Hi, everybody!!
I am new here, and I'd like to ask You to help me to interpret a certain passage from James Joyce's "Finnegan Wake." I am a student of literature and currently working over a project on Terence McKenna's literary heritage.
In his books McKenna is constantly alluding to James Joyce's works, and some of his quotations are literally incomprehensible for a foreigner such as I am. My mother' tongue is Russian. Besides, "Finnegan Wake" hasn't yet been translated into Russian. For all I know, the last attempt to translate some forty pages of that book took around five years or so. Alas, James Joyce isn't easy reading for retardant students.
So, closer to the point. The passage in question at the time being is:
"Here in Moicane we flop on the seamy side, but up n'ent, prospector, you sprout all your worth and you woof your wings, so if you want to be Phoenixed, come and be parked."
It is that simple, but I can only guess what it means.So, if somebody could go to the trouble to transliterate it into a bit easier understandable English, I would be deeply touched.
Besides, can anybody help me with pronunciation of the name Moicane, because I know that Gaelic names sound quite differently from what they look.
Thanking You in anticipation.
With the best regards. blacklilac![]()



So, if somebody could go to the trouble to transliterate it into a bit easier understandable English, I would be deeply touched.
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