The Most Dangerous Book: The Battle for James Joyce’s Ulysses (57 page)

BOOK: The Most Dangerous Book: The Battle for James Joyce’s Ulysses
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:
Ibid., p. 43.
resigned
:
Ibid., pp. 86, 91.
Egoist
print run
:
Morrisson, “Marketing British Modernism,” p. 466n.
reduced issues
and
£37:
DMW
, pp. 99

100.
wholesale prices
:
Paul Johnson,
Modern Times: A History of the World from the 1920s to the 1990s
(London: Phoenix, 1992), p. 35.
In 1915, zeppelins
:
Ian Castle,
London 1914–1917: The Zeppelin Menace
(Oxford: Osprey, 2008), pp. 35–39.
“indescribably beautiful”
:
Captain Breithaupt qtd. ibid., p. 44.
“Can’t you?”
:
Marsden qtd. in
DMW
, p. 107.
Pound suggested
:
Ibid., p. 98.
manager refused
:
Ibid., p. 92.
they cut two sentences
:
Weaver to JJ, July 28, 1915, Cornell, Series IV Box 14;
DMW
, p. 99.
“Her thighs, fuller”
:
JJ,
Portrait
, p. 171.
“we have decided”
:
DMW
, p. 99.
deleted two words
:
Ibid., p. 103.
“stupid censoring”
:
Weaver to JJ, July 28, 1915, Cornell, Series IV Box 14.
sent the manuscript
:
JJ to Grant Richards, Nov. 27, 1905,
LII
, p. 128.
no advance
:
Richards to JJ, Feb. 17, 1906, Cornell, Series IV Box 13.
cut several passages
:
JJ to Richards, May 5, 1906,
LII
, p. 133.
“Two Gallants”
:
Richards to JJ, April 23, 1906, Cornell, Series IV Box 13.
objected to the word
bloody
:
Ibid.
“she did not wish”
:
JJ, “Grace,”
Dubliners
(New York: Viking Press, 1962), p. 157.
“if any fellow”
:
JJ, “The Boarding House,” ibid., p. 68. The Viking edition does not italicize
his
, but other editions do, and the word is italicized in Joyce’s drafts and proofs.
the favor of listing
:
JJ to Richards, May 13, 1906,
LII
, p. 136.
“An Encounter”
:
JJ to Richards, May 5, 1906,
LII
, p. 134.
“bottle-green eyes”
:
JJ, “An Encounter,”
Dubliners
, p. 27.
“beyond anything”
:
Ell, p. 329.
nothing but the title
:
JJ to Richards, May 13, 1906,
LII
, p. 137.
advancement of Irish civilization
:
JJ to Richards, June 23, 1906,
LI
, p. 64.
“I cannot write”
:
JJ to Richards, May 5, 1906,
LII
, p. 134.
“do no good”
:
Richards to JJ, May 10, 1906, Cornell, Series IV Box 13.
“The appeal to my pocket”
:
JJ to Richards, May 13, 1906,
LII
, p. 137.
“Remember” he wrote
:
Richards to JJ, May 10, 1906, Cornell, Series IV Box 13.
“the very careful”
:
Ibid., Sept. 24, 1906.
several other publishers
:
LII
, p. 109n; Ell, p. 231; Ell, p. 267.
George Roberts
:
Colum and Colum,
Our Friend Joyce
, pp. 88–90; David Gardiner,
The Maunsel Poets: 1905–1926
(Dublin: Maunsel & Co., 2004), pp. 2–6.
“Here’s this fellow”
:
JJ and Hans Walter Gabler,
Dubliners: A Facsimile of Drafts & Manuscripts
(New York: Garland, 1978), p. 215 (Yale 2.7–18). See also JJ to Richards, May 13, 1906,
LII
, p. 137.
“bloody old bitch”
:
Ell, p. 311; P. J. Keating,
The Haunted Study: A Social History of the English Novel, 1875–1914
(London: Secker & Warburg, 1989), p. 271. The first version is in the 1906 draft sent to Richards. The second is in Joyce’s 1909 draft. The version published in 1914 reads “his old mother.”
a public letter
:
JJ, “A Curious History,” reprinted in
Egoist
1, no. 2 (Jan. 15, 1914), pp. 26

27.
threatened to sue
:
JJ to George Roberts, July 19, 1911,
LII
, p. 289.
wrote to King George
:
Ell, p. 315.
secure written authorization
:
Colum and Colum,
Our Friend Joyce
, p. 97.
hesitated
and
windows smashed:
McCourt,
Years
, p. 189.
“the publication of the book”
and
“clearly libelous”:
Roberts to JJ, Aug. 23, 1912, Cornell, Series IV Box 13.
went to the printer’s shop
:
Ell, p. 335.
ruddy-faced man
:
Colum and Colum,
Our Friend Joyce,
p. 92.
They
were “guillotined”
:
LII
, p. 318n.
“a monotonous wilderness”
:
Qtd. in Jonathon Green and Nicholas Karolides,
Encyclopedia of Censorship
(New York: Facts on File, 1990), pp. 464

5. For the influence of this case, see Weaver to JJ, March 25, 1916, Cornell, Series IV Box 14.
common law offense
and
Obscene Publications Act:
M.J.O. Roberts, “Morals, Art, and the Law: The Passing of the Obscene Publicans Act,”
Victorian Studies
28, no. 4 (Summer 1985), pp. 609–29; Colin Manchester, “Lord Campbell’s Act: England’s First Obscenity Statute,”
Journal of Legal History
9, no. 2 (1988), pp. 223–41. Obscenity had been an offense since a 1727 proclamation by King George III. The Obscene Publications Act does not specify sentencing. It details law enforcement powers.
gambling dens
:
Manchester, “Lord Campbell’s Act,” p. 227.
ships carrying arms
:
Metropolitan Police Act of 1839, 2&3 Vict. c. 47.
citizen’s complaint
:
Manchester, “Lord Campbell’s Act,” pp. 229–231.
“no artistic merit”
:
Campbell qtd. in Roberts, “Morals, Art,” p. 616.
Literary London didn’t object
:
Ibid., p. 618.
nine hundred members
:
Manchester, “Lord Campbell’s Act,” p. 239n.
Thomas Paine
:
Times
, (London), Dec. 25, 1820.
helped Lord Campbell
:
Roberts, “Moral Act,” p. 621.
In 1817 the Society
:
Manchester, “Lord Campbell’s Act,” pp. 224–5.
“She had to reach”
:
Émile Zola,
La Terre
(Vizetelly ed.) qtd. in Edward de Grazia,
Girls Lean Back Everywhere: The Law of Obscenity and the Assault on Genius
(New York: Random House, 1992), p. 42.
Henry Vizetelly
:
William Frierson, “The English Controversy in Realism in Fiction 1885–1895,”
PMLA
42 (1928), p. 534; de Grazia,
Girls Lean Back,
pp. 40–42.
two-shilling edition
:
See Vizetelly’s advertisements in the 1888 printing of George Moore’s
Spring Days. A Realistic Novel. A Prelude to “Don Juan”
(London: Vizetelly & Co., 1888).
Vizetelly boasted
:
De Grazia,
Girls Lean Back,
pp. 43–44.
“the troughs”
:
Tennyson,
Locksley Hall, Sixty Years After
(1886) qtd. in Frierson, “The English Controversy,” p. 536.
three months in prison
:
Ibid., pp. 540–2; de Grazia,
Girls Lean Back,
pp. 44–51.
“some critic will”
:
JJ to Grant Richards, May 13, 1906,
LII
, p. 137.
Church of England family
:
DMW
, pp. 4–32.
vegetables like asparagus
:
Ibid., p. 27.
Adam Bede
:
Ibid., p. 33.
The first thing
:
Ibid., p. 83.
“reputation for quarrelling”
:
Marsden to Weaver, May 7, 1917, qtd. in
DMW
, p. 137.
“a searching, piercing”
:
Monro Saw & Co to JJ, June 24, 1919,
LII
, pp. 444–5.
“to forge”
:
JJ,
Portrait,
p. 253.
river Weaver
:
DMW
, p. 23.
abandon the novel
:
Herbert Cape to James Pinker, Jan. 26, 1916, Yale Joyce, Box 2 Folder 49.
without so much as commenting
:
DMW
, p. 102.
called the manuscript “hopeless”
:
Richards qtd. in Ell, p. 384n.
could tolerate frankness
:
EP to JJ, Nov. 27, 1915,
EP/JJ
, p. 60.
“quite impossible”
:
Werner Laurie to James Pinker, Jan. 17, 1916, Yale Joyce, Box 2 Folder 69.
“It is too discursive”
:
Duckworth reader qtd. in
EP/JJ
, p. 64. My ellipsis.
“These vermin crawl”
:
EP to Pinker, Jan. 30, 1916,
EP/JJ
, pp. 65–66;
“the universal element”
:
EP, “‘Dubliners’ and Mr. James Joyce,”

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