EDNOTE. Apologies. My computer seems to be having a
fit of premature emission--doubtless due to the subject matter of the
posting. I trust this third attempt will more successful.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2003 3:29 PM
Subject: Van loves Ada+Lucette; Casanova's Memoirs; QUERY/
KVEREE
In ADA II-8 (418-22) the morning after
the nightclub scene Van finds himself abed with both sisters.
Nabokov writes:
"What we have now is not so much a Casanovanic situation
(that double-wencher had a definitely monochromatic pencil — in keeping with the
memoirs of his dingy era) as a much earlier canvas, of the Venetian (sensu
largo) school, reproduced (in ‘Forbidden Masterpieces’) expertly enough to
stand the scrutiny of a bordel's vue d’oiseau"
(418).
In his notes to Oksana Kirichenko's Russia
translation of ADA, Nikolai Mel'nikov identifies the Casanova allusion
as the latter's account of a dalliance with --"two
delightfully amenable sisters, Nanette and Marton" (592). In the interest
of hard core Nabokov scholarship, I located the episode at http://etext.library.adelaide.edu.au/c/c33m/chapter5.html in the classic London
1894 translation based on Casanova's French manuscripts as translated by
Arthur Machen.
Giacomo Casanova
The memoirs of Jacques Casanova de Seingalt
CHAPTER V
An Unlucky Night I Fall in Love with the Two Sisters, and Forget Angela—A
Ball at My House—Juliette’s Humiliation—My Return to Pasian—Lucie’s Misfortune—A
Propitious Storm
There is in fact very little in common between Casanova's account
and ADA's description of the Ada/Van/Lucette episode apart from the basic
two sister element,or,. Ada and Lucette are no Nanette and Marton;
nor Van, Casanova. Indeed VN specifically rejects Casanova (who was Venetian by
birth) as a prototype in favor of an "earlier canvas, of the Venetian (sense largo) school, reproduced
(in ‘Forbidden Masterpieces’)."
All of which brings us to MY QUERY. Can anyone offer a
suggestion as to the prototype painting of the "unsigned, unframed" scene
in question? (If it is not entirely VN's verbal creation?) And/or the "Forbidden
Masterpieces" collection of photographs of the more sensual paintings of the Old
Masters?