Hi Carolyn- TimesCecily: Times Do you suggest, Miss Fairfax, that I entrapped Ernest into an engagement? How dare you? This is no time for wearing the shallow mask of manners. When I see a spade I call it a spade. Gwendolen: [Satirically.] I am glad to say that I have never seen a spade. It is obvious that our social spheres have been widely different. An aspect of Victorian life was not calling a spade a spade. Of course Gwendolen has seen a shovel, but brilliantly suggests that young ladies of the refined classes might not admit to this. Nor to their early sexual encounters. The mechanism by which such encounters are disowned might be the trained volition - manners - which Wilde mocks or, as Freud suggested more-or-less contemporaneously, a peculiar and reversible ablation of memory which he termed "repression". I understood Andrew to be considering the consequences of such events and wished to note that he appeared to have opted for Freud's [not Gwendolyn's] "explanation" of the mechanism. For me, Freud's self-described "mythology" might be of some historical interest; while the questions he raised about mental mechanisms are far from settled. My comment, intended playfully, drifted off into obscurity. Sorry! -Sandy Times On Sunday, September 4, 2005, at 10:32 PM, Donald B. Johnson wrote: ----- Forwarded message from chaiselongue@earthlink.net ----- Date: Sun, 04 Sep 2005 17:29:11 -0800 From: Carolyn Kunin < Reply-To: Carolyn Kunin < Subject: sexual references in spades? To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum ......It wasn't until I was in my forties that I remembered at least three specific instances from childhood of this sort of thing happening to me....... Andrew Brown Hmmm........Very interesting but anti-intuitive. This phenomenon is still unexplained and worthy of investigation. Gwendolen's explanation - "I am glad to say that I have never seen a spade." - is not the last word on the subject, as she well knew. -Sandy Drescher Dear Sandy, As a devotée of the divine Earnest I caught your reference at one - - however I must admit that I don't get your point. Gwendoline was responding to Dear Cecilie's claim that when she saw a spade she called it a spade - - in other words Cecilie was explaining that she felt entitled to criticize Gwendoline, her guest. In what way is Gwendoline's clever riposte an "explanation"? an explanation of what? Could you spell it out for me? I don't know if I'm too stupid or too innocent to understand. Carolyn ----- End forwarded message ----- ......It wasn't until I was in my forties that I remembered at least three specific instances from childhood of this sort of thing happening to me.......         Andrew Brown Hmmm........Very interesting but anti-intuitive. This phenomenon is still unexplained and worthy of investigation.  Gwendolen's explanation - "I am glad to say that I have never seen a spade." - is not the last word on the subject, as she well knew. -Sandy Drescher Dear Sandy, As a devotée of the divine Earnest I caught your reference at one - - however I must admit that I don't get your point. Gwendoline was responding to Dear Cecilie's claim that when she saw a spade she called it a spade - - in other words Cecilie was explaining that she felt entitled to criticize Gwendoline, her guest. In what way is Gwendoline's clever riposte an "explanation"? an explanation of what? Could you spell it out for me? I don't know if I'm too stupid or too innocent to understand. Carolyn