THIRD CENSUS OF FINNEGANS WAKE 119 
died when his love accepted him in marriage. +426.12—with William Harvey
(q.v.). 
*Harman_maybe Thomas Harmam, whose Caveat or Warning for Common Cursitors
(1566) Eric Partridge compares to Grose (q.v.). "Harmam" or "Harmambeck"
is cant for a constable. +394.29—with Heremom (q.v.); 466.25. 
Harmsworth—see Northchiffe. 
*Hamett, Sheila—see Solomon Silent. 
176.3. 
Harold, Chulde—Byrom's(q.v.) hero. +423.8. 
Harold II, "last of the Saxons" (1022— 66)—English king, defeated
and killed at Hastings, fighting William I(q.v.), the Conqueror. It was after
the Norman Conquest that surnames were introduced into England. ?+4.32—with
HCE, Haroun, Childeric, Egbert (q.q.v.); 5.6; 9.11—12; 30.2—3,20-2
1 (see Humphrey, Chimpdem); +31.8—9—with Humphrey; +32.14—with
Humphrey, HCE (q.q.v.), .18 (Here; Harold is derived from Anglo-Saxon here,
"army," wealdan, "rule")—with Here Comes Everybody (q.v.); +33—34—with
Haroum(q.v.); 375.6; 378.7; +567.18—with Harald Gray Cloak (q.v.).

Harold Bluetooth (940-86)—Danish king whose baptism marked Denmark's
conversion to Christianity. 387.8; 403.12. 
Haroun-al-Raschid, "the Orthodox", (763—809)—caliph of Bagdad,
character in theThousandandOneNights in which he goes about disguised. It
is a role of Bloom's (q.v.) in "Circe" (q.v.). +4.32—with HCE (q.v.);
31.8—9; 
+32.14—with Humphrey (q.v.); 
+318.9—with Humphrey (q.v.), 33—34; 
+358.28—29—with Wellington (q.v.); 
566.16. 
Harrlot, Thomas (1560-1621)—English mathematician. 301.17. 
Harris, Frank—his biographies of Shakespeare and Wilde (q.q.v.) were
pillaged by Joyce for Ulysses and FIN. I can't distinguish Harris from Horus,
Horace, Harrys, etc. + 110.17—with Aristotle (q.v.). 
Harris, Lord George—l9th-cemtury cricketer. He probably doubles with
one of the English King Henrys (q.v.). Henry II (q.v.) is called "lord Harry"
in "Oxen of the Sum" (Ulysses, 393). +584.1—with Thomas Lord (q.v.).

Harrods—Londom department store 
which often doubles (why?) with Herod 
(q.v.). 127.11; +159.15—with Hope 
Bros. (q.v.); +527.3—with Herod (q.v.); 
+536.35—with Herod (q.v.). 
*Harry_these "Harry" references I can't pin down. Some may be King Henrys
(q.v.) or Tom Dick Harry (q.v.). Harry was an ill-fated name for Ireland—
consider Henry II, Henry VIII, Henry Tudor, Henry Carr (q.q.v.). + 14.36—
with Heremon (see Heber), Ahriman (q.v.); 71.15; + 110.17—with Aristotle
(q.v.); + 134.27—with Harald Fair Hair (q.v.); 137.22; + 176.20—with
Tom Dick Harry (q.v.); 224.12; 233.31; 260.left margin; 303.26; 351.31; 373.17;
+396.16 (Old Harry—see Devil); 410.2; 416.1,2 (see Hurrish); +425.25—with
Tom Dick Harry(q.v.), + .32—with Ahriman(q.v.); 
 455.13; +483.19—with Esau (q.v.); 
 511.22 (bis),.24 (bis); +578.7—with 
Finn (q.v.); +584.1—with Lord Harris (q.v.); 621.24. 
Harry the Minstrel or Blind Harry (b. 1470)—Scottish poet. +484.21—with
Henry II (q.v.). 
*Hart_sometimes the male deer (q.v.), the animal with which Joyce identified
himself and Parnell (q.v.); sometimes the "heart"; sometimes Shakespeare's
sister, Joan Hart, whose descendants are alive today. Sometimes, by virtue
of Joyce's always prophetic soul, Mr Chive Hart who made the first—and
very fine—word-list of FIN. 11.26; 37.11; 300.16; 339.8; 460.17; 499.30;
616.2; 
622.29. 
Hart, Bill—American hero of silent Westerns. 274.14. 
*Harte, Eva—see Eve. 251.28. 
*Hartigan, Hurricane—maybe Harrigan and Hart, Irish-American comedians
and song-writers. 210.16. 
Hartley, Marsden—painter. In McA1mom's novel, The Distinguished Air,
the principal characters are—so Edward Dahlberg says—Joyce and
Hartley. The novel is, further, said to be about pederasts and lesbians in
Berlin after World War I; it was sold as pornography on Times Square, then
titled There Were Silk Stockings. 547.4. 
Harty or Hart—Lord Mayor (q.v.) of Dublin (q.v.). 547.4. 
Harvey, Bagnal—hanged in ' 98. 471.33. 
Harvey, William (1578—1637)—English