Difference between revisions of "O foenix culprit!"

From FinnegansWiki
Jump to navigationJump to search
 
Line 2: Line 2:
 
** [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exultet Wikipedia]
 
** [http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Exultet Wikipedia]
  
* '''Phoenix Park:''' Dublin's great municpal park, which is associated with [[HCE|HCE's]] crime
+
* '''Phoenix Park:''' Dublin's great municpal park, which is associated with [[HCE|HCE's]] crime, also with the Phoenix Park Murders in May 1882 (The Invincibles were a radical group responsible for the murders and some of its members were hanged)
 +
** Phoneix Park Murders: [https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Phoenix_Park_Murders Wikipedia]
  
 
* '''phoenix:''' the dying and resurrecting bird of Egyptian mythology (the symbol of the phoenix was used by Michelet to explain Vico's theory)
 
* '''phoenix:''' the dying and resurrecting bird of Egyptian mythology (the symbol of the phoenix was used by Michelet to explain Vico's theory)

Latest revision as of 21:59, 24 February 2020

  • O felix culpa: (Latin) “O happy fault” → an allusion to the Latin chant which accompanies the lighting of the Paschal candle during the Catholic service of Holy Saturday; it begins with the line, Exsultet iam Angelica turba caelorum ("Now let the Angelic host of Heaven rejoice") and includes the lines, O certe necessarium Adae peccatum, quod Christi morte deletum est! O felix culpa, quae talem ac tantum meruit habere Redemptorem! ("O truly necessary sin of Adam, which the death of Christ has blotted out! O happy fault, which merited such and so great a redeemer") → Adam and Eve's disobedience (the "happy fault") is contrasted with the obedience of the citizens of Dublin enjoined in the city's motto, which is alluded to in the preceding lines → St Augustine is often cited as the author of the Exsultet, probably because of a passage in The City of God (De Civitate Dei, Book 15, Chapter 22) in which he refers to his own verses in praise of the paschal candle
  • Phoenix Park: Dublin's great municpal park, which is associated with HCE's crime, also with the Phoenix Park Murders in May 1882 (The Invincibles were a radical group responsible for the murders and some of its members were hanged)
  • phoenix: the dying and resurrecting bird of Egyptian mythology (the symbol of the phoenix was used by Michelet to explain Vico's theory)
  • foe