Lamppost (Cashel Boyle O'Connor Fitzmaurice Tisdall) Farrell A Dublin eccentric known for his wild clothes and for his habit of walking outside of lampposts. Farrell is sitting in the National Library's reading room during the discussion of Shakespeare in "Scylla and Charybdis."
James (Skin-the-Goat) Fitzharris He drove the decoy car after the Phoenix Park Assassinations of 1882. The cabman's shelter to which Bloom and Stephen go in "Eumaeus" is said to be operated by him (but probably is not).
"Henry Flower" Bloom's alias in his correspondence with Martha Clifford.
Nosey Flynn From "Counterparts" in Dubliners. A frequenter of Davy Byrne's, who praises Bloom in "The Lestrygonians."
Ignatius Gallaher From "A Little Cloud" in Dubliners. The star reporter discussed in the newspaper offices in "Aeolus," Gallaher broke the story of the Phoenix Park Assassinations, possibly (Joyce implies) by infiltrating the group of Irish extremists.
Lieutenant Stanley G. Gardner Discussed in "Penelope," Gardner is probably the only person (besides Bloom and Boylan) who has complete sexual intercourse with Molly during her marriage. If the affair did take place, it happened between 1899 and 1901. Gardner died of fever in South Africa during the Boer War.
Garryowen The large dog that menaces Bloom in Barney Kiernan's pub in "The Cyclops." It belongs to Gerty MacDowell's grandfather, Giltrap.
Uncle Richie Goulding Stephen's uncle, whom he considers visiting in "Proteus." Simon Dedalus intensely dislikes his brother-in-law, who has been ruined by drink and who forms a pathetic figure as he eats with Bloom (another outcast) in "The Sirens."
Haines The patronizing, anti-Semitic Oxonian who rooms with Mulligan and Stephen in the Martello Tower. Haines, who has come to Ireland to study Irish folklore, simplistically asserts that all of Ireland's troubles are attributable to "history," not to British misuse.
Charles Wisdom Hely The Dublin stationer and printer for whom Bloom used to work. Men advertising his business appear in "The Lestrygonians," walking about wearing scarlet letters on large white hats.
Ellen Higgins Bloom's mother, who married Rudolph Bloom, about 1865.


















