A. he gets into an argument with another patron
B. he is disgusted by the eating habits of the patrons
C. he is refused service by an anti-Semitic waiter
D. the food is non-Kosher
A. like Bloom, Stephen is part Jewish
B. Stephen comes from a low-class family
C. Stephen drinks too much
D. Stephen refused to pray at his dying mother’s bedside
A. a devoted friend of the deceased Dignam
B. a man respected for his scientific interests
C. a shrewd financial speculator
D. a total outsider
A. accepted by the literary figures only because of Buck Mulligan’s influence
B. as much of an outsider in Dublin as Bloom is
C. resented because of his brutal honesty
D. well thought of by the Irish Literary Renaissance movement
A. anti-English diatribe
B. comic novel
C. philosophical investigation
D. tribute to Irish literature
A. a covert indictment of Irish nationalism
B. a result of considerable thought and research
C. his key to getting a better teaching job
D. mere performance
A. cannot speak Latin
B. gets his facts all wrong
C. speaks with a lisp
D. takes the British position on all matters
A. Achilles
B. Hector
C. King Priam
D. Nestor
A. academic
B. mock-heroic
C. operatic
D. reverential