Nabokov's words are in his letter to Katherine White (of the New
Yorker) on 17 March 1951. He is disappointed (to put it
mildly) that she hasn't appreciated "The Vane Sisters".
He says he does not understand what she means by (his) "overwhelming
style". He writes a sentence which it occurs to me might have been, and
still might be, made more of by people discussing Nabokov: "For me, 'style'
is matter." (Beckett's remark on Joyce's Work in
Progress is endlessly quoted: "Form is content, content
is form." I expect Nabokov was alluding to this.)
Nabokov explains his purpose in "The Vane
Sisters", culminating in the acrostic of the last two paragraphs.
He writes: "Most of the stories I am contemplating (and some I have written
in the past -- you actually published one with such an 'inside' -- the one about
the old Jewish couple and their sick boy) will be composed on these lines,
according to this system wherein a second (main) story is woven into, or placed
behind, the superficial semitransparent one. I am really very disappointed that
you, such a subtle and loving reader, should not have seen the inner scheme
of my story."
He points out that one New Yorker reader of his story "finds
it unusual that a college girl wears a hat at an exam". Nabokov retorts
with a bit of the social reality so well known to him, as a seasoned
lecturer to, and examiner of, college girls: "They all do it when they want to
catch a bus or a train immediately afterwards."
He writes: "I am really quite depressed by the whole business.... what
matters most is the fact that people whom I so much like and admire have
completely failed me as readers in the present case."
So Nabokov is not here "announc[ing] that there's always an important story
lurking behind a manifest plot", as Jansy puts it, but he is saying that in some
of his past and most of his future stories there was or will be such a "second
(main) story".
It's worth comparing this with Freud's notion, in the "Elisabeth von R."
case in Studies on Hysteria (1895), of the real
"Leidensgeschichte" (passion narrative, existential history of
suffering) discovered by his "archaeological method" as a deeper layer
beneath the "banal Leidensgeschichte" that the "patient" and everyone
else already knows. Only by his encouraging her to tell the "deep",
"buried" "Leidensgeschichte" can the "patient" be "cured". It is
what "Anna O." called the "talking cure".
Anthony
Stadlen
"Oakleigh"
2A Alexandra Avenue
GB - London N22
7XE
Tel.: +44 (0) 20 8888 6857
For Existential Psychotherapy and
Inner Circle Seminars see:
http://anthonystadlen.blogspot.com
In a message dated 20/01/2013 16:04:40 GMT Standard Time, jansy@AETERN.US
writes:
I cannot
remember, or find, his exact words about "Signs and Symbols," but I think
that it's when he announces that there's always an important story
lurking behind a manifest plot