ATD 489-524
- 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 502
- 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
desolate sighs
(They're not gay?)
Apostlet
???
Cyprian Latewood
Possibly named after third-century Saint Cyprian, during his lifetime made Bishop of Carthage and eventually martyred under a Valerian persecution of Christians. Saint Cyprian is notable for having ordered his executioner to be paid twenty-five pieces of gold, then having stripped himself of clothes and awaiting, in prayer, his beheading. There are a number of thematic resonances between Pynchon's Cyrian and the biblical one; notably their primary characterization as men of submission and servitude. Additionally, etymologically, 'cyprian' signifies both Aphrodite-worshiper and prostitute. remy 07:33, 29 December 2006 (PST)
Eastern wog
Cf p222.
The German Sea
???
sub-Clerkenwell
???
annoyance
(Why?)
Page 490
gyps
???
Byron's Pool
???
"Div!"
???
"Whizzo!"
???
"That is that of which I speak!"
prob. homosexuality. cf. "I am the Love that dare not speak its name." -- Lord Arthur 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."
A rendition of That's what I'm talkinabout!
Cloisters Court
???
King's
???
Queen Anne's Gate
???
Newnham
???
Wrangleresses
???
Phillippa Fawcett
???
Grace Chisolm and Will Young
???
nautch-girl
???
socio-acrobatic aggrandizement
'social climbing'
opium beer
???
duc de Richelieu
???
Page 491
the City
???
can't ever tell
Dog-eat-dog capitalism?
Reginald "Ratty" McHugh
???
one more flag
IE, his father's wallpaper brand.
Balkan Sobranies
An upscale brand of cigarette.
lilies-and-lassitude humor of the '90s
Cult of Oscar Wilde?
table d'hôte
???
Very well, I contradict myself.
???
Page 492
divine... prosaic
(Walt was of course prosaic himself before he became divine.)
xanthrocroid
???
Capsheaf
Is this a third speaker, or another name for Ratty?
viva
Slangy short form of viva voce, an oral examination.
Crayke
???
D'accord
French: right, OK.
reputation for viciousness
???
croft
???
Mavis Grind
???
orthopædic journals
???
Dymphna
???
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.
McHugh
Talking to self?
alfresceehwh
???
Lorelei, Noellyn, and Faun
???
High Albedo
Albedo: power of reflecting light. Blondes reflect more light than brunettes.
white veils
???
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.
Page 494
wrong altar
???
gnomic tenses
???
circs
???
'If she's not content with a vegetable love'
a reference to Marvell's bitterly ironic seventeenth century poem 'To His Coy Mistress'. The phrase 'vegetable love' refers, comically, to a Platonic love between man and woman, assuirng the coty mistress that, had he 'world enough and time', he would not threaten her physically.
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
???
George Grossmith...and that jolly Weedon
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....
[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.
cp. Wilhelm II file
???
"Map of the World"
???
Newmarket
A famous English race-course, hence the following reference to the 'racing season'.
Morse and Vassilev
???
East Rumelian
???
zadruga
???
tchifliks
???
gradinarski druzhini
???
gossamer
Pynchon draws him as 'wet' as possible?
Page 496
sod... pouffe
???
failed canards
???
Lent... Easter... Long Vacation
???
Colonial 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
???
Zeta function... conjecture
???
'joint'
???
Bob's your uncle
???
Limehouse
???
Page 497
excess
(So not wholly gossamer?)
Coronation Red
???
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.
Australian season
A reference to the Australian cricket season which runs throughout their summer and the Eurpopean winter.
New Court
???
Tavernier-Gravet slide rules
???
High Church
???
Mags and Nuncs and Matins
???
not Zion
???
Compline hour
???
Te Deum
???
Khaki Election
???
Filtham
???
Page 498
chromaticism... Richard Strauss
???
Staindrop
???
"Filtham's Tedium"
(Talk about overlabored puns...)
dress regulations
???
Gauss
???
Ramanujan
???
display of hurt feelings
Cf p30.
Page 499
light up
Dark world vs spark of value.
[zeta]-function
???
Hilbert thinks of nothing else
???
desire... of rather a specialized sort
???
