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Page "Finnegan's Wake" ¶ 2
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Tim and Finnegan
In the ballad, the hod-carrier Tim Finnegan, born " with a love for the liquor ", falls from a ladder, breaks his skull, and is thought to be dead.
* The last part of the song where Tim Finnegan says, " D ' ainm an diabhal ", means " In the name of the devil ", and comes from the Gaelic.
" Finnegan's Wake " is famous for providing the basis of James Joyce's final work, Finnegans Wake ( 1939 ), in which the comic resurrection of Tim Finnegan is employed as a symbol of the universal cycle of life.
He claimed to be a descendant of the " Tim Finnegan " whose death and resurrection are celebrated in the song Finnegan's Wake.

Tim and lived
In the 1960s Heath had lived at a flat in the Albany, off Piccadilly ; at the unexpected end of his premiership he took the flat of a Conservative MP Tim Kitson for some months.
One of these, John Willis, lived in the area and was responsible for introducing record producer Tim Smit to the gardens.
The Hot Springs County Museum and Cultural Center has an eclectic collection of memorabilia from local pioneers circa 1890 through 1910, with plans to focus on Tim McCoy, who lived in Hot Springs County from 1912 to 1942, during which he built the High Eagle Ranch about 45 miles west of town.
* Musician Tim Rose lived on West 46th street, Restaurant Row, in Hell's Kitchen for a decade or more in the 1980s and 90s, and later referred to it as " skid row " in a song called " Because You're Rich.
With the television producer Tim Taylor, Aston began to work on creating shows that would bring archaeology into popular consciousness, being involved in the creation of the short lived Time Signs ( 1991 ), which was followed by the far more successful Time Team, which began airing in 1994 and continues today.
Cecil Court bookseller Tim Bryars consulted original source material, including the parish rate books of the time and a number of antique maps, to establish where in the street the young Mozart lived.
This is because the band relocated to the home town of new lead singer Tim Burgess ( who lived in Northwich ) before the 1990 release of The Charlatans ' debut single " Indian Rope ", on the band's own Dead Dead Good Records label.
midfielder Gary O ' Neil, former Millwall FC and current Everton FC midfielder Tim Cahill and Reading FC ( previously Blackburn Rovers ) striker Jason Roberts lived in Bromley, English darts player Les Capewell was born in Bromley, Manchester United defender Rio Ferdinand, Leicester City F. C.
Joey met his little brother and moved in with Tim at the beginning of season 6 but soon afterwards was reunited and lived with Nell and Addy in New York.
A number of well known New Zealand musicians, artists, writers and potters currently live or have lived in the area, including singer / songwriter Tim Finn ( who wrote the song " I Hope I Never " there ), actress Alma Evans-Freake, author Maurice Shadbolt, painters Colin McCahon ( whose house is preserved as a museum ) and Bibi Asgher, photographers Brian Brake and Peter Evans, poet John Caselberg and potter Len Castle.
On June 17, 2006, DeCicco married Tim Best, a 44-year-old native Londoner who'd previously lived in Texas, that she first met at the John Labatt Centre in downtown London during the 2005 Memorial Cup hockey championship.
Jonny Smith later joined the show, with Tim Lovejoy for series 10 who was very short lived on the show.
Tim Holt Drive in Harrah, where he and his wife had lived, was subsequently named in his honor.
Running from 1944 to 1951 noted panelists included Tim Buck, who lived nearby.
In a deleted scene from the 3rd season of Homicide, Munch mentions to both Meldrick Lewis and Tim Bayliss that he had an uncle who lived up north but was unsure of what became of him — this is presumably Andrew.
Living in or near A virtual " who's who " of London ’ s underground ' glitterati ' lived close to The Pheasantry, including Martin Sharp, Eric Clapton, Germaine Greer, artist Tim Whidborne, ' prominent London identity ' David Litvinoff ( production adviser on Nicolas Roeg's Performance ), writer Anthony Haden-Guest ( author of The Last Party: Studio 54, Disco and the Culture of the Night ) and another friend from Melbourne, photographer Robert Whitaker, lensman of choice for many leading rock groups on the scene, including The Beatles and Cream.
" Tim used to live in a house that I lived in too, and we both used to move in and out ... that is, we stayed there alternately.
Tim Morris has lived in the Derwent Valley of Tasmania since 1976.
Tim was born in Wellington, New Zealand, but has lived in the Pacific and the UK.
Tim Berners-Lee lived in Cessy when he invented the World Wide Web.

