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| Check out this mystery
~ and review in The Guardian ~ for numerous fun allusions to James Joyce's Ulysses. Quirke even sees a "lanky-looking galoot in a gabardine raincoat" (148). |
Bloomsday Eve
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Back in April ~ on Jeopardy!
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My brother gave an excellent guess:
"What is the destruction
of Martello Tower #3 in Quebec City?"
And so close, he nearly had it: " . . . the cedar-shingled roof of Martello Tower #3 was destroyed by fire on June 6, 1857 by fire and replaced with a metal roof. The tower was demolished in 1904 to make way for a hospital pavilion."
Appropriately, a Martello - themed answer -- about Canada rather than Ireland -- constitutes a classic "Bloomism", which is "a term coined by scholar Richard Ellmann to describe a characteristic mental habit of Leopold Bloom in James Joyce’s Ulysses: 'an uneasy but scrupulous recollection of a factual near-miss.' It refers to moments when Bloom accurately recalls the gist or context of a fact, name, or phrase, but gets the specific detail slightly wrong, resulting in a funny or almost-correct error."
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| Update 2025:
The Forty Foot & The Martello Tower |




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