THIRD CENSUS OF FINNEGANS WAKE 289 
94.4,5; 100.11,13 (see Lia Fail?); 
103 .9,10; + 104.6 (Irish lighthouse), 
+ .10—with Tnistram Tree (q.v.); 106.36 
(see Quickenough); + 113.19—with 
Tristan, Tnistram Tnee (q.q.v.); 128.2,3; 
 135.4,5; 136.31—32 (Kingstowm), 
33,34,35; + 146.34—with Gladstone, 
Sequoia (q.q.v.); + 153.10,23,24 (olum son a stone. . . stone Seten)—with
St 
Peten, Einstein (q.q.v.); sor = Hebrew "stone"); +159.4—5 (elmtmee..
. a stone 
 pietrous ... a lass—las or laas = Greek "stone")—with St Peter,
Einstein, Alice (q.q.v.); 176.8 (see Art); 202.30; 213.13,24; 215.35; 216.1,
+.3—4—with Shem and Shaun (q.v.); 
221.31—32,33, + .34—with Gladstone (q.v.); 227.20 (Three Rock
Mountain in Ireland); 230.26; 247.4; 259.1—2 (passim); 264.12,13,14;
267.26; 279.1—2; 
 +280.30—31—with ?Liffey (q.v.); 
291.6,11; +293.11,13,14—with Einstein (q.v.), + .22 (alass—see
159.4 above)— with Alice (q.v.); 331.4,5 (see Lia Fail); 
 3322 (see Sequoia), 12,13; 
+339.10.12—with Raglan, ?Three (q.q.v.); +350.2,4—?with Liffey
(q.v.); 360.26 (fairest . . . Canolus), 27 (a tree is being felled); 371.30
(Sutton, am environ of Dublin); ?376.7,14; +420.8—with Three, Gladstone
(q.q.v.), .11,12—with Liffey (q.v.); +430.4,6—with Liffey (q.v.;
and Yellowstone Park); 460.16,17; ?492.9,1 1 (emeralds); 503.13,26,30 (his),
+32—with Ask (q.v.), 33,36; 
504.12,16,25,33 (cran = Irish "tree"), 35 (see Yggdrasill); 505.16,17,18,19,
2 1,27,29 (German "apple tree"), 33; 
506.7,16,17,35; 563.21; 564.30 (other trees named above); 570.32,34 (see
Sylvanus); 614.3 (French "elm," "stone"). 
Tree, Iris—English actress whom John Quinn (q.v.) called "a fine wench
with pink hair." See Iris, Tree. 30.1; 318.34. 
Treestam, Treestone—see Tree and Stone, Tristan, Tristram Tree. 104.10—13
repeats the seven (q.v.) clauses of 3.4—14. 
Trelawny, Sin Jonathan (1650—1721)— Cornish bishop whose imprisonment
caused 20,000 Cornishmen to want to know why. 91.18. 
Trestrine von Tennefin—see Tristan. 279.n. 1, line 24. 
*Tre~4_Roman fountain. 192.12. 
Triangle—see Delta, Signs. 
Trichepatte—see St Patrick. 228.6. 
*Tricks and Doelsy—Issy (q.v.) from con- 
text; Doelsy is scrambled Isolde (q.v.). 
398.18. 
Trilby—title, heroine of Du Maunien's (q.v.) novel. 285.n. 1; 548.29.

Trinculo—im The Tempest. See Mutt and Jute, Cahiban. 16.30. 
*Trii~ity_likely to refer to Trinity College, Dublin (TCD), the Protestant
university founded by Elizabeth I (q.v.); or to the doctrine of the Trinity
as taught by St Patrick (q.v.), picking the shamrock; or to the Three (q.v.)
soldiers. 
*Tripler, Abraham, + 167.25—26—with 
Abraham (q.v.). 
Triss, Tris—takes in Tristan and "is" on Issy, Isolde (q.q.v.). Does
it include the Three (q.v.) soldiers? 
Tristan, Tnistnam—(1) sorrow as opposed to, interchangeable with, on
reversed into joy (see Tristopher); (2) Sin Amory Tristram from Ammorica
(Brittany), one of Ireland's Norman conquerors, founder of the St Lawrence
(q.v.) family of Howth (q.v.; see also Tristram Tree); when in FIN II, iv,
Tristan takes Isolde (q.v.), he is also the stranger who takes Ireland, a
girl who has solid ivory where hen brains should be and who has no alternative
to the handsome stranger save the doting Four(q.v.) on Elders (q.v.); (3)
Tristan of Lyomnesse, nephew (q.v.) of Mark of Cornwall (q.v.),lovenof Isolde
of Ireland, his "aunt" (q.v.); Tristan is also the husband, in name only,
of Isolde of the White Hands (q.v.). See also Tramtris, Anguish, Hoel, Songe,
Pemmark. 
 Tristan's story is best known in Wagner's (q.v.) version (see Mildew Lisa),
but for FW, Bédien's (q.v.) The Romance of Tristan and Iseult is far
and away the most important source, and indeed must be accounted one of the
books without which FW in general can scarcely be understood (see Letters,
I, 241). 
 In FIN, the Mank-Tristan-Isolde triangle moves in and out of identity with
the Finn-Dermot-Grania, ArthurLancelot-Guimevene, Captain O'SheaParnell-Mms
O'Shea, etc., pattern. This primitive love triangle is bright, brittle, unsoftened
by moral consciousness or sentimental education. Ten thousand emotional miles
from Wagner's, Bediem's Tristan and Iseult is an un and unslick bedroom farce
peopled all with trickstems. Mark and his four barons (see also Elders) would
trick the lovers, and