Great Eastern
???
Page 500
Weierstrass and Sofia Kovalevskaia
???
sounds like maths
???
folio
???
four-color chromolithograph
???
Snazzbury
???
Silent Frock
Cf noise-canceling headphones.
toilette
???
Page 501
green, white, and mauve stripes
???
black crepon
???
Italian-cloth
???
Page 502
modern lettering
???
L'ARIMEAUX ET QUEURLIS
Larry, Moe, and Curly's
twilling
???
Page 502
Earl's Court Wheel
???
whelks
???
Chinese Turkestan railway shares
???
jellied eel
???
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. Found in 1895, the "Hammers" are playing their home games at Boleyn Ground aka "Upton Park". Yep, soccer.
lupine liminality
???
hydrangeas
???
Hardy, whimsical
???
Page 504
Harwich... German Sea
???
Hook of Holland
???
madhouse at Osnabrück
???
Page 505
plug hats
???
Cobh
???
Page 506
Euclid
???
elms in Cleveland
(Before Dutch elm disease?)
went on for years
???
Shorty
???
Page 507
how little I cared
(Blaming Krakatoa???)
palm upward
???
Prospect Avenue
???
leaf-spring suspension
???
overrun
???
Flats
???
Page 508
Cuyahoga
???
your exact face
(How common?)
Page 509
descending minor triad
???
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
???
cosmos
???
Page 510
first momentous glance
Page 349 only?
Elis
Yale University students, called so after founder Eli Yale.
Page 511
preferring
Cf Rose in "Titanic".
Root Tubsmith
???
Fuchs, Schwarz... Frobenius
???
Professor Manning
???
Marseilles
???
species of tarantella
???
dreamed it
(Page?)
Cigar Deck
???
Page 512
how to stop looking
Cf p27.
fooling
(They both miss it?)
lobelias
???
Victor Herbert
???
Wolf-Ferrari
???
Page 513
1st Edition Typo
"She smlld falsely"
Page 515
high-hatting
Snubbing, cutting.
twenty-knot
???
uncreated
Featureless?
after 1914
Still 10 years away.
S.M.S. Emperor Maximilian
S.M.S.: Seines 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
???
dreadnoughts
???
Slavonian
???
Schultz-Thorneycroft
???
Parsons turbines
???
British men-o'-war
Warships.
Page 516
shell-rooms-to-be
???
twelve-inch barrels
???
shelter deck
???
casemates
???
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. 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
???
horizontally disposed
???
Lloyd Arsenale
???
Stabilimento Tecnico
???
Page 517
Promontorio
???
O.I.C. Bodine
Stands for...? nope
fermented potato mash
Cf Veikko's vodka p82.
four shafts
???
Mauretania
???
Zu befehl, Herr Hauptheitzer
???
Black Gang
???
Oberhauptheitzer
???
Mannlicher
???
"Dampf mehr!"
???
singlet
???
Page 518
Marconi room
???
design maximum of nine degrees
???
nymphs
???
"Porca miseria"
???
Page 519
tight circle
Military as inane as circus clowns.
deeper levels
(Eg particle vs wave?)
Chinese
???
nicht wahr
???
Graz
???
bilge-crab
???
Page 520
Teutonic
???
Mulai Ahmed er-Raisuli
???
Agadir, Queen of the Iron Coast
???
Sus... Susi
???
Abdel Aziz
???
Canaries
???
Lübeck
???
Berbers
???
Page 521
tree-climbing goats
???
argan trees
???
Gnaoua
???
mlouk gnaoui
???
Seigneurs Noirs
???
Habsburg navy
???
Mogador road
???
Tawil Balak
???
Rahman
???
Formalhaut
???
Moïsés
???
Jonah... Massa
???
Page 522
kashbah
???
Ighir Ufrani
???
alimzah
???
tasargelt
???
scruff
???
Staketsel
???
lazarettes
???
mon chou
"My cabbage." A french term of affection.
Page 523
moon deck
???
lower orlop
???
lateen-riggers
???
Page 524
exhilirated Second occurrence of this misspelling of exhilarated.
Piazza Grande
???
Denza
???
Antonio Smareglia
???
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 |