Dear List, Victor, Carolyn, A.Stadlen:
The question about Shade's shagbark, like many other similar doubts
-- such as Kinbote's various misprints, false misprints and
misguided cross-references-- reminded me of a particular strategy
that entranced the "Viennese quack".
Freud, in Jokes and Their Relation to the
Unconscious, retells the joke about two Jews who meet on a
train:
"Where are you going?" one asks. "I'm going to
Pinsk," the other replies. To which the first answers, "You say you are going to
Pinsk, because you want me to think you are going to Minsk. But I know you are
going to Pinsk. So why are you lying to me?"
Someone asked me if Kinbote's "gilt key" would lead me
to "guilt key". Like the reference to "primal scene" and "lockless
doors" it may indicate an erotic, traumatic subtext lurking
in Shade's poem.If we remember that Nabokov not only reviled Freud but
insistently so, returning to him over and over, I now ask
Would that old Jew be really travelling to
Pinsk?
Jansy