Lotus Eaters

“Bath. Cleanse from drugs of the day.”
Bloom drifts through the city, picks up a flirtatious letter under a false name, watches Mass, and ends in the warm narcotic of a public bath.
- Beat 01To the post office
Bloom walks slowly toward Westland Row, half a tourist in his own city, eyeing tea-merchants' windows and imagining a sleepy East.
- Beat 02Henry Flower
At the post office he collects a letter addressed to 'Henry Flower, Esq.' — a flirtatious pen-pal correspondence he conducts under a false name with one Martha Clifford.
- Beat 03M'Coy on the street
He's waylaid by the chatty M'Coy, who asks Bloom to sign him in at Dignam's funeral. While they talk, Bloom is half-watching a stylish woman climb into a carriage and gets denied his glimpse.
- Beat 04All Hallows' Church
He steps into All Hallows and watches communion from the back pew, half-curious, half-amused, thinking about religion the way an outsider thinks about a soft drug.
- Beat 05The chemist and the bath
He stops at Sweny's chemist for Molly's face-lotion, buys a bar of lemon soap, then heads to the public baths to soak before the funeral.
Late morning. Bloom is killing time before a funeral, drifting through central Dublin in a soft, unfocused haze. He stops at the post office to pick up a letter from a woman called Martha, with whom he is conducting a tame, slightly seedy correspondence under a fake name — flirtation by post, no intention of meeting. He wanders into a Catholic church mid-service and watches the congregation with the curious, slightly amused eye of an outsider, half-admiring the comfort of it, half-clocking the con. He picks up a bar of lemon soap at the chemist, bumps into an acquaintance, fends off a tip on a horse, and ends drifting toward the Turkish baths where he imagines himself floating in warm water like a child. The whole chapter is anaesthesia. Every action is a small narcotic — flirtation, ritual, hot water, daydream — because somewhere underneath, the clock is ticking down to four o'clock and his wife. Today we'd recognise this as the texture of low-grade emotional avoidance: scrolling, snacking, micro-dosing pleasures so we don't have to sit with the big feeling. Bloom's version is gentler and more dignified, but it's the same instinct.
- Scene
- The Bath
- Hour
- 10:00 AM
- Organ
- Genitals
- Art
- Botany, chemistry
- Color
- —
- Symbol
- Eucharist
- Technic
- Narcissism
- Correspondence
- Lotus Eaters