THIRD CENSUS OF FINNEGANS WAKE 45 
tion. +64.24—with Three Musketeers 
(q.v.); + 580.31—32—with Edmund 
Burke, William Burke, Thomas Burke 
(q.q.v.); +610.1—2—with William 
Burke, Harald Fair Hair (q.v.). 
Burke, Thomas Henry (d.1882)—Irish undersecretary who, along with Lord
Frederick Cavendish (the viceroy), was murdered by the Invincibles in the
Phoenix (q.v.) Park—see James Carey. I think it odd that I have not
found Lord Frederick in FIN, or more reference to Thomas Burke. Perhaps Joyce
blends him with William Burke (q.v.). + 106.6—with Tom, Tom Burke,?INilham
Burke (q.q.v.); 132.33; +361.25— with Buckley (q.v.); + 580.28 (the
Col. Richard Burke of Ulysses, 44?), +31— with Edmund Burke, William
Burke (q.q.v.). 
Burke, Tom—hero of (I haven't laid eyes on it) Lever's (q.v.) novel,
Tom Burke of Ours. + 106.6—with Thomas Burke, William Burke (q.q.v.).

Burke, William (1792—1829)—and his partner and betrayer William
Hare were Irish and carried on their trade of murder-and-resurrectionism
in Edinburgh, where they sold corpses to Dr Knox (q.v.). Our word "burke"
comes from this and means (1) to murder by suffocation, (2) to dispose of
a thing indirectly, to smother or shelve it. In FW, Burke is associated with
the Three (q.v.) soldiers, with Buckley, Berkeley (q.q.v.). See all other
Burkes listed here. 60.14,15; +64.23—with Robert O'Hara Burke, Three
(q.q.v.); -+106.5-6—with Thomas Burke, Tom Burke (q.q.v.); + 132.33—with
Thomas Burke(q.v.); ?+ 192.2,4—with Buckley (q.v.); +238.22—with
Hare and Tortoise(q.v.); 
272.31; 312. +29—with Three, Berkeley, Buckley (q.q.v.); +343.3—with
Three (q.v.); +346.11—with Buckley, Berkeley (q.q.v.); ?375.28; +423.32—
with Buckley, Berkeley (q.q.v.); 443.16 (see Knox); ?449.20,26; ?503—4;
505. 3—4; 552.9; +580.28, 31—32—with Thomas Burke, Edmund
Burke, Robert O'Hara Burke (q.q.v.); +610.1—with Buckley (q.v.; see
also Archdruid), + .2 
—with Harald Fair Hair (q.v.), +.12— with Buckley (q.v.); +611.1,2—with
Buckley, Berkeley (q.q.v.). 
*Burleigh, Farmer—see Arley, Burghley. 
257.17. 
Burns, Robert (1759—96)—Scottish poet. 
 189.32; 204.6; 248.35; 520.26. Burro—see Ass. 
~ Dr—see Burrus, Burro, Bruno. Maybe Dr Lewis Burman, who Wyndham Lewis
(q.v.) savages in Time and Western Man. 163.15,35. 
Burrus and Caseous—Butter and Cheese. See Brutus and Cassius. 
Burton—Lord Mayor (q.v.) of Dublin 
 (q.v.). 536.27. 
Burtt, Edwin Arthur—author of The Metaphysical Foundations of Modern
Physical Science. 293.n.2. 
Bury, J. B.—l9th-century historian, author of The Life of St Patrick
(q.v.), which Joyce used in FIN. 291.11. 
*Burymeleg. 11.6. 
Buschmann, J. C. E.—collected worldwide forms of "father" and "mother."

207.34. 
Bushe, Charles Kendal—legal light of 
 19th-century Dublin and author of 
 Cease Your Funning (title is a song from 
The Beggar's Opera). 256.12; 586.11. 
*Bushe, Peganeen, 331.10. 
Bushmills—Irish town and whiskey. 357. 4; 521.15; 577.21. 
Buslaev, Vasihii—hero of the Novgorod epic cycle, Russian buslai, a
"fallen man" or "drunkard." 5.5. 
Butcher and Baker—sometimes Abel (meatman) and Cain (vegetarian), or
Esau (meat) and Jacob (vegetarian); see all these. Sometimes Shakespeare
(q.v.), the bu1~cher-boy of Ulysses (185) and/or Bacon (q.v.). See also Lang,
Fleischmann, Baxter, Butt. 7.10; 41.13; 50.1; 63.16 (refers to the Blue Shirts;
see O'Duffy); 64.18; 67.15; 70.11; 80.8; 90.2; 136.4; 144.30; 172.5,7 (see
Cantleman); 
 190.5; 212.20; 213.26; 257.19, 22; 
265.n.5; 290.27; +315.1—with Butt (q.v.); 320.29; 338.9; 351.19; 406.2;
422.3; 491.28; 498.20; 5 18.12,13; 600.29; 
603.6;607.12. 
Butler—family famous in Irish history. In 
1328 they became Irish earls with the 
title of Ormond(q.v.). + 12.4—with Butt 
(q.v.); 105.2; 118.5; 166.17; 266.10; 
372.7; 385.15; 519.5-6. 
Butler, O'Brian—see Boris O'Brian. 
Butler, Samuel (1612—80)—English author of Hudibras (q.v.). Or
Samuel Butler, author of Erewhon, The Way of All Flesh, translator of Homer
(q.v.), proponent of the theory (Joyce has fun with it)