-------- Original Message --------
Subject: Fw: [NABOKOV-L] Coining Words: Larvae, Larvorium: Linnaeus and Specters:Nymphs?
Date: Fri, 15 Jan 2010 06:41:20 -0200
From: jansymello <jansy@aetern.us>
To: Stephen Blackwell <sblackwe@utk.edu>

 
 
----- Original Message -----
From: jansymello
To: Vladimir Nabokov Forum
Sent: Thursday, January 14, 2010 6:47 PM
Subject: [NABOKOV-L] Coining Words: Larvae, Larvorium: Linnaeus and Specters:Nymphs?

Dear List, 
If "larvae" are entomologicaly related to "nymphs," would VN's choice for "nymphet" contain this ghostly evil meaning?  It makes sense, in a way (considering Humbert Humbert's point of view).
 
larâ‹…va â€“noun, plural -vae  
1. Entomology. the immature, wingless, feeding stage of an insect that undergoes complete metamorphosis.
2. any animal in an analogous immature form.
3. the young of any invertebrate animal.
4. larvae, Roman Antiquity. malignant ghosts, as lemures.

Origin:
1645–55; < NL; special use of L larva a ghost, specter, mask, skeleton; akin to Lares
Dictionary.com Unabridged
Based on the Random House Dictionary, © Random House, Inc. 2009.
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[Latin lārva, specter, mask (because it acts as a specter of or a mask for the adult form).]
lar'val adj.
Word History: The word larva referring to the newly hatched form of insects before they undergo metamorphosis comes from the Latin word lārva, meaning "evil spirit, demon, devil." To understand why this should be so, first we need to know that the Latin word also was used for a terrifying mask, and in Medieval Latin it could mean "mask or visor." Larva is therefore an appropriate term for that stage of an insect's life during which its final form is still hidden or masked, and New Latin lārva was thus applied in 1691 by Carolus Linnaeus, the Swedish botanist who originated our system of classifying plants and animals. The word larva is first recorded in English in its scientific sense in 1768, although it had been used in its "spirit" sense in 1651 in a way that foreshadowed the usage by Linnaeus.
The American Heritage® Dictionary of the English Language, Fourth Edition
Copyright © 2009 by Houghton Mifflin Company.
Published by Houghton Mifflin Company. All rights reserved.
Cite This Source
 
other data (©2010 About.com, a part of The New York Times Company)

Ancient Romans believed that after death their souls became spirits. There is some debate about the nature of these Roman ghosts. According to the Christian theologian St. Augustine whose writing follows by a few centuries most of the Latin literary and pagan references to ghosts, there were the following different types: lares if good; lemures (larvae) if evil, and manes if indeterminate.
The Words of Augustus on Lemures and Demon:From Chapter 11. City of God, by St. Augustine: "He [Plotinus] says, indeed, that the souls of men are demons, and that men > become Lares if they are good, Lemures or Larvae if they are bad, and Manes if it is uncertain whether they deserve well or ill. Who does not see at a  glance that this is a mere whirlpool sucking men to moral destruction?  For, however wicked men have been, if they suppose they shall become Larvae or divine Manes, they will become the worse the more love they have for inflicting injury; for, as the Larvae are hurtful demons made out of wicked men, these men must suppose that after death they will be invoked with  sacrifices and divine honors that they may inflict injuries. But this  question we must not pursue. He also states that the blessed are called in Greek eudaimones, because they are good souls, that is to say, good demons,  confirming his opinion that the souls of men are demons."

Another Interpretation of the Lemures - Haunting Spirits:
Instead of being evil spirits, lemures (larvae) may have been souls that  could find no rest because they met with a violent or premature death and  were unhappy. They wandered among the living haunting people and driving   them to madness.
Lemuria - Festivals to Placate the Lemures:
 No sane Roman wanted to be haunted, so they had ceremonies to satisfy the spirits. The lemures (larvae) were propitiated during the nine-day Lemuria  festival in May. At the Parentalia or Feralia on the 18th and 21st of  February, the living descendants shared a meal with the benevolent spirits  of their ancestors (manes or di parentes). 
Ovid (43 B.C. - A.D. 17) on the Lemures and Manes:  In Ovid's Fasti 5.422, the Manes and Lemures are synonymous and both  hostile, in need of exorcism via the Lemuria. Ovid incorrectly derives the  Lemuria from Remuria, saying it was to placate Remus, the brother of 
Romulus.Larvae and Lemures: Usually considered the same, not all ancient authors considered them as such. In the Apocolocyntosis 9.3 and Pliny's Natural History, Larvae are  tormentors of the dead. Manes:were originally good spirits (in the plural), whose name was  usually seen with the word for gods, di, as in Di manes. Manes came to be  used for the ghosts of individuals. The first writer to make this use is  Cicero (January 3, 106 B.C. - December 7, 43 B.C.).

References: "Aeneas and the Demands of the Dead," by Kristina P. Nielson. The  Classical Journal, Vol. 79, No. 3. (Feb. - Mar., 1984). 
"Lemures and Larvae," by George Thaniel. The American Journal of Philology 1973.
See: Aeneid in the Realm of Hades;  Odysseus in the Underworld - Nekuia
"Lemures and Larvae," by George Thaniel The American Journal of Philology.  Vol. 94, No. 2 (Summer, 1973), pp. 182-187
 
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Fran Assa [to JM :In TOoL there is a quick reference to "asparagus" when Flora's mother has to go out herself to get "aspirins" ...) Sorry, Jansy.  But obviously phallic.  
JM: So Freudian, like his cigar. But his cigar is not Magritte's pipe. 
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