Hands up

Allsopp's, an English brewing company founded in Burton-on-Trent in the 18th century (and acquired by Samuel Allsopp in 1807) is mentioned twice in Joyce's novel. In Lestrygonians Bloom thinks of Dubliners having a "bottle of Allsop" at lunch. A much more puzzling reference comes in Cyclops when Lenehan says that he will have "An imperial yeomanry," and John Wyse Nolan translates this to the barman as "a hands up." Terry confirms the order: "bottle of Allsop. Right, sir." For anyone familiar with Allsopp's, "hands up" should probably not be too hard to fathom, as their bottles and ads all display the image of a upraised red hand. But "imperial yeomanry" takes obscurity a long step further. It links the image of raised hands to British soldiers surrendering during the second Boer War.

John Hunt 2024


  Source: barclayperkins.blogspot.com.


  Joyce's handwritten notesheet with the words "uphander" and "imp. yeom." Source: www.jjon.org.


  Headline and first sentences of the article on page 7 of the 15 July 1905 Dublin Evening Telegraph. Source: www.jjon.org.


  Photograph of a mounted Imperial Yeoman in South Africa by William Skeoch Cumming (who served with the force in the second Boer War), held in the collections of the Imperial War Museums. Source: Wikimedia Commons.