
"And what a city Dublin is!" he continued. Richard Ellmann, James Joyce, (rev.1982), pp.111, 637 & 639)įor Joyce, Dublin can bear comparison with London: During the 1931 stay they, accompanied by Nora's sister Kathleen, went to the Tower of London, Madame Tussaud's Waxworks, Windsor Forest, Stonehenge, and to places associated with Shakespeare, etc. I wonder what is Irish law on the point or where did I get the idea?." He chose his father's birthday, July 4, as the wedding day, perhaps remembering that John Joyce (who died in Dublin on December 29, 1931) had been grieved by his elopement. When I lived in Ireland I always believed that marriage by habit and repute was recognized in the United Kingdom. He wrote to Miss Harriet Shaw Weaver, "In reading a book on a legal position of women, I find that under Scots law I am legally married, and my daughter-in-law tells me, the same holds good in the United States. First they stayed for a little over a month in the Hotel Belgravia in Grosvenor Gardens, S.W.1, then moved at the beginning of May to a flat at 28b Campden Grove, Kensington, W.8, where they planned to stay indefinitely (although they stayed there until September and moved back to Paris). In middle April 1931 Joyce and Nora went to London to marry following the British law. In late September 1904 Joyce tried to find a job in London for Nora. The older poet spent the whole day with Joyce, buying him breakfast, lunch and dinner, paying for cabs, and took him to Arthur Symons and to the people he thought would be most useful. Yeats, informed beforehand of his arrival time, came to Euston Station at six in the morning to meet him. On the way to Paris he stopped in London where he could meet William Butler Yeats. On DecemJoyce left Dublin for Paris to study medicine. Joyce, who had a British passport, visited this city many times. London, located between Ireland and the Continent, is a very influential city for Joyce as well as Dublin, Paris, Trieste and Zurich. The Cliffs of Moher (Aillte an Mhothair), County Clare Loch Ness (Loch Nis) of the Caledonian Canal Loch Lochy (Loch Lochaidh) and Loch Oich (Loch Omhaich) of the Caledonian Canal

Glen Coe (Gleann Comhann), the Central Highlands Inveraray Castle (Caisteal Inbhir Aora), Argyll and Bute Loch Lomond & The Trossachs National Park (Pairc Naiseanta Loch Laomainn is nan Troisichean) The Charles Dickens Museum, 48 Doughty Street, London WC1N 2LX Sherlock Holmes, 221B Baker Street London NW1 The Palace of Westminster (the Houses of Parliament)

Atelier Aterui: Image Index: London and Joyce JOYCEANĢ8 B Campden Grove, Kensington, London W.8
