On the "deep
amputation" quote: in context the narrator describes people
running up a snowy hill followed by a groan. Isn't the meaning
then that someone's leg or legs have sunk into the snow,
figuratively amputating the limbs; the "arctic" in this
context meaning "of or pertaining to the cold conditions which
created the snowy hill?"
As to the purpose of
the seasonal shift to Spring, if you go back to my piece
you'll see I pointed out that christian imagery crops up quite
a bit through the story, and that I narrowed the story's
present day action down to the week before Easter Sunday.
Therefore the perverse Last Supper episode is for the narrator
then a precursor looking forward to Nina's death, a last
supper before her sacrifice. The end of the story's important
to keep in mind as well since the narrator declares Nina to be
mortal, unlike Ferdinand and Segur--and unlike Jesus who rose
from the dead. She's simply gone but for the memories the
narrator can evoke of her which simply reenact the death.
By the way, on St.
George theme, Nina makes the sign of the cross over the
narrator's head each time she leaves him which is an important
echo of the St. George story. I think if the mood seems pagan
rather than christian despite the christian imagery it's
because nabokov has inverted the meanings of the christian
myths, Victor does not defeat the dragon Ferdinand and so Nina
is sacrificed and dies, right?