Michael Groden - Notes on James Joyce's Ulysses |
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Lestrygonians: Comments by Joyce
"Among other things," he said, "my book is the epic of
the human body. The only man I know who has attempted the same thing is
Phineas Fletcher. But then his Purple Island is purely descriptive,
a kind of coloured anatomical chart of the human body. In my book the
body lives in and moves through space and is the home of a full human
personality. The words I write are adapted to express first one of its
functions then another. In Lestrygonians the stomach dominates
and the rhythm of the episode is that of the peristaltic movement."
"But the minds, the thoughts of the characters," I began.
"If they had no body they would have no mind," said Joyce. "It's
all one. Walking towards his lunch my hero, Leopold Bloom, thinks of his wife,
and says to himself, 'Molly's legs are out of plumb.' At another time of day
he might have expressed the same thought without any underthought of food. But
I want the reader to understand always through suggestion rather than direct
statement."
(Frank Budgen, James Joyce and the Making of "Ulysses," p. 21 / p. 21)
and see Joyce's comments about getting the exact order of the words right - he is talking about a sentence from this episode