Dear List,

 

We know that Hazel's death takes place exactly on line 500, at the end

of Canto II and that, apparently, the mirror of  Canto IV should end

with line 1000, but the poet died before its completion.

 

Shade's poem was written in  three weeks, in July 1959, the same year in

which Nabokov moved to Switzerland and its lakes and mountains. I wrote

down once, following Kinbote's instructions:

 

Canto I -    July 2-3-4, 166 lines, 13 cards

Canto II -    July 5 (Birthday: line 181 "Today I'm sixty-one.

Waxwings...) -11, 334 lines 27 cards (ends with Hazel's death as written

in July 11) 

Canto III-    July 12-18, 334 lines, 27 cards ( "shocking tour de force"

)

Canto IV-   July 19-20 ( 9 cards)- 21 (4), 165 lines, 13 cards (ends, or

stops, at Shade's death, written July 21)

Interspersed information:

In July 5 Shade was writing on card 14 and reached line 208.

From July 5 to July 6 he reached card 18 and line 230.

On July 10 he wrote on his 33 card, lines 406-416

On the eve of his death Shade wrote on card 76, line 237, a reference to

A.Pope.

On July 21 Shade began his last batch of cards ( 77-80)

 

1. Why did Shade stop after filling in the fourth and last batch of

cards (was there a "faircopy" made since he was killed before its

completion?). Did Kinbote's visit interrupt him then?

2. What can we make out of Kinbote's commentaries and chronology from

lines 991 until 999? Kinbote seems to have finally managed to enter

Shade's text to develop his commentaries as if inhabiting some sort of

"real time".

 

Any thoughts about this?  

A new query to Lines: 992-994  Where is Shade writing and looking from?

When?

 

Time: July 21

lines  977-982:

"I / Shall wake at six tomorrow, on July/

The twenty-second, nineteen fifty-nine,

 

lines 983-984:

So this alarm clock let me set myself,/Yawn, and put back.../

(any relation with the clockwork-toy seen in early in July 1909?)

 

line 985:

"But it's not bedtime yet. The sun attains..."

( 1959: would he be writing at 19:59, 7:59 PM? )

 

The poem closes on line 999 with neighbor's gardener ( is he Kinbote's

Balthasar, one of the three Magi? Maud's "moor"? The clockwork toy at

his first  "conflagration/sunburst/black night", also in July but after

Shade had just turned 11 - as on lines  141/143?)

 

Space:

a. Where is Sybil?

 

line 989-990 & line 992

Where are you? In the garden. I can see

Part of your shadow near the shagbark tree

................

(Leaning against its lamppost like a drunk)

 

 

b. Where is Shade?

In an early note Kinbote informed us (lines 47-48)

"If I wanted to see its south side...

If I yearned for the opposite side..

...walk uphill to the top of my garden...patch of line under the lone

streetlamp on the road below.

So Shade was looking down to the streetlamp  (both words: Lamppost and

streetlamp  have no hyphen and this "lone" one seems to be only existing

post close to Shade's home...)

The time ( not bedtime & a setting sun in the Summer as seen from

Shade's perch) informs us something about space: " The sun attains/ Old

Dr. Sutton's last two windowpanes"

We also had, in the past, clear instructions about Dr.Sutton's home (

above JS and CK's) 

 

Kinbote's version is different. When he describes his stroll with JS

(after Sybil has left)  it must be still be light enough to find shades

and shadows,or a flying Vanessa. Enough daylight to aim at John Shade

and hit him...   

Tom Rymour, where is the map you promised to us?

Jansy

 

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