----- Original Message ----- From: Stephen Blackwell.
A belated reply to this thread:
I've suggested in a paper that the Kasbeam Barber is also in part a reference to Aubrey Beardsley's poem "The Ballad of a Barber", which is about a middle-aged barber who rapes (figuratively murders) his client, a pubescent (or younger) princess. The paper is on line at http://www.nabokovmuseum.org/pdf/blackwell.pdf.
Cheers,
Steve Blackwell
Anthony Stadlen wrote:
Talking of which, can anyone explain the importance of this barber, and why he should have cost VN a month of work, as he claimed in 'On a Book Entitled "Lolita"'? There's an easel on the barber's desk with a picture of his dead son, just as there was one on the dentist Quilty's desk with a picture of his then live nephew the playwright. But ... ?