Ulysses finds himself unchanged, aside from his experience, at the end of his odyssey.
Ulysses, obviously. It was an elaborate prank, and our supposed intellectual elite continue to fall for it.
The head coach don't want no sissies, so he reads to us from something called Ulysses.
I used to carry a copy of Ulysses with me everywhere just in case I was knocked down by a bus. It seemed more important than having clean underwear.
Happy he who like Ulysses has made a great journey.
Because the great thing about fairy tales and folk tales is that there is no authentic text. It's not like the text of Paradise Lost or James Joyce's Ulysses, and you have to adhere to that exact text.
You should approach Joyce's Ulysses as the illiterate Baptist preacher approaches the Old Testament: with faith.
Who is more real? Homer or Ulysses? Shakespeare or Hamlet? Burroughs or Tarzan?