Subject:
QUERY: Nabokov's Nines
From:
"Matthew Roth" <MRoth@messiah.edu>
Date:
Tue, 29 Jan 2008 13:57:04 -0500
To:
"Vladimir Nabokov Forum" <NABOKV-L@LISTSERV.UCSB.EDU>

Dear list,
 
I've been noticing the prevalence of the number nine in several of VN's works, but I'm not sure what to make of them. In Despair, Hermann discovers his alter ego on the ninth of May (5/9). In chapter four, he makes a show of noting that the date on which he writes to Felix is Sept. 9 (9/9). And he murders Felix on April 9 (4/9).  (If we add April and May, we get another nine.) My own notion is that the nine here is to be seen as representing a person or personality--it even looks like a person, no?
 
Moving on, in Pnin we must notice that Timofey's last known address is 999 Todd Rd.
 
And in PF, of course, we get not only a 999 line poem but a lamppost numbered 999 right outside Shade's house. Aside: At the the end of chapter 4 of Despair, Hermann reveals that he too is interested in noting the numbers of streetlamps.
 
So what do we make of all these nines? Are they a marker of transition, the last moment before the numbers turn over? I think Priscilla Meyer says something like this in her Dolorous Haze/Hazel Shade essay.
 
Matt

[EDNote: 342 Lawn St. also qualifies, in way.  There was a posting within the past two years on shiftings between 666 and 999, but my archive search has failed to find it so far.  Perhaps others will have more success.  In accord with Tammi's concept of the "poetics of dates," one might observe that 9 is likewise the sum of VN's birthday digits (4/23). ~SB]

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