THIRD CENSUS OF FINNEGANS WAKE 213 
(q.v.); Kevin's story is the basis of George Moore's (q.v.) The Lake, the
hero of which is a priest named Father Oliver Gogarty. ? 179.20; ?+240.23—with
Phil the Fluter, Flynn, Finn (q.q.v.); 419.13 (foibler, 0 flip); +512.31—with
O'Fond (q.v.). 
O'Ford, Flatter—Ford Madox Ford (q.v.). Joyce wrote (to the tune of
"Father O'Flynn," q.v.) verses praising Ford's success with women (see Ellmann,
649). See Huddleston. 512.31—with Father O'Flynn (q.v.~ plus Hurdle
Ford on Dublin). 
Og—king of Bashan, a giant (Joshua, XII, 4). 46.22; +366.26—with
Gog (q.v.). 
*Oga_Kiswahili "cowardice, fear," Mr 
Dalton says. 203.32. 
Oglethorpe, James Edward (1696— 1785)—founded the state of Geomgia(see
Peter Sawyer) with the aim of helping criminals. 81.21. 
Ogma Sun-face—Irish god, inventor of ogam (on ogham) letters. See my
article in A Wake Digest about MacAlister's (q.v.) Secret Languages of Ireland.
89.30,32; +90.1—2—with Sun Yat-sen (q.v.); 123.8; 161.8; +223.4—with
John Hogan (q.v.); 261.27; ?340.9 (with Aughrim, a battle and a Dublin street);
546.13; 602.12 (face of a son). 
O'Gorinan—see Gonman. 
O'Grady, Rose—song, "Sweet Rosie O'Grady." See Rose. 133.7. 
O'Grady, Standish James (1846—1928)— Yeats (q.v.) said O'Grady
"reconstructed by imaginative processes the life led by our ancestors in
this country [Ireland]," and O'Gnady published his reconstruction as History
of Ireland: 
Heroic Period (1878). O'Grady, I take it, found the Irish past impossible
(pace Macphemson and Lady Gregory, q.q.v.) and made Ireland a new past which
was the past of the Irish Literary Renaissance. (Joyce, too, remade the past
for Ireland.) His father was Standish Hayes O'Gnady. 411.21. 
O'Growney, Father Eugene (1865—99)— helped found the Gaelic League.
He died in America, was dug up and brought to Ireland for neburial. 102.19.

O'Hagan, Thomas O'Hagan, 1st baron (1812—85)—lord chancellor
of Ireland, a great orator. He began as a nationalist, but sold out to the
English. 299.23. 
O'Halloran, Sylvester— 18th-century Irish physician who helped found
the 
Royal Irish Academy and helped repel 
Macpherson's (q.v.) "attempts on our 
History and Annals." +291.11—with 
Holly (q.v.). 
*O'Hara_part Burke and Hare (q.v.). 
Perhaps, as Mn Senn suggests, Kane 
O'Hama, 18th-century author of Midas 
 (q.v.), a play made up of Dublin jokes 
and by-sayings—580.32. 93.6. 
O'Heffernan, Blind—Irish bard. 519.6. 
*Ohlan, N—Nolan (q.v.). 
Ohm, George Simon (1787—1854)— German electrician. ?301 .3 (0
He Must 
Suffer); 310.1; +614.3—with Ampere 
(q.v.). 
*O'Hollerins of Staneybattem— O'Hallenans? Stoneybatter is a Dublin
street. +291.11—with Holly (q.v.). 
*O'Hugghis, Dora, 519.5. 
*O'HulTy, Hairy—as in Tom Dick Harry (q.v.). 8.27. 
*O'Hyens of Locklaunstown—Ohioans? See Lochlaun. 291.10. 
Oisin—see Ossian. 
*Okaroff_see A'Hara. 49.3. 
O'Keef-Rosses and Rhosso-Keevens— town of Kiev and its early Scandinavian
settlers, sometimes called Rhossisti. See Ross, Rosse. According to Mm Senn,
the Swiss-German word russenkafer means a beetle, nearly related to the earwig
(q.v.). 310.16—17. 
*O'Kehley, Rhian—Ryan O'Kelly, I suppose. Oakley? 90.28—29. 
*O'}(~eels_see O'Neill. 291.10. 
Olaf Cuaman—see Olaf the White. 
Olaf Tryggvesson—see Olaf the White. 
Olaf the White—became first Norse king of Dublin, ca 852.According
to Ginaldus Cambrensis (q.v.), three (q.v.) brothers, Olaf, lyon, Sitnic
(q.q.v.), built the cities of Dublin, Limerick, Waterfond—a fairy tale,
doubtless, but Joyce associates the three as city builders (see 12.31—32,
353.14,19, etc.) There are many Olafs in Norse and Irish hi story and in
FW—Olaf Tryggvesson (Olaf I of Norway), St Olaf (Olaf II of Norway,
known as Olaf the Stout)—but I can't much distinguish them. 
 Olaf Cuaran (d.921) was also a king of Dublin and may have been identical
with Prince Hamlet and Havebok the Dane (q.q.v.)—see 11th Britannica,
"Hamlet," "Havelok"—as saga heroes. 
 In his note, "Humphrey," Mm 0 Hehir shows that from Nonse "Olaf" are derived
(by various means) the names