Aeolus

“In the heart of the Hibernian metropolis.”
A chapter told in newspaper headlines. Bloom tries to place an ad while editors, lawyers, and Stephen swap rhetoric, gossip, and jokes.
- Beat 01Headlines start
The episode is broken every few paragraphs by mock newspaper headlines that grow more lurid and modern as the chapter goes on.
- Beat 02Bloom at the ad desk
Bloom is at the Freeman's Journal trying to renew an advertisement for the tea merchant Alexander Keyes. He shuttles between the printing floor and the editor's office.
- Beat 03The editor's room
Myles Crawford and a cast of Dublin talkers — Professor MacHugh, J. J. O'Molloy, Lenehan, Ned Lambert — perform set-piece speeches and remember famous trials and orations.
- Beat 04Stephen arrives
Stephen drops in to deliver Deasy's foot-and-mouth letter. The editors are charmed; they offer him drinks and a chance to write for them. He tells them a short, sour parable about two Dublin women on Nelson's Pillar.
- Beat 05Bloom rebuffed
Bloom comes back for confirmation on his ad. Crawford, half-drunk, half-grand, brushes him off ('he can kiss my arse'). Bloom pockets the insult and keeps walking.
Midday. Bloom is in the offices of the Freeman's Journal newspaper, trying to chase up a small advert for a client. The chapter is chopped into short scenes, each one slapped with a mock newspaper headline that gets sillier and more inflated as the day goes on — a parody of how journalism flattens and dramatises everything. Editors, journalists, lawyers and hangers-on wander in and out, telling jokes, swapping gossip, performing speeches about Irish patriotism and the great orators of the past. The dominant note is hot air: men who like the sound of their own voices congratulating each other on how well they speak. Bloom moves through this male performance trying to do an honest, small piece of business and is brushed off and slightly patronised. Stephen arrives separately to drop off Deasy's letter about cattle, gets pulled into the bluster, holds his own with a strange little story he invents on the spot. Bloom and Stephen are in the same building, brush past each other, and don't connect. The chapter is essentially about media — the way public language is mostly noise — and about Bloom as a quiet working person trying to get a job done in a room full of people who'd rather be performing.
- Scene
- The Newspaper
- Hour
- 12:00 PM
- Organ
- Lungs
- Art
- Rhetoric
- Color
- Red
- Symbol
- Editor
- Technic
- Enthymemic
- Correspondence
- Aeolus
Aeolus
Joyce mapped each chapter to an episode of Homer's Odyssey. This one echoes Aeolus — not as direct retelling but as structural shadow.