Ithaca begins with Bloom and Stephen walking to
Bloom's house from the vicinity of the cabman's shelter. The
route described in the first paragraph is as direct as
possible and about one mile long. A strong walker might cover
it in 15 minutes, but given Stephen's condition it must take
the two men at least 20 minutes, and probably closer to 30.
They start at "normal walking pace," but after reaching
Mountjoy Square they proceed "at reduced pace" to Temple
Street North. Then they continue "at reduced pace with
interruptions of halt," and finally, when they reach St.
George's Church, they are moving "at relaxed walking pace."
One may infer that Stephen is exhausted, but possibly the
conversation has also become more engaging.
Eumaeus ends with Stephen and Bloom leaving the cabman's
shelter near Butt Bridge, just west of the Custom House,
and moving "towards Gardiner street lower." At this
point they are on Beresford Place, a broad semicircular street
that loops behind the Custom House from the northeastern
quays. The beginning of Ithaca finds them finds them
walking north "from Beresford place" along "Lower
and Middle Gardiner streets," all the way to "Mountjoy
square, west." There they turn left onto "Gardiner's
place." At "Temple street, north" they turn right
and proceed up to "Hardwicke place," where the church
is. They pass through "the circus before George's church"
and thence (though the chapter does not delineate this last
leg) the short distance to Dorset Street and across it to 7
Eccles Street.
Aside from the focus on the steadily slowing pace of this
walk, the one interesting feature of the account in Ithaca
is its observation that the two men pass "by an inadvertence
as far as the farther corner of Temple street." This is a
small matter of crossing from the northeast corner to the
southwest corner of the intersection before proceeding up
Temple Street. The only reason it can be considered a mistake
is that Bloom's house lies on the northeast side of Eccles
Street, so crossing the street takes the walkers a minute
distance out of their way. The term that Joyce uses for the
mistake, "an inadvertence," is one of many cunning
deployments of Latinate words in Ithaca.