Jansy Mello: Alvin Toffler asked VN to
describe "the germination of a book" in a 1963 interview for
Playboy
Magazine. Nabokov refused this invitation, but allowed him to
examine a box filled with "
index cards with
some notes I made at various times more or less recently and
discarded when writing Pale Fire. It's a little
batch of rejects. Help yourself. "Selene, the moon
Selenginsk, an old town in Siberia: moon-rocket town" .
. . "Berry: the black knob on the bill of
the mute swan" . . "Dropworm: a small caterpillar hanging on a thread" . .
[ ] "Not 1, too,lived in Arcadia,' but 'I,' says Death, even
am in Arcadia'--legend on a shepherd's tomb (Notes and Queries, June
13,1868, p. 561)" . . . "Marat collected butterflies" . . . "From the
aesthetic point of view, the tapeworm is
certainly an undesirable boarder. The gravid segments
frequently crawl out of a person's anal canal, sometimes in chains,
and have been reported a source of
social embarrassment." (Ann. N. Y.Acad. Sci. 48:558.Nabokov's
interview. (03) Playboy [1964]
http://lib.ru/NABOKOW/Inter03.txt
Several bits from Nabokov's "rejects" did make an apprearance
later on, in Pale Fire.or, at least, specific words, such as "higher
state" [from:"Time without consciousness-- lower animal
world; time with consciousness--man; consciousness without
time-- some still higher state"].or the inclusion of Death
(and Dementia) in Arcadia.
Yesterday, in one of the references
to Dr. Krolik, a new chain of associations was awakened in me, concerning the
index card information about Marat as a butterfly collector. As
we all know, the French radical ideologue, his psoriatic illness and
even Cora Day appear in ADA and that, in Pale Fire VN has Hazel
suffer from psoriatic fingernails (will her spirit turn into
a butterfly?).
What did I learn from Krolik, though?
Everything began with a mistake I made while spelling "lepidopterist."
The terms "lepidoptera" and "leporidade" were bungled (our Ed S.B kindly
revised it before sending out the posting) after I got stung by
the similarity of sounds in lepidopterists, lepers, lepidosis - and the
intruding leporidae and rodents. .
The instigating paragraph in
ADA: "Mademoiselle, who was in the know, too, looked up
‘Psoriasis’ in a one-volume medical encyclopedia [ ] In the present
case, the cure optimistically advised was to ‘take a warm bath at least twice a
month and avoid spices’; this she typed out and passed on to her cousin in a
Get-Well envelope. Finally, Ada showed Van a letter from Dr Krolik on the same
subject; it said (English version): ‘Crimson-blotched, silver-scaled,
yellow-crusted wretches, the harmless psoriatics (who cannot communicate their
skin trouble and are otherwise the healthiest of people — actually, their bobo’s
protect them from bubas and buboes, as my teacher used to observe) were confused
with lepers — yes, lepers — in the Middle Ages, when thousands if not millions
of Vergers and Vertograds crackled and howled bound by enthusiasts to stakes
erected in the public squares of Spain and other fire-loving countries.’ But
this note they decided not to plant in the meek martyr’s index under PS as they
had first intended: lepidopterists are over-eloquent on
lepidosis."
Rats are related to Proust (in ADA Marcel
Proust's perversion is ambiguously described as his sadistic
pleasure derived from torturing rats) and to some other author in Pale
Fire. (this item has been exhaustively explored in our List, together
with scatological musings in Shade's verses and in Swift). Nevertheless,
after checking in the www, I realized
that rodents and leporidae (lepus=hare) were to be excluded so
that I could focus only on "scales" (lepis)*.
In conclusion: Marat, Hazel, Vladimir
Nabokov have one more thing in common with butterflies! They are afflicted
by "scaly iruptions"
The discarded note on Marat's "lepidoptera" must have
left its shadow on various other Nabokovian texts for ".lepidopterists are over-eloquent on lepidosis."
It would be an exxageration should I also link
"butterflies", "scales" and "scatology" to - "Gradus" (steps,
degrees,grades, escalades)! It's a professional bias,
though,.but here it's where CK's note to line 270 finds its place:
"I have seen The Red Admirable feasting on oozy plums
and, once, on a dead rabbit. It is a most frolicsome fly. An almost tame
specimen of it was the last natural object John Shade pointed out to me as he
walked to his doom (see, see now, my note to lines 993-995).I notice a whiff of
Swift in some of my notes. I too am a desponder in my nature, an uneasy,
peevish, and suspicious man, although I have my moments of volatility and
fou rire.":
......................................................................................................................................................................................................................................
* wiki: The
presence of scales on the wings of Lepidoptera, comprising moths and
butterflies, characterises this order of insects. The name is derived from
Ancient Greek λεπίδος (scale) and πτερόν (wing). The wings of Lepidoptera are
minutely scaled, which feature gives the name to this order.[1] Scales also
cover the head, parts of the thorax and abdomen as well as parts of the
genitalia.
other sources:
Lepidoptera (n.) 1773, "insects with
four scaly wings," the biological classification that includes butterflies and
moths, coined 1735 in Modern Latin by Swedish botanist Carolus Linnaeus (Karl
von Linné, 1707-1778) from Greek lepido-, comb. form of lepis (genitive lepidos)
"(fish) scale" (related to lepein "to peel;" see leper) + pteron "wing, feather"
(see pterodactyl).
Psoriasis "is an immune-mediated
disease that affects the skin" [ ] It "occurs when the immune
system mistakes a normal skin cell for a pathogen, and sends out faulty signals
that cause overproduction of new skin cells. [ ] The most common
form, plaque psoriasis, is commonly seen as red and white hues of scaly patches
appearing on the top first layer of the epidermis (skin).The name psoriasis
(ψωρίασις) is from theGreek language, meaning roughly "itching condition" (psora
"itch" + -sis "action, condition").[ ]The disorder is a chronic recurring
condition that varies in severity from minor localized patches to complete body
coverage. Fingernailsand toenails are frequently affected (psoriatic nail
dystrophy) and can be seen as an isolated sign.
leper: "one afflicted with leprosy,"
late 14c., from Late Latin lepra, from Greek lepra "leprosy," from fem. of
lepros (adj.) "scaly," from leops "a scale," related to lepein "to peel," from
lopos "a peel," from PIE root *lep- "to peel, scale" (see leaf (n.)). Originally
the word for the disease itself (mid-13c.); because of the -er ending it came to
mean "person with leprosy," so leprosy was coined 16c. from adjective leprous.
lepidosis: a scaly eruption.