-----Mensagem Original-----
Enviada em: domingo, 22 de dezembro de
2013 18:42
Assunto: [NABOKV-L] certicle storms in
Ada
'What was that?' exclaimed Marina, whom
certicle storms terrified even more than they did the Antiamberians of Ladore
County.
'Sheet lightning,' suggested Van.
'If you ask me,' said Demon, turning on his chair to
consider the billowing drapery, 'I'd guess it was a photographer's flash.
After all, we have here a famous actress and a sensational
acrobat.'
Ada ran to the window. From under the anxious
magnolias a white-faced boy flanked by two gaping handmaids stood aiming a
camera at the harmless, gay family group. But it was only a nocturnal mirage,
not unusual in July. Nobody was taking pictures except Perun, the
unmentionable god of thunder. (1.38)
In his poem Groza momental'naya navek ("The
Thunderstorm Instantaneous Forever") included in Sestra moya zhizn'
(My Sister Life) Pasternak, too, has grom
(thunder) take pictures:
Sto slepyashchikh
fotografiy
Noch'yu snyal na pamyat'
grom.
In memory [of summer] the thunder took at
night
a hundred blinding
photographs.
In his Vysokaya bolezn' ("The Sublime Disease")
Pasternak compares Lenin's govorok (speech) to shorokh
moln'i sharovoy (the rustle of a ball lightning).
Certicle is an anagram of electric. On Antiterra (Earth's twin
planet on which Ada is set) electricity is banned after the L
disaster. L is Lenin's (and Lucette's, and Lolita's*) initial.
Bliznets v tuchakh ("A Twin in the Thunderclouds," 1914) was
Pasternak's first book of poetry. Bliznetsy ("The Twins,"
1852) is a poem by Tyutchev