Joyce cannot have been too surprised with their choice; Chaplin was almost certainly an inspiration for Bloom. However, this particular allusion, and many others, has been largely overlooked because of all the energy devoted to uncovering Joyce’s allusions to Homer’s Odyssey. In his lectures on literature at Cornell University, Vladimir Nabokov (the author of one of the few 20th-century novels to rival Ulysses: Lolita) was very insistent about what a waste of time he thought the obsession with Joyce’s “Homeric” parallels was:
“That there is a very vague and very general Homeric echo of the theme of wanderings in Bloom’s case is obvious, as the title of the novel suggests, and there are a number of classical allusions among the many other allusions in the course of the books; but it would be a complete waste of time to look for close parallels in every character and every scene of the book. “
Nabokov is certainly right about this, but Joyce did spend quite a bit of time emphasizing the connections between his book and Homer’s epic. In a sketch he made of Leopold Bloom, for instance, Joyce inscribed the line of Greek verse - “Tell me Muse, of the man of many devices, who over many ways…” - that opens The Odyssey. But look closely at the sketch (below) and another influence on Leopold Bloom should be clear.
