Alice Ben Bolt

Alice Ben Bolt

In Brief

In Eumaeus, as Bloom listens to the old sailor talk about going home to Queenstown to see "my own true wife I haven't seen for seven years now," he thinks of the various literary works that have been written "on that particular Alice Ben Bolt topic." Ben Bolt is a 19th century poem, and song, about a sailor who returns to the town of his childhood after twenty years and learns that Alice, who apparently loved him, is dead.

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American author, songwriter, and politician Thomas Dunn English wrote the poem in 1842, and American composer Nelson Kneass set it to music in 1848. (The work is not English, as Thornton supposes––though the poet's name is.) Both poem and song proved extremely popular, and their popularity was renewed by the publication of George du Maurier's Trilby (1894), a novel whose plot centers on a woman's inability to sing the song properly.

The first of the poem's eight-line stanzas provides all the information one needs to understand the allusion:

Don't you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt––
Sweet Alice whose hair was so brown,
Who wept with delight when you gave her a smile,
And trembled with fear at your frown?
In the old church-yard in the valley, Ben Bolt,
In a corner obscure and alone,
They have fitted a slab of the granite so grey,
And Alice lies under the stone.
In the remaining four stanzas, the speaker tells Ben Bolt about other changes that the passing years have brought to the town they grew up in. He concludes by affirming the unchanging friendship that binds him to "Ben Bolt of the salt-sea gale." This final line is the only indication that Ben Bolt has been a sailor, and the first stanza is the only one that mentions Alice.

Nothing in the song suggests that Alice and Ben had a significant relationship. Bowen is therefore mistaken to say that "Bloom rightly thinks of the song as representative of such stories of husband's [sic] absence and eventual return as Enoch Arden and Rip Van Winkle." Either Bloom is wrongly thinking of the poem in this way, or he is thinking in more general ways of men returning to see people they have loved. Caoch O'Leary is about an old man returning to see a young man whom he knew as a child. But Enoch Arden, whose imprint can be seen throughout the paragraph in which Bloom thinks of Ben Bolt, is about a husband's return to his wife, and Rip Van Winkle tells a similar story, so Bloom may well be thinking of Ben Bolt in this way.

The poem was included in anthologies of verse like Rufus Wilmot Griswold's The Poets and Poetry of America, first published in 1842 and reissued in many subsequent editions. Song versions, especially the one by Kneass, were frequently performed in the US and the UK––it was one of Abraham Lincoln's favorites––so Bloom might have heard one in a music hall, concert hall, or home parlor. After the appearance of du Maurier's novel in 1894, a popular stage play of Trilby debuted in Boston in 1895. Herbert Beerbohm Tree mounted successful UK productions later in the same year, in a tour that began in Manchester and ended in London after visits to Leeds, Glasgow, Edinburgh, Liverpool, Dublin, Newcastle, and Birmingham. The show ran for one week at Dublin's Gaiety Theatre, 7-12 October 1895. Films were also made in 1914 and 1915.

Bloom could conceivably have gained familiarity with the work in many different formats––poem, song, novel, play––but the strange way in which he refers to it as "Alice Ben Bolt" (Alice and Ben Bolt are two people, not one!) makes it seem likely that the song is playing in his head. These three words appear together in the first line of the poem, and in the musical setting by Kneass they make up a single musical phrase, with falling pitches and sequences of eighth notes and quarter notes conspiring to make the two names stick together in the ear. It seems that they have stuck so effectively in Bloom's ear that now he simply recalls the song as Alice Ben Bolt.

JH 2023
 1895 souvenir of the play Trilby calling attention to the popular song at its heart, held in the New York Public Library. Source: Wikimedia Commons.