Tim and Walken
Over five hundred people attended his funeral, many of the actors and comedians who had worked with him on Saturday Night Live and on film including Phil Hartman ( who would die five months later ), Adam Sandler, Brendan Fraser, Joe Mantegna, Lorne Michaels, Dan Aykroyd, Steve Buscemi, Mike Myers, Christopher Walken, John Goodman, Eugene Levy, George Wendt, Norm Macdonald, Holly Wortell, Rob Schneider, Chris Rock, Tim Meadows, and Tom Arnold.
* Christopher Walken played a version of Irving's Headless Horseman, a brutal and sadistic Hessian mercenary sent to America during the American Revolutionary War, in Tim Burton's 1999 film Sleepy Hollow.

Tim and gentleman
Cynthia breaks off her engagement to Roger, sustaining both family and public rebukes and insults for her inconstancy, then quickly accepts and marries Mr Henderson ( Tim Wallers ), a professional gentleman she met in London.

Tim and Irish
The family names, the predominant Catholic religion, the prevalence of Irish music – even the accents of the people – are so reminiscent of rural Ireland that Irish author Tim Pat Coogan has described Newfoundland as " the most Irish place in the world outside of Ireland ".
The ninety-two room building formerly served as the ' out-of-season ' residence of the Irish Lord Lieutenant and the residence of two of the three Irish Governors-General: Tim Healy and James McNeill.
* January 4 – Tim Wheeler, Irish Musician
Tim Healy is appointed first Governor-General of the Irish Free State and W. T. Cosgrave becomes President of the Executive Council.
Both the Irish Times and the Irish Press, which was then edited by Tim Pat Coogan, were extremely critical of the government's curtailment of freedom of speech and in particular of the Minister of Posts and Telegraphs Conor Cruise O ' Brien which was used against the IRA.
Timothy Michael Healy, KC ( 17 May 1855 – 26 March 1931 ), also known as Tim Healy, was an Irish nationalist politician, journalist, author, barrister and one of the most controversial Irish Members of Parliament ( MPs ) in the House of Commons of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland.
The Provisional Government under W. T. Cosgrave hired the use of the main lecture theatre of the Royal Dublin Society in its headquarters in Leinster House, a formal ducal palace, to enable a formal state opening of the new two chamber Oireachtas of the new Irish Free State and the delivery of the speech from the throne by the new Governor-General of the Irish Free State, Tim Healy in December 1922.
For example, the first Governor-General of the Irish Free State, Tim Healy, was instructed by the British Dominions Office in 1922 to withhold the Royal Assent on any Bill passed by the two houses of the Oireachtas ( the Irish parliament ) that attempted to change or abolish the Oath of Allegiance.
The Irish Nationalist MP Tim Healy wrote to Bright, wishing him a speedy recovery and " Your great services to our people can never be forgotten, for it was when Ireland had fewest friends that your voice was loudest on her side.
* Tim Wheeler ( born 1977 ), Irish rock musician
Both The Irish Times and The Irish Press, which was then edited by Tim Pat Coogan, were extremely critical of the government's curtailment of freedom of speech and in particular of the Minister for Posts and Telegraphs Conor Cruise O ' Brien which was used against the PIRA.
Nossiter then informed Tim Pat Coogan who was the editor of the Irish Press.
" After this speech, Tim Healy, the Irish Nationalist, a master of parliamentary invective, sent Smith a note, " I am old, and you are young, but you have beaten me at my own game.
Tim Pat Coogan, the Irish historian, said at the time of the USC, " The B Specials were the rock on which any mass movement by the IRA in the North has inevitably floundered.
In his reply Sadlier noted that he was “ satisfied that the harp was very early in the 12th century an Irish badge ...” In December 1922, George Sigerson, the President of the National Literary Society, recommended to Tim Healy, the Governor-General of the Irish Free State that the harp should be adopted as the symbol of the Free State.

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