an unnamed nuisance and
undergoes a protracted trial in which he never knows
for certain what the charges are. His identity
constantly changes as characters from his past and
personifications of perverse desires enter the court.
Bloom speaks with one of the whores, Zoe Higgins,
who knows where Stephen is. When Bloom finds him,
Stephen, in his drunkenness, is attempting to settle
his bill. Bloom ensures that he isn't cheated. The
ghost of Stephen's mother appears, Stephen breaks
the chandelier, and they end up on the street. A fight
with some English privates (he has allegedly insulted
the King) leaves Stephen prostrate on the pavement.
The police appear, but Corny Kelleher and Bloom
smooth things over. Bloom gazes at the unconscious
Stephen and experiences a vision of his dead son,
Rudy.
The remaining three chapters, may be seen as
Ulysses' homecoming to Ithaca. These segments
cover the following events from The Odyssey: the
hero's return, his slaying of the treacherous suitors of
his faithful wife Penelope, and his joyful reunion with
her.
In Chapter Sixteen, it is 1:00 at a cabman's shelter.
Bloom and Stephen drink coffee. A number of minor
characters appear, and Stephen and Bloom interact
with them. Bloom shows Stephen a photograph of
Molly, the implication being that Stephen's talents
might be used to further Molly's career (and thus
oust Boylan from her affections). They leave and
discuss music as they walk.
In Chapter Seventeen, it is 2:00 in the morning at the
Bloom's home at 7 Eccles Street. The narrative style
is in the dry, question-and-answer style of the
catechism. Stephen and Bloom are brought together
for the last time here. Stephen seeks a father, Bloom
seeks a son. At the same time, each of them is
individual, yet harmoniously joined. In the text, they
are united by a word play, becoming "Stoom and
Blephen," but their union or reconciliation is
ephemeral. They urinate in the garden, Bloom invites
Stephen to stay, Stephen declines and leaves.
In Chapter Eighteen, called "Molly's Soliloquy," Molly
is in bed, just on the cusp of sleep. The entire chapter
is from Molly's point of view, revealing Molly's
thoughts. She is thinking about her husband, her
meeting with Boylan earlier that day (in that very
bed), her past, her hopes. Among other things, she
suspects Bloom of having an affair, she thinks of
woman's lot in the games of courting and mating,
she thinks of her lovers, and she longs for a
glamorous life. She thinks of beauty and ugliness,
and her thoughts are interrupted by a train whistle.
She thinks of her past life in Gibraltar and laments
the drabness of her present. She thinks about her
health and her daughter, she thinks about her visits
to the doctor, and muses about Stephen. Her
thoughts turn to Rudy and Bloom. She thinks of
humiliating her husband, she recalls the time when
she and Bloom first made love, letting the reader see
she clearly prefers Bloom to Boylan. Punctuation,
selection, comment, things usually associated with
authorial control, are missing.
Those familiar with The Odyssey will see the ironic
comparison between Molly Bloom and with Penelope,
who uses her knowledge of the construction of hers
and Ulysses' bed to confirm the identity of her long-
absent husband. This chapter begins and ends with
the affirmative Yes. The yeses represent Molly's
ongoing optimism to life in general, punctuating the
choices she has made and the memories she has
revisited during the entire soliloquy. The yesses also
represent Joyce's belief that women are a positive life
force, a notion he was at pains to demonstrate in this
remarkable soliloquy. The key here is to be found in
Molly's ultimate decision to serve Bloom breakfast in
bed tomorrow.
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Wednesday, August 13, 2014
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