Dear List,
Nabokov's indications about "Pale Fire"
& its relation to the moon are clear enough. While I was
permanently getting lost during my inquiries over the adoption of
the Gregorian calendar ( in Russia it took place only in 1918), I read
through various other kinds of time-measurements and I was intrigued by the "lunar calendar" and a reference to
its use by a "fine crescent" ( resulting from
Earthshine). Leonardo da Vinci's words for it
were also curious ("ashen glow", "the Old moon in
the New moon's arms").
In the novel, is it really Kinbote who "steals his
opalescent light" from John Shade and the latter, Kinbote's fiery orb,
a sun?
According to a NASA site, it was Leonardo Da Vinci who solved the astronomical
riddle of the Earthshine, something one can see whenever there's a crescent
Moon on the horizon, at sunset, by looking between the horns of the
crescent after a ghostly image of the full Moon.
In his Codex Leicester (circa 1510) we see
Leonardo's sketch of a crescent moon with
Earthshine.