Ulysses - A collection of Garry's Mod lua projects. To keep up with the latest and greatest changes to ULX/ULib, please use the following links to access our SVN repository. A summary of Part X (Section2) in James Joyce's Ulysses. Learn exactly what happened in this chapter, scene, or section of Ulysses and what it means. Perfect for acing essays, tests, and quizzes, as well as for writing lesson plans.
Ulysses 2.0.2.dmg (12.72 MB). Name: Ulysses Version: 2.0.2 Mac Platform: Intel Includes: Pre-K'ed OS version: OS X 10.10 or later Processor type(s) & speed: 64-bit processor Courtesy of TNT Team (repackaged by techietrash to remove quarantine attribute) Release Date: April 25, 2015 What's New in Version 2.0.2 This update fixes a couple of late.
Amor matris: subjective and objectivegenitive.
![Ulysses 2 2 Ulysses 2 2](https://live.staticflickr.com/8070/8247398222_7a32910c14_b.jpg)
Summary
Stephen is teaching a history class on Pyrrhus’s victory—theclass is not very disciplined. He drills the students, and a boynamed Armstrong phonetically guesses that Pyrrhus was “a pier.”Stephen indulges him and expands on Armstrong’s answer, callinga pier “a disappointed bridge.” He imagines himself subservientlydropping this witticism later for Haines’s amusement. Thinking ofPhyrrus’s and Caesar’s murders, Stephen wonders about the philosophical inevitabilityof certain historical events—is history the fulfillment of the onlypossible course of events, or one of many?
Stephen takes the class through Milton’s Lycidas ashe continues to ponder his own questions about history, questionshe thought about while reading Aristotle in a Paris library. Animage from Milton’s poem makes Stephen think of God’s effect onall men. Stephen thinks of the lines of a common riddle then decidesto tell the students his own riddle as they gather their thingsand prepare to leave to play field hockey. Stephen alone laughsat his impenetrable riddle about a fox burying his grandmother undera bush.
The students leave, except for Sargent, who needs helpwith his arithmatic. Stephen looks at the ugly Sargent and imaginesSargent’s mother’s love for him. Stephen shows Sargent the sums,thinking briefly of Buck’s joke that Stephen’s Hamlet theory isproven by algebra. Thinking again of amor matris, ormother’s love, Stephen is reminded of himself as a child, clumsylike Sargent. Sargent heads outside to join the hockey game. Stephenwalks outside, then goes to wait in Deasy’s office while Deasy,the schoolmaster, settles a hockey dispute.
Mr. Deasy pays Stephen his wages and shows off his savingsbox. Deasy lectures Stephen on the satisfaction of money earnedand the importance of keeping money carefully and of saving it.Deasy remarks that an Englishman’s greatest pride is the abilityto claim he has paid his own way and owes nothing. Stephen mentallytallies up his own abundant debts.
Deasy imagines that Stephen, whom he assumes is Fenian,or an Irish Catholic nationalist, disrespects Deasy as a Tory—aProtestant loyal to the English. Deasy argues his Irish credentials—hehas witnessed much Irish history. Deasy then asks Stephen to usehis influence to get a letter of Deasy’s printed in the newspaper.While he finishes typing it, Stephen looks around his office atthe portraits of racehorses and remembers a trip to the racetrackwith his old friend Cranly.
Stephen hears shouts welcoming a goal scored on the hockey field.Deasy hands Stephen his completed letter and Stephen skims it. Theletter warns of the dangers of foot-and-mouth cattle disease andsuggests that it can be cured. It seems that Deasy resents the influenceof those people who currently have power over the situation. Healso seems to blame Jews for similar corruption and destructionof national economies. Stephen argues that greedy merchants canbe Jewish or gentile, but Deasy insists that the Jews have sinnedagainst “the light.”
ULYSSES | |
---|---|
Owners: WorldCom International, BT, France Telecom and KPN | |
Landing points Calibre 4 6 0 2. ULYSSES-1: 1. St Margaret's Bay, Kent, United Kingdom 2. Calais, France ULYSSES-2: 3. Lowestoft, Suffolk, United Kingdom 4. Near IJmuiden, the Netherlands | |
Date of first use | 1997 |
ULYSSES is a submarine communications cable network divided into two sections: ULYSSES-1 and ULYSSES-2 that transit the English Channel and the North Sea, respectively. It carries telecommunications and internet signals to-and-from the UK to continental Europe. It began service in 1997 and is owned by WorldCom International, BT, France Telecom and KPN.
Network[edit]
ULYSSES-1 has landing points in:
1. St Margaret's Bay, Kent, United Kingdom
2. Calais, Pas-de-Calais, France
1. St Margaret's Bay, Kent, United Kingdom
2. Calais, Pas-de-Calais, France
Block macos. ULYSSES-2 has landing points in:
3. Lowestoft, Suffolk, United Kingdom
4. Near IJmuiden, North Holland, the Netherlands
3. Lowestoft, Suffolk, United Kingdom
4. Near IJmuiden, North Holland, the Netherlands
Ulysses 2018
The route then continues inland into mainland Europe and joins the two cables together at:
5. Amsterdam, Netherlands
6. Düsseldorf, Germany
7. Frankfurt, Germany
8. Saarbrücken, Germany
9. Brussels, Belgium
10. Reims, France
11. Fresnes-lès-Montauban, France
12. Paris, France
5. Amsterdam, Netherlands
6. Düsseldorf, Germany
7. Frankfurt, Germany
8. Saarbrücken, Germany
9. Brussels, Belgium
10. Reims, France
11. Fresnes-lès-Montauban, France
12. Paris, France
And from the two UK landing points the cable connects together at:
13. London, UK
13. London, UK
![Ulysses 2 2 Ulysses 2 2](https://static.wixstatic.com/media/cf1115_2ae9f586aabc4b7c9b14e9419a19628c~mv2.jpg/v1/fill/w_264,h_436,al_c,q_80,usm_0.66_1.00_0.01/cf1115_2ae9f586aabc4b7c9b14e9419a19628c~mv2.webp)
References[edit]
Ulysses 2 2 Trailer
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