Vladimir Nabokov

NABOKV-L post 0013704, Thu, 19 Oct 2006 08:43:45 -0800

Subject
CK to MR on Shade in asylum
Date
Body

Carolyn,

In C.949 Kinbote analyzes the character of Gradus. In one section, he
imagines a trial (Gradus versus the Crown), during which he says, I suppose
in the voice of the prosecutor, "we may concede, doctor, that our half-man
was also half-mad." This sounds to me more like a commitment hearing than a
trial, and if so it might bolster your theory concerning Shade's
commitment. A bit of his own hearing seeping in?

Matthew Roth


Dear MR,

I re-read this commentary and found it exceedingly rich - - in things that
seem significant (tv, lightning) but which I don't understand.

I don't think "Gradus versus the Crown" can be a commitment hearing - -
but I'm not sure what it is. Probably an allusion we're not able to
recognize.

I began to suspect that the king's palace incarceration was actually Shade's
in an asylum, when I noticed that the slippers brought to "the king" were
John Shade's. Also the gloved hand of the orderly (the king's valet's
valet) was a clue. And isn't the door left slightly ajar? - - hardly
revolutionary efficiency!

I also found interesting in this re-reading of c. 949 that the Rare Book
Room has no doors. Instead there is a curtained opening. I'm not sure, but
this reminds me of the way to Iris Acht's room (and her portrait is hanging
on the wall of the king's cell too). It could be part of the references to
The Portrait of Dorian Gray but there is more going on here than I
understand.

Carolyn

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