From Galya Korovina,
New York
galya_korovina@yahoo.com
Zinaida Shakhovskaya died
on June 11, 2001 in Paris, in a residence for the
elderly.
Lenta-Ru Russian news agency,
quoting AFP (Agence France Presse), issuedthe
following notice in Russian:
Princess Zinaida Shakhovskaya,
one of the most eminent Russian emigres,died
on Monday. She was
95. Princess Shakhovskaya died at her home in Paris.
Zinaida Shakhovskaya was
born in Moscow, and after the Revolution she and
other members of her family
emigrated to France. During the World War II
she joined the French Resistance
movement, and after the war for some time
she lived in Moscow, where
her husband worked for the Belgian embassy. She
cultivated friendship with
MarinaTsvetayeva, was a well-known emigre writer,
and at one point was the
Editor-in-Chief of Russkaya Mysl newspaper ( Russian Thought,
a Paris-based Russian language newspaper). In one of her
last interviews at the beginning
of 2001, Zinaida Shakhovskaya said that she
had exceeded her allotted
span on earth and was happy to realize that she
was going to die soon.
Zinaida Shakhovskaya met
Vladimir Nabokov in 1932, through her sister Natalie
Shakhovskaya, who was married
to Nabokov's cousin, composer Nikolas Nabokov.
At first they were goodfriends.
In 1936 in Brussels Nabokov stayed with
Zinaida Shakhovskaya and
her husband, they exchanged many letters, she helped
to arrange Nabokov's public
readings in Brussels, at Nabokov's request looked
after his younger brother
Kirill, she and her husband visited the Nabokovs in
Menton in 1937. That
same year, 1937, she published in French, in the Belgian
newspaper La Cite Chretienne,
an enthusiastic article about Nabokov: The
Master of Russian Literature
Vladimir Nabokov-Sirin. She quoted in her book
on Nabokov his letter to
her, stating that he had read this article with
interest and tender emotion,
and that the article was very well written, very
clever and perceptive.
However, Zinaida Shakhovskaya's relations with Vera
were mostly strained and
gradually deteriorated to the point
where Shakhovskaya openly
displayed her hostile attitude, blaming Vera for
alienating Nabokov from
Russian culture and Christian values. In 1959 she
published in Paris, in La
Revue des Deux Mondes, under the pen name Jacques
Croise, an article Nabokov,
or "The Wound of Exile" In this article she
resented Lolita and
Nabokov's fame, tore apart his work and claimed that a
spiritual desert ruined
his true talent. Nabokov found this article offensive.
In Paris, at avery
crowded Lolita reception at the Gallimard publishing
house on October 23, 1959,
which Shakovskaya attended as a member of the
press, she was about to
hug Nabokov when he looked her straight in the eye
and uttered a perfunctory"Bonjour,
Madame". Shakhovskaya felt the slight
was intentional, whereas
it was most likely a symptom of the same distraction
Nabokov had manifested on
campus when Vera's cues had so often saved him from
social disasters(StacySchiff,
Vera).
In I979 Zinaida Shakhovskaya
published in La Presse Libre in Russian a book
_V poiskakh Nabokova_
(In Search of Nakokov). As she wrote in her
introduction, she always
wanted to write a book on Nabokov, and planned to
structure it around the
64 letters that Nabokov had written to her. However,
due tocopyright laws it
turned out to be impossible to publish these letters,
and shere structured her
book, revealing in the title her intent to show the
real Nabokov, who played
hide-and-seek with his readers his entire life,
and continuedt o do so after
his death. This is a biased book, so to say, a
contra book, according to
the classification used by the currently very
popular in Russia _Pro et
Contra_series on famousauthors and thinkers.
Copies of Nabokov's letters
to Shakovskaya were exhibited, with her
permission, at the Nabokov
Centenary Exhibition at Radio Liberty, Prague. This
exhibition was curated by
Ivan Tolstoy, and also included, among other things,
Tolstoy's private collection
of Nabokov's first editions. As Tolstoy wrote
in Shakhovskay's obituary
notice in Novoye Russkoye Slovo, a New York-based
Russian language newspaper,
after perestroika Shakhovskaya was widely
published in Russia, accepting
publication offers from whoever, and was duped
a lot. She did not
know, and probably did not want to know the real Russia,
she shunned hard, unpleasant,
unesthetical truth about her Motherland and its
people. She mixed up, often
unconsciously, Russian ideas and the Russian way
of life, applying the ideas
of the bygone epoch to the present day morals
and manners. That
is, she had a perception of a foreign writer. And with
this drama in her soul,
deeply insulted by that in her old age, cantankerous
and vocal, she departed
to the residence for elderly to live out her long life
95years almost a century.
Zinaida Shakhovskaya's death
so far has not made big news in Moscow, but for a
radio announcement and the
Lenta-Ru notice above. Incidently, she had always
corrected those who called
her knyaginya Shakhovskaya, that is, aprince's
wife, explaining that she
used to be knyazhna Shakhovskaya -- a prince's
unmarried daughter.׀
(Both words are "Princess" in English.) This would
have probably been the last
straw for her: in her Lenta-Ru obituary she is
called knyaginya Shakhovskaya.