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There is maybe nothing that sounds more boring than hearing two people talk about soil, but friend, prepare to be amazed at the details of what makes this amazing substance the life blood of Earth itself!
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Stephen's reflections on a poor student plumb the limits of a mother's love.
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A boy stays after class, and Joyce toys with both authority and identity.
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As Stephen's class lets out, a riddle is asked and answered, satisfying nobody.
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Stephen is a somewhat merciful teacher. Musings on Jesus, government, and riddles.
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Stephen's classroom; a library in Paris; Blake and Aristotle; dragons and souls.
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Observations on the author, and the history of Ulysses.
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In Stephen's classroom, Joyce brings in Milton. Reflections on drowning.
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In Stephen's musings on history, real and potential, Frank finds a recurring Joycean theme.
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Stephen muses on first-rate wit and second-hand history.
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In Stephen's classroom, four girls' names hint at religion, class, and sex.
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In Stephen's classroom, Frank muses on the names of cookies and of boys.
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Stephen continues his lesson, and we learn something of both Pyrrhus and Nestor.
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Mulligan bathes, and Stephen takes his leave. The end of chapter 1.
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Today Chuck and Josh take a shallow dive in the warm pool that is the NY Times Crossword Puzzle.
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We begin Chapter 2, and find Stephen in the classroom with old battles, radical poets, and the daughters of memory.
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Gossip at the swimming hole: an unlikely officer, redheads, supermen, and missing ribs.
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Stephen, Mulligan, and Haines encounter bathers, and Joyce employs some foreshadowing with news of Mulligan's brother.
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Stephen fathoms the depths of both Hell and Dublin Bay, and Frank muses upon T. S. Eliot.
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Stephen presents us with a roll call of heresiarchs.
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