A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 312 pages of information about A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.

A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 312 pages of information about A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man.

Then went to college.  Other wrangle with little round head rogue’s eye Ghezzi.  This time about Bruno the Nolan.  Began in Italian and ended in pidgin English.  He said Bruno was a terrible heretic.  I said he was terribly burned.  He agreed to this with some sorrow.  Then gave me recipe for what he calls risotto Alla BERGAMASCA.  When he pronounces a soft O he protrudes his full carnal lips as if he kissed the vowel.  Has he?  And could he repent?  Yes, he could:  and cry two round rogue’s tears, one from each eye.

Crossing Stephen’s, that is, my green, remembered that his countrymen and not mine had invented what Cranly the other night called our religion.  A quartet of them, soldiers of the ninety-seventh infantry regiment, sat at the foot of the cross and tossed up dice for the overcoat of the crucified.

Went to library.  Tried to read three reviews.  Useless.  She is not out yet.  Am I alarmed?  About what?  That she will never be out again.

Blake wrote: 

    I wonder if William Bond will die
    For assuredly he is very ill.

Alas, poor William!

I was once at a diorama in Rotunda.  At the end were pictures of big nobs.  Among them William Ewart Gladstone, just then dead.  Orchestra played O Willie, we have missed you.

A race of clodhoppers!

March 25, morning.  A troubled night of dreams.  Want to get them off my chest.

A long curving gallery.  From the floor ascend pillars of dark vapours.  It is peopled by the images of fabulous kings, set in stone.  Their hands are folded upon their knees in token of weariness and their eyes are darkened for the errors of men go up before them for ever as dark vapours.

Strange figures advance as from a cave.  They are not as tall as men.  One does not seem to stand quite apart from another.  Their faces are phosphorescent, with darker streaks.  They peer at me and their eyes seem to ask me something.  They do not speak.

March 30.  This evening Cranly was in the porch of the library, proposing a problem to Dixon and her brother.  A mother let her child fall into the Nile.  Still harping on the mother.  A crocodile seized the child.  Mother asked it back.  Crocodile said all right if she told him what he was going to do with the child, eat it or not eat It.

This mentality, Lepidus would say, is indeed bred out of your mud by the operation of your sun.

And mine?  Is it not too?  Then into Nile mud with it!

April 1.  Disapprove of this last phrase.

April 2.  Saw her drinking tea and eating cakes in Johnston’s, Mooney and O’Brien’s.  Rather, lynx-eyed Lynch saw her as we passed.  He tells me Cranly was invited there by brother.  Did he bring his crocodile?  Is he the shining light now?  Well, I discovered him.  I protest I did.  Shining quietly behind a bushel of Wicklow bran.

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A Portrait of the Artist as a Young Man from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.