My
judgment is ... (unpopular with many Nabokovians) that Shade is a lousy poet,
presented as such via brilliantly-balanced but mean-low-down parody by
VN.
Opinions understandably differ about whether Shade is a
lousy poet, but it seems clear to me that VN did not present him as
such. On the contrary, it is almost inconceivable that VN would have
spent the first many pages of his follow-up novel to Lolita
presenting lousy poetry. This flies in the face of everything we know of
the man. Furthermore, the fact that he offered long excerpts from the
poem at public readings, to which his audience responded with evident and
unironic enjoyment, also argues for VN's faith in the poem's merits.
Most signficant of all, the poem is, let's face it, Nabokovian in the highest
degree! See my article "Genius and Plausibility: Suspension of
Disbelief in Pale Fire" on the Zembla website.
Best,
J.