I second Sergey, coming
originally even from more colder land (Novosibirsk in West Siberia) if not more
morthen than SPb.
We knew how to avoid
cold.
Insulation, insulation,
insulation - something people have not heard in our coal-rich Appalachia with
its cardboard houses and probably 75% of heating money lost in entropy while
people shiver behind unsealed windows in winter.
Russian/Scandinavian/Zemblan concept of "fortochka" have to be admired; one has
to breathe.
Not even talking about
Novaya Zemlya.
Victor Fet
Just some comments from somebody who comes from a "distant
northern
land" (in my case, Russia - and St. Petersburg).
> Winters in Zembla would be nasty, indeed, and
> even summers
would tend to be cool, yet Kinbote's memories portray it as
> a
near-tropical place in terms of weather.
This is true also for St.
Petersburg, and because of this we tend
to remember better the summers (I
think, Ingmar Bergman says
somewhere something similar about Sweden).
>And he is also more sensitive
> to cold than we would expect of a
Zemblan, as he tries to get the heater
> in Goldworth's house to be more
efficient.
This is really an idea I confronted many times being in warmer
countries
than Russia. I don't know why people expect that russians should
be
less sensitive to the cold than the inhabitants of warmer places.
(Same
concerning "zemblans".) I always answer that I know better
how to behave when
it is cold (I still remember some of our
scientific visitors in Russia very
lightly dressed indeed because they
didn't understand the danger - and the
students in Durham - North
of England - who were dressed ridiculously lightly
when it was snowing
- from my point of view), BUT it doesn't mean that I like
cold. In addition,
even in the USSR, not to speak about skandinavian
countries and
Zembla, usually winter heating in big cities was more
adequate
than in such western places as the UK (where it was truly
horrible)
and France (where the walls are thin, there are single
windows,
and is usually a lot of drafts).
>erhaps this evidence shows
> little more than the fact that
Kinbote is inventing Zembla during the
> summer time in New Wye, and the
sunniness of his surroundings is intruding
> on his
fantasy.
>
> Another note to this issue is that the first time
Kinbote sees Shade, it
> is on a cold, icy day, and he compares Shade to
old man winter, as if
> Shade is the one whose natural element is the
cold, instead of vice versa
> as we would expect of a former resident of a
"northern land."
Again, "accepted wisdom". People do, indeed expect this, but it
is not
in general true.
> I don't have any real point here except that these things seem
>
interesting, and I wonder if anyone else feels that perhaps they are
>
connected in some way?
Best regards,
Sergei
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