The use of "pale fire" in poems or books is not a rare occurrence,
either in the past [ Cf. William Blake, The French Revolution, 1791 :" Then
the Abbè de Sieyes rais'd his feet /On the steps of the Louvre; like a
voice of God following a storm, the Abbé follow'd /The pale fires
of Aumont into the chamber; as a father that bows to his son...)
nor in the present (William Hope Hodgson mentions 'pale fire" at least
four times in "The house on the borderland," as in: "At last, only a
crescent of pale fire, lit the, now dim, Sea
of Sleep.).
However, a chance find landed me on a more interesting verse
using the words "pale fire," but it was difficult for me to ascertain
that it belonged, indeed, to Lord Byron's tragedy "The Duke of Mantua." My first thought was to submit the lines as
a note to "The Nabokovian." However, I'd have to familirize myself with
items that were too distant from my area of interest, abilities and
available bibliography. There are also links between the
Duke of Mantua and the characters of Verdi's opera, "Rigoletto," but
its libreto, written by Francesco Maria Piave, is based on the work "Le
Roi s'Amuse" by Victor Hugo.
Trying to investigate what importance any of the above metioned
works might have had for Vladimir Nabokov ( for example, if he came
across the lines at any time and enjoyed discovering one more
misleading clue to PF's title...), I started by checking Dmitri Nabokov
and "Rigoletto," but Dmitri performances in this opera are recorded
only for 1982-83* (in the internet) i.e., too late for its being a
helpful clue about Nabokov's acquaintance with the Duke of
Mantua/Rigoletto through his son.
In "Pale Fire"there is a Renaissance Duchess (directly mentioned
by CK, also indirectly in Shade's lines indicating the Duke's bronze
statue of Neptune taming a sea-horse, in Robert Browning's "The Last
Duchess"), but her husband has been identified as the Duke of Ferrara.
** Lucrezia Borgia, I think, reappears in Ada related to "aqua toffana"
(must check into that)
If I had eagle eyes and the patience of a dove I could insist in
my exploration, using the internet or ordering old copies from "The
Gentleman's Magazine" or "The London Literary Gazette and Journal of
Belles Lettres..." I don't. But I offer these first intimations should
anyone else find the item on Byron-Nabokov-Renaissance-Gipsies and
Dukes promising enough...
Zorayda, a gipsy, a
mysterious being:
A turban girds her brow, white as the sea-foam,
Whence, all untrammeled, her dark thin hair
Streams fitfully upon her storm-beat front;
Her eye at rest, pale fire in'its black orb
Innocuous sleeps - but roused, Jove's thunder-cloud
Enkindles not so fiercely ! Once it shot
Full on mine eye: - a dazzling terror yet
It haunts my brain !
- - -
Lady, list to me !
The mountain top I flee:
There I watch the first were that comes laden with light,
And its soft hue I spread o'er each billow so bright,
With its beam I enkindle each heaven peering height,
And the morn's radiant canopy.
..................................................................
Tom Mole: Byron's Romantic Celebrity: Industrial
...review: J Christine Kenyon - 2009
Duke of Mantua is 'appropriated' from the Thomas. Phillips portrait of
Byron. The extent to which portraits of quite unrelated subjects have
been claimed ...
www.euppublishing.com/doi/pdf/10.3366/E1354991X09000567
.............................................................................................
The Gentleman's magazine 1823 -
Literary Criticism
The story, the moral of which is highly objectionable, is one of
a criminal passion, indulged by Andrea, the Duke of Mantua, for
Hermione. ...
books.google.com.br/books?id=6qkJNy3q6q8C...
Lord Byron,The Duke of Manua, a Tragedy June 28, 1823 Saturday
No.336
Cf. Also Literary criticism, 1812, on Lord Byron's rejected
address, and Theatrical Magazine, p.381.
.......................................................................................
*Toledo
Opera – The History of Toledo Opera Many of the area's finest vocalists were
regulars in productions of Rigoletto, ... Raymond Gibbs in 1981-82;
Rigoletto with Louise Russell, Dmitri Nabokov, ...
www.toledoopera.org/history2.html -
The History of Toledo Opera, ACT ONE, Scene Two,
by Sally Vallongo
Entering the second decade, the Toledo Opera had established itself as
a successful new company ...(and) continued to mount seasons of full
productions including La Fanciulla del West with Maralin Niska and
Ruben Domenguez in the 1980-81 season; La bohème with Maria Spacagna
and Raymond Gibbs in 1981-82;
Rigoletto with Louise Russell, Dmitri
Nabokov, and Leonore Lanzillotte in 1982-83; and, in 1983-84, The
Mikado ...Toledo Opera arrived at its quarter-century mark with a proud
record of quality performances...
** - Ferrara, Mantua and Byron: "Torquato Tasso, the poet, fell
in love with Leonora d'Este, daughter of Alfonso, duke of Ferrara. The
duke confined him as a lunatic for seven years in the asylum of Santa
Anna, but at the expiration of that period he was released through the
intercession of Vincenzo Gonzago, duke of Mantua. Byron refers to this
in his _Childe Harold_, iv. 36."