Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0013538, Wed, 11 Oct 2006 17:02:38 -0400

Subject
Re: Split personality in PF
Date
Body
Jansy,

Now that strikes me as an excellent point, and one that hadn¹t occurred to
me. I mean the idea of Shade as the versipel. The more I think of it, the
better it sounds.

For one thing ‹ reflections. Writers and poets only have one age and it is
not always the one with gray hair and bags beneath the eyes. Seeing oneself
in a chance reflection is always a wake up call and one not often greeted
cheerily. Ask the cedar waxwing, confused by reflections in an azure tinted
window pane. You could even ask Shade¹s furniture, reflected in a wintry
pane one day and on another day, joining the snow, thanks to a domestic
ghost.

More later. Have to go out now.

AndrewB


On 10/10/06 9:30 PM, "jansymello" <jansy@AETERN.US> wrote:

> Dear Andrew and List,
>
> Of course you, Andrew, didn't annoy me by the simultaneous address: the CK&JM
> (C=J) fusion seems to be flourishing anyway. Still, I've already talked enough
> about why I don't subscribe to the "multiple personality disorder" issue since
> it adds nothing to my enjoyment in "Pale Fire", which I continue to see as a
> work of fiction. I'm not even curious about what VN might have added - except
> as an expanded commentary to Kinbote's already profuse explanations -
> concerning the novel per se ( it has an "open ended" sort of frame, but there
> is a frame - even if it comprises merely the printed novel's two covers, an
> idea VN explores in "Ada" with very interesting consequences).
>
> Kinbote's own perception of his situation is rather complex. He might "cook up
> a stage play, an old-fashioned melodrama with three principles: a lunatic who
> intends to kill an imaginary king, another lunatic who imagines himself to be
> that king, and a distinguished old poet who stumbles by chance into the line
> of fire, and persihes in the clash between the two figments."
> Jack Grey is, apparently, unimportant although, somehow, he knows that these
> two figments will manage to inflict a "real" death and, of course, we
> encounter Kinbote's partial awareness of his "lunacy".
> On his commentary of line 347 Kinbote observed that 'there are always "three
> nights" in fairy tales' but in his imaginary melodrama we shall find no three
> knights but, possibly, his principles referred to the three "parcae" (Cloto,
> Atropos, Lachesis spinning and weaving and cutting life's thread, like an
> Author) in masculine disguise.
>
> Perhaps I was not politically correct ( you said: I had no humorous intentions
> toward absent-minded seniors, which I think would be unkind) but I didn't mean
> it was you who used humor concerning seniors, but VN, and I meant that he was
> realistic and compassionate in this rendering of comb/shoehorn/spoon
> transformations. I know this by experience although my "changelings" are
> somewhat different from Shade's.
>
> I'm sure I annoyed you by calling "Shade" a mawkish character ( "... driving
> himself mad in the process of digesting and commentating Shade¹s mawkish epic
> The Daughteriad aka Pale Fire.") but, whatever revelations are to be gleaned
> about fictional Shade, I cannot forget the lines where he wrote that "like a
> fool I sobbed in the men's room" because his little girl was not cast as a
> fairy or an elf ( now, for the first time, do I notice a mysterious connection
> bt "elves", Mother Time and Shade's future references to Goethe's Erlkönig in
> contrast to Eliot's poem and Webster's "White Devil" ...) since he never
> seemed to get over his disappointment that she looked like him, not Sybil.
> Shade is presented as someone that is as blind to his family's plights and to
> his fellow-men as Kinbote must have been, but forced on himself a discourse
> on pity and grief.
> Now what about this for a "versipel": " His misshapen body, that gray mop of
> abundant hair, the yellow nails of his pudgy fingers, the bags under his
> lustreless eyes, were only intelligible if regarded as the waste products
> eliminated from his intrinsic self by the same forces of perfection which
> purified and chiseled his verse. He was his own cancellation." ?
>
> Jansy ( sans serif )
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