----- Original Message -----
Sent: Wednesday, September 17, 2003 12:43 PM
Subject: Re: EDnote on gratuitous word play
Re. the search for gratuitous virtuousity and hidden meanings and so forth,
I would suggest VN's own play with the possibility: in PNIN, chap. 1, there
appear both Mme Roux, "the concierge of the squalid apartment house...where
Pnin...had spent fifteen years" and the obviously Bolshevik author
of Russia Awakes (1922), "Old Miss Herring." One would usually
suspect hidden treasures to be found related to characters of such
names in VN's works: but best I can tell, these are both "red herrings,"
and there is not much more here than gratuitous (in some sense of the word)
play on that phrase.
----- Original Message -----
Sent: Tuesday, September 16, 2003 12:49
PM
Subject: EDnote on gratuitous word
play
EDNOTE:
Nick Grundy has challenged me to find a good
example of Gratuitous Virtuosity in VN's work. In general, I am not
persuaded that GV is a sin (and even sometimes a mitzvah---GV, GV!) but, if
pushed, I would nominate ADA, I-26 which explicates the code
used by Van & Ada during their 1884-88 separation. The three-page
chapter would seem to be all in aid of permitting the reader to
decode a short, inconsequential phrase in the preceding
chapter:
Van
plunged into the dense undergrowth. He wore a silk shirt, a velvet jacket,
black breeches, riding boots with star spurs — and this attire was hardly
convenient for making klv zdB AoyvBno wkh gwzxm dqg kzwAAqvo a gwttp
vq wjfhm Ada in a natural bower of aspens; xliC mujzikml.....
.
The "decrypt" (as we ex-cryptanalysists racily put it): is "[making]
his way through the brush and crossing the brook to reach Ada"......., they
embraced." At the end of I-26 Ada herself suggests "omitting
this little chapter altogether."
Boyd in the Cyberedition of his book on ADA points out that the coded passage
calls attention to surrounding textual allusions to Marvell and Rimbaud poems.
Yes, but such would be the case even if I-26 is omitted. Nor
can the chapter can be justified on structural
grounds---nothing in the book would be affected if the chapter were not there.
In closing, I remark my opening comment that GV is not necessarily a mortal
sin. A close look at Ada shows that there are other "gratuitous"
chapters.