It cannot possibly be the Walrus from that Lewis Carroll poem, can it? The Walrus is, after all, all about the cabbages and kings. While the Kinbote reference is clear, the possibility of the cabbage one being Carroll seems like far too much free-association (Walrus for wall) to hold any water—or cabbages.

 


From: Vladimir Nabokov Forum [mailto:NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU] On Behalf Of D. Barton Johnson
Sent: Saturday, June 30, 2007 12:09 PM
To: NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU
Subject: [NABOKV-L] VN SIGHTING: Treuer PF

 

FROM: Don Johnson

 

l have been doing a lot of desultory reading lately. By chance I ran across a novel, "The Translation of Dr Appeles," by David Treuer who teaches  in the English Department at the U. of Minnesota.     Its hero (like Treuer) is an Ojibwe with a PHD but  (unlike Treuer) works in a NYC library archive  and translates Indian legend manuscripts. The book interweaves the life of the translator and the 19th century Indian tale he is translating. All in all, a good literary novel playing with the metaphor of texts (and lives) interbreeding (and interbleeding).

 

Among the things that caught my eye was a passage describing a disjointed dream based presumably upon scenes from the books that pass through his hands. Among them, we find:

 

     "To his left was a man throwing cabbages over a stone wall and to his right  a bearded professor played table tennis  in his basement with a pair of twins" (77)

 

 

Doctor Kinbote, I presume?  I see from Treuer's  University CV that he teaches a course called "The Layering of Modern Narrative, Looking for Treasure in Nabokov's Pale Fire."

 

P.S. But  (rhetorically) who is that man throwing cabbages over the wall?